| Literature DB >> 28174150 |
Jens M Nygren1, Susanne Lindberg2, Pontus Wärnestål2, Petra Svedberg1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Participatory research approaches have been introduced to meet end-users' needs in the development of health promotion interventions among children. However, whereas children are increasingly involved as passive informants in particular parts of research, they are rarely involved as partners, equal to adult researchers, throughout the research process. This is especially prominent in the context of child health where the child is commonly considered to be vulnerable or when the research concerns sensitive situations. In these cases, researchers and gatekeepers to children's involvement base their resistance to active involvement of children on potential adverse effects on the accuracy or quality of the research or on ethical or moral principles that participation might harm the child. Thus most research aimed at developing health promotion interventions for children in health care is primarily based on the involvement of parents, caregivers, and other stakeholders.Entities:
Keywords: children; involvement; participation; research
Year: 2017 PMID: 28174150 PMCID: PMC5320392 DOI: 10.2196/resprot.7094
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Res Protoc ISSN: 1929-0748
Descriptions of levels of participation in various models of child participation in research.
| Models | Nonparticipation | Consultative participation | Collaborative participation | |||
| Adult-initiated | Child-initiated | Jointly initiated | ||||
| Hart [ | Manipulation, decoration and tokenism | Assigned but informed | Consulted and informed | Shared decision with children | Directed by children (adults facilitate); shared decision with adults | |
| Treseder [ | Assigned but informed | Consulted and informed | Shared decision with children | Directed by children (adults available); shared decision with adults | ||
| Shier [ | Listened to and encouraged to share views | Children’s views are taken into account | Involved in decision making; given power and responsibility | |||
| Chawla [ | Prescribed participation; assigned participation | Invited participation | Negotiated participation | Self-initiated negotiated participation; graduated participation | Collaborative participation | |
| Reddy and Ratna [ | Active resistance, hindrance, manipulation, decoration and tokenism, tolerance, indulgence | Assigned but informed | Consulted and informed | Shared decision with children | Shared decision with adults; directed by children (adults invited) | Jointly directed |
| Lansdown [ | Children consulted and invited | Children collaborate with adults | Led or managed by children (adults support) | |||
Levels of participation in the research process.
| Consultative participation | Collaborative participation | ||||
| Inform | Consult | Involve | Collaborate | Empower | |
| The goal with child participation | Respecting children while keeping them informed | Preparing and performing research based on children’s views | Involving children throughout the research process | Making decisions with children throughout the research process | Enabling children to be involved in making final decisions throughout the research process |
| The promise to the child | You have access to all information and have been informed equally as much as anybody else in the project. | You will be important for information-seeking and feedback throughout the research process. | You will work together with us to help and contribute with your perspective on the research. | You will be an equal partner in finding and developing solutions in line with the purpose and aims of the research. | Your efforts and contributions will be visible and implemented in the outcomes of research. |
| Activities to involve the child | Explain to the child what is to be done, how and why, as well as the consequences of participation. | Study the child’s experiences through interviews, observations, and questionnaires. | Work with the child in workshops and other activities in which they are allowed to contribute with their perspectives. | Involve the child in workshops and other activities in which they are allowed to ideate, create, contribute, test, and evaluate. | Present to the child which contributions they have made to allow them to elaborate and confirm. |
Consultative participation: inform.
| Invitation | Data collection | |||||
| The methods used at this level | We gave information to and collected permission from parents and representatives from pediatric health care. | Children and their parents were given verbal invitation to participate by their nurse. | We designed and formulated information letter and consent form in a child-friendly way. | We gave verbal explanation of what data will be collected, why, and how. | We gave verbal explanation about underlying principles of their participation and how we planned to document the process. | Schedules of activities were used so that the child could keep track of what is to be done. |
Consultative participation: consult.
| Establishing the idea, purpose, and design | Data collection | ||||
| The methods used at this level | We based our purpose on needs formulated from national cohort data of young adult cancer survivors and from empirical data collected from blog observations of users. | Individual pilot interviews were done with young adult cancer survivors, parents, and clinicians. | We designed approaches to avoid power imbalance and to support motivation to participate. | Pilot interviews were done with children to validate the interview techniques. | Semistructured focus group interviews were done with the purpose of getting children’s views on the phenomenon. |
Collaborative participation: involve.
| Optimizing children’s participation | Evaluation of the prototype | ||||
| The methods used at this level | We combined participation of children and proxy informants during the research process. | We created playful and creative material and approach during data collection. | We used usability tests. | We used a 2-week use study with diary documentation. | We used a follow-up focus group interview. |
Collaborative participation: collaborate.
| Iterative design workshops | Follow-up and feedback workshops with children | |||
| The methods used at this level | We performed workshops to build familiarity and create proxy personas. | We used workshops to co-create redemption scenarios. | We used workshops for feedback and prototyping. | We used workshops to verify and further develop ideas. The children worked in teams and moved between stations with low-fidelity prototypes on which they gave verbal and drawn feedback. |
Collaborative participation: empower.
| Personas | Validation workshop with children and parents | ||
| The methods used at this level | We co-created personas that throughout the process kept the interests of the children in the focus of the researchers. | We performed a workshop to verify that the outcomes of the research were in line with the goals and concerns of the target group. Children and their parents gave verbal feedback on confirmation or identification of further design directions for the ideas and prototypes presented at each station. | The participants involved in the initial focus groups evaluated the outcomes of the research in the form of a printed outline of the purpose and functionality of the service; a website presenting the aesthetics of the design with illustrations, screenshots, and movie clips; and a form evaluating the prototype design and relevance to the purpose of the project and individual experiences and preferences. |