| Literature DB >> 25303222 |
Elizabeth Pellicano1, Adam Dinsmore2, Tony Charman3.
Abstract
There has been a substantial increase in research activity on autism during the past decade. Research into effective ways of responding to the immediate needs of autistic people is, however, less advanced, as are efforts at translating basic science research into service provision. Involving community members in research is one potential way of reducing this gap. This study therefore investigated the views of community involvement in autism research both from the perspectives of autism researchers and of community members, including autistic adults, family members and practitioners. Results from a large-scale questionnaire study (n = 1,516) showed that researchers perceive themselves to be engaged with the autism community but that community members, most notably autistic people and their families, did not share this view. Focus groups/interviews with 72 participants further identified the potential benefits and remaining challenges to involvement in research, especially regarding the distinct perspectives of different stakeholders. Researchers were skeptical about the possibilities of dramatically increasing community engagement, while community members themselves spoke about the challenges to fully understanding and influencing the research process. We suggest that the lack of a shared approach to community engagement in UK autism research represents a key roadblock to translational endeavors.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25303222 PMCID: PMC4193852 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0109946
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Descriptives for respondents to the online survey for each of the four key stakeholder groups (total n = 1516).
| Autistica person (n = 122) | Immediate family member (n = 849) | Professional (n = 426) | Researcher (n = 119) | |
| Chronological age | ||||
| M (SD) | 39.4 (12.9) | 45.1 (9.8) | 42.2 (11.8) | 40.6 (13.8) |
| Range | 18–72 | 18–83 | 21–70 | 22–87 |
| Gender | ||||
| Female | 56 | 765 | 350 | 81 |
| Male | 60 | 83 | 74 | 38 |
| Other/would rather not say | 6 | 1 | 2 | 1 |
Note: a The term “autistic person” is the preferred language of many people on the spectrum [50]. In this paper, we use this term as well as person-first language to respect the wishes of all individuals on the spectrum.
Figure 1Researchers' (A) and community members' (B) perspectives on involvement in research: themes and subthemes.
Respondents' mean frequency ratings for their experiences of each type of researcher-community engagement.
| Type of Engagement | |||
| Dissemination | Dialogue | Partnership | |
| M (SD) | M (SD) | M (SD) | |
| Range | Range | Range | |
| Autistic adults | 2.73 (1.3) | 2.50 (1.2) | 2.03 (1.2) |
| (n = 122) | 1–5 | 1–5 | 1–5 |
| Immediate family members | 2.69 (1.3) | 2.11 (1.08) | 1.84 (1.0) |
| (n = 849) | 1–5 | 1–5 | 1–5 |
| Practitioners | 3.12 (1.2) | 2.42 (1.12) | 2.16 (1.1) |
| (n = 426) | 1–5 | 1–5 | 1–5 |
| Autism researchers | 3.48 (.96) | 3.50 (.98) | 2.82 (1.1) |
| (n = 119) | 1–5 | 1–5 | 1–5 |
Note: Lower values reflect reduced frequency of involvement in research.
Figure 2The proportion of responses for each stakeholder group with regards to their degree of satisfaction with community involvement in research.
Themes identified from open question in online questionnaire by autism researchers (n = 63).
| Themes | Subtheme | Example quotes |
|
| Positive community attitudes towards research | “The public are very interested to hear about autism research.” “Given the huge need for help and support for persons with autism, which is alas, often unmet, the public are very open and willing to take part in research that can go any ways towards this goal.” |
| Scepticism toward involvement | “I feel that it can often be tokenistic, i.e. asking the same old panel of people with autism to contribute to policy, practice and decision making almost to “tick the box” to say that people with autism have been involved.” | |
|
| No singular voice | “The experiences of individuals with autism and their families are many and varied. Sometimes the most vocal individuals have a completely different experience/agenda than some of the most vulnerable people we engage.” |
| “Attempts at engagement are very quickly dominated by more able people and people with additional mild to moderate learning disabilities, who could express their views with support, become swamped.” | ||
| “Autism charities and groups are disparate and fractious.” | ||
| Autistic features make involvement difficult | “Some of the challenges people with autism may face make the interactions quite difficult - trouble taking on board another person's point of view, commenting in a sensitive way that does not cause offense, etc. I would favour more partnership, but very different goals and methods of interaction make this a formidable challenge.” | |
| “It can often be difficult to work with people with autism as their viewpoints may be held very firmly and a ‘black and white’ thinking style can be a challenge.” | ||
| “Due to the nature of autism, inclusion in group discussions/debates and decision making is difficult and time consuming (therefore expensive). I do feel these factors influence the true involvement of people with autism in research.” |
Themes identified from open question in online questionnaire by autistic adults (n = 94), immediate family members (n = 476) and practitioners (n = 219).
