| Literature DB >> 30095277 |
Sue Fletcher-Watson1, Jon Adams2, Kabie Brook3, Tony Charman4, Laura Crane5, James Cusack6, Susan Leekam7, Damian Milton8,9, Jeremy R Parr10, Elizabeth Pellicano11.
Abstract
Participatory research methods connect researchers with relevant communities to achieve shared goals. These methods can deliver results that are relevant to people's lives and thus likely to have a positive impact. In the context of a large and growing body of autism research, with continued poor implementation, and some evidence of community dissatisfaction, there is a powerful case for participatory autism research. In order to develop a framework for such collaborative working, a UK seminar series was organised and co-produced by autistic and non-autistic people with academic, practitioner and lived expertise. This article reports on the outcomes from the series, identifying five topics relevant to building a community of practice in participatory research: Respect, Authenticity, Assumptions, Infrastructure and Empathy. Each topic is connected to a specific example from within and beyond research, to inspire new practices in the field. We call for the development of participatory research skills among the autism research community and the facilitation of greater autistic leadership of, and partnership in, research. Such work, if delivered to a high standard, is likely to lead to better translation into practice and improved outcomes for autistic people and those who support them.Entities:
Keywords: autism; community; disability rights; involvement; methods; participatory research
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30095277 PMCID: PMC6512245 DOI: 10.1177/1362361318786721
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Autism ISSN: 1362-3613
The seminars.
| Topic | Title | Location | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Autism practice | Developing and sharing approaches to research informed practice for children and young people | Edinburgh |
| 2 | Public services | Developing more effective health and social care services in partnership with the autism community | Newcastle |
| 3 | Public services | Developing more effective public services in partnership with the autism community | Cardiff |
| 4 | Autism and society | Doing autism research well – building a participatory framework for autism research | London |
| 5 | Autism and society | Autistic well-being | London |
| 6 | Autism practice | Learning and sharing lessons on how to conduct autism research well | London |
Figure 1.Current topics in participatory autism research.
Respect – how to respectfully represent lived experience in research (www.knowyournormal.co.uk).
| In the | |
| Strengths of this approach | Limitations of this approach |
| ● Focus on a priority area for autistic people and
involvement of autistic co-researchers facilitated
recruitment into the study and engagement with
findings | ● Autistic researchers limited from data collection due to
time constraints and personal relationships with
participants |
Empathy – how to build effective working partnerships (www.artscatalyst.org/jon-adams-konfirm).
| Strengths of this approach | Limitations of this approach |
| ● Independent funding expands the range of opportunities for
people involved | ● To be successful, this requires investment of time on both
sides and a willingness to challenge existing ‘knowledge’ or
assumptions |
Authenticity – how autism communities can shape a research agenda (www.autistica.co.uk/our-research/your-research-priorities).
| Autistica and a consortium of partners launched
a James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnership to define
the top 10 autism research questions. This was an
independently facilitated and validated process, which
surveyed a representative sample of autistic people,
caregivers and professionals before bringing them together
to reach agreement on the top 10 through a final workshop.
Importantly, the process deliberately excluded researchers
from the final workshop so that the top 10 is a genuinely
community-led, authentic list ( | |
| Strengths of this approach | Limitations of this approach |
| ● Independent facilitation achieved consensus across groups
and ensured power balance between groups | ● Merging perspectives of a diverse group into homogeneous
outcomes can result in under-specified priority research
topics |
Assumptions – best practice in autistic leadership and community advocacy (www.arghighland.co.uk).
| Autism Rights Group Highland (ARGH) is a
collective of Autistic Adults based in Scotland. They work
together to lobby, campaign and educate. Recent activities
include a successful campaign to remove puzzle piece imagery
from the journal | |
| Strengths of this approach | Limitations of this approach |
| ● Many voices working together add strength and weight to a
campaign | ● Reaching consensus between diverse members is
difficult |
Infrastructure – how to support and encourage autistic academics and activists (participatoryautismresearch.wordpress.com/).
| The Participatory Autism Research Collective (PARC) was set up to bring autistic people, including scholars and activists, together with researchers and practitioners who work with autistic people. Their aim is to build a community network, where those who wish to see more significant involvement of autistic people in autism research can share knowledge and expertise. | |
| Strengths of this approach | Limitations of this approach |
| ● While it is autistic-led, the group is inclusive of
autistic and non-autistic academics | ● Autistic-led groups like PARC, operating independently of
a host institution, may struggle to secure
funding |