Author:
Spencer Bethan,Hugh-Jones Siobhan,Cottrell David,Pini Simon
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Evidence suggests resources and services benefit from being developed in collaboration with the young people they aim to support. Despite this, patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE) with young people is often tokenistic, limited in engagement and not developmentally tailored to young people. Our paper aims to build knowledge and practice for meaningfully engaging with young people in research design, analysis and as research participants.
Methods
We report the participatory processes from the INSCHOOL project, examining long-term health conditions and schooling among 11–18 year olds. Young people were consulted at the inception of the project through a hospital-based youth forum. This began a partnership where young people co-designed study documents, informed the recruitment process, developed creative approaches to data collection, participated in pilot interviews, co-analysed the qualitative data and co-presented results.
Results
PPIE advisors, participants and researchers all benefitted from consistent involvement of young people throughout the project. Long-term engagement allowed advisors and researchers to build rapport and facilitated openness in sharing perspectives. PPIE advisors valued being able to shape the initial aims and language of the research questions, and contribute to every subsequent stage of the project. Advisors co-designed flexible data collection methods for the qualitative project that provided participants with choices in how they took part (interviews, focus groups, written tasks). Further choice was offered through co-designed preparation activities where participants completed one of four creative activities prior to the interview. Participants were therefore able to have control over how they participated and how they described their school experiences. Through participatory analysis meetings advisors used their first-hand experiences to inform the creation of themes and the language used to describe these themes. PPIE in every stage of the process helped researchers to keep the results grounded in young people’s experience and challenge their assumptions as adults.
Conclusions
Young people have much to offer and the INSCHOOL project has shown that researchers can meaningfully involve young people in all aspects of research. Consistent PPIE resulted in a project where the voices of young people were prioritised throughout and power imbalances were reduced, leading to meaningful participant-centred data.
Funder
National Institute of Health Research
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Health Professions,Health (social science)
Reference44 articles.
1. Lea S, Martins A, Morgan S, Cargill J, Taylor RM, Fern LA. Online information and support needs of young people with cancer: a participatory action research study. Adolesc Health Med Ther. 2018;9:121–35.
2. Van Schelven F, Boeije H, Inhulsen M-B, Sattoe J, Rademakers J. We know what we are talking about: experiences of young people with a chronic condition involved in a participatory youth panel and their perceived impact. Child Care Pract. 2021;27(2):191–207.
3. Taylor RM, Whelan JS, Gibson F, Morgan S, Fern LA. Involving young people in BRIGHTLIGHT from study inception to secondary data analysis: insights from 10 years of user involvement. Res Involv Engagem. 2018;4(1):1–14.
4. Cooper V. Child focused research: disconnected and disembodied voices. Childhood. 2023;30(1):71–85.
5. Mazzei LA, Jackson AY. Complicating voice in a refusal to let participants speak for themselves. Qual Inq. 2012;18(9):745–51.
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献