| Themes | Subtheme | Example quotes |
|
| Lack of awareness about research | “This is the first time I have heard of any research.” |
| “I have never had any engagement.” | ||
| “The research is conducted by, in the main, neurotypical researchers looking at, not surprisingly, neurotypically framed problems and questions. There are too many assumptions about what it is like to be autistic, what autistic people want and possibly most important, what autistic people need.” | ||
| “I feel isolated from any sort of research. I have very little knowledge of any research that may be going on or what its purpose is. Is it purely academic? Does it have practical applications, and if so, how? ” | ||
| “There is just so little research that I'm aware of. Once diagnosed, you're left to get on with it unless you have the time and inclination to get involved in support groups.” | ||
| “I have never been approached or asked to take part in research although I would be interested to do so.” | ||
| Experiences depend on researcher attitudes | “The autism researchers that I dealt with personally were always interested in what I had to say, as well as my well-being.” | |
| “I find a majority of autism researchers I have managed to speak to unapproachable and more concerned with engaging in academic debates about autism as opposed to speaking to autistics.” | ||
| “Those I have come into contact with have had a genuine interest and concern for people with autism.” | ||
| “Some of the researchers have been informative and collaborative, others have no interest in what practitioners need or have to share” | ||
| Asymmetric interactions | “Despite most research projects claiming that information about the results of these projects will be sent to me upon their completion, I very rarely, if ever, receive any such information. It almost feels like they've got what they need from me by this point, so they don't really need to contact me again with the results, as they won't get anything back by doing so.” | |
| “Researchers are more keen on collecting data, but not providing results” | ||
| “I would like more detail of the results of research, particularly where I have given time and effort to helping with it. I sometimes only get a very short summary of the research, and often I would welcome more detail.” | ||
| “Often have not had feedback from the results of a research project and often left thinking… and so? What does that matter, what happens next/what difference does that make?” | ||
|
| Lack of opportunity to get involved | “I've been turned away from a few studies for being female.” |
| “In my experience researchers are only interested in helping those at the more able end of the spectrum.” | ||
| “I do get asked for help in research issues but as I work full time and my son is ASD I don't have the time to do them. My son is at respite today and I am having a day off which is the only reason I've been able to complete this.” | ||
| “Carers don't have much time or energy left over for things that don't directly affect our ability to deal with the day to day issues, however much we want access to latest thinking.” | ||
| “As a practitioner in the public sector I am overworked and often not able to find time to actively engage with current research, though I like to stay informed on research reports” | ||
| Skeptical about researcher intentions | “Being used by researchers to further their own career.” | |
| “Most autism researchers are engaged in research that I find unacceptable, i.e. looking for ‘cures’ or which seem to ‘objectify’ autistic people as odd or freaks or severely flawed.” | ||
| “I don't think many researchers feel they can talk to autistic people as if they matter, they're too busy studying them like specimens or looking for a ‘cure’.” | ||
| “There are pockets of joined up working which are excellent but there are also huge silos within the world of autism research.” | ||
| Absence of accessible, user-friendly research | “Lots of research is not in the public domain and requires subscriptions.” | |
| “I have only been involved because I have been proactive myself. Families have lots of information about living with the effects of Autism yet researchers don't seem to be tapping in to this resource.” | ||
| “It's hard to find out about the research and about what's available publicly. Useful info and links tend to come via word of mouth - other routes are typically time-consuming, material often not user-friendly.” | ||
| “It should be easier to access research papers published in journals. Researchers should be prepared to publish pdfs of their own research papers, since members of the autism community often do not have access to journal subscriptions.” | ||
| “We live in a society where it can be hard to be sure of who is a credible source of information/opinion when online, either via blogs or social networking etc. Open access to journals may increase the public's opportunity to find out about the latest autism research from a reliable source.” | ||
| “As an autism professional I have to seek out any information regarding research myself, very rarely is it in a format that is easy to comprehend for a non academic/researcher.” | ||
| Research topics not rooted in reality | “Feels like researchers are working in their own world, with little direct engagement with us. Probably they are following the funding and have become isolated from the practical issues people face.” | |
| “Those of us who live and breathe autism and who have to manage daily to support our children can feel left out of the debate. Researchers will look for something of interest TO THEM - and not necessarily useful to the autism community in any practical sense.” | ||
| “I feel most UK researchers operating from ivory towers with very little contact with real autism.” | ||
| “Far too interested in causes and cures with intellectual understanding only and no practical application.” | ||
| “It's never about the issues that persons with autism face. It's too airy, too detached from practical application and frankly a waste of time and money. Researchers need to be helping these people, not simply writing papers about them.” |