On payment, yes, it depends on the study and on the PwME. There's the option of PwME opting not to be paid, or having their payment be donated to a charity. And of course, it's not feasible for every study to pay for PPI. There are lots of different ways to do things. A Masters student could come to the forum and ask for feedback on their study design, for example, and that would be great.I agree, but it also needs to be clear that being paid would mean some people couldn't take part. I'd have to report the additional income to the benefits agency so they could deduct it from my income; I did that once, and they stopped all my benefits for five months while they investigated.
I think something like a forum where people can contribute to an ongoing discussion as and when able is more realistic for many.
Members of the forum committee have proactively offered to help good ME/CFS researchers with PPI admin, for example by setting up private subforums for them with a handful of members with skills relevant to a study to toss ideas around with. I don't think any researcher has taken us up on that idea yet, but it's been really great to see more researchers engaging on public threads here. That all counts, it doesn't always have to be a formal arrangement.As smallish research teams won't necessarily have the skills and resources to set up a new forum, I wonder if it could even be something S4ME might offer to host? If the admin(s) who liaised with them about what they needed and did the setting up were paid at the going rate for their hours, it might still be more economical for the project than having to start from scratch. The team would also benefit from the contributions of members too severely affected to take on a full PPI role themselves.
I've had vague ideas of researchers meeting a PPI requirement by paying for a type of forum 'think tank' service provided by volunteer PwME and carers in private S4ME subforums, with the funds going to a forum research fund. But, we are a long way from that.