| Literature DB >> 31463160 |
Julie A Beans1, Bobby Saunkeah2, R Brian Woodbury1, Terry S Ketchum3, Paul G Spicer3, Vanessa Y Hiratsuka1.
Abstract
Experiences with unethical research practices have caused some American Indian and Alaska Native (AIAN) individuals, organizations, and tribes to mistrust health research. To build trust and repair relationships, current research with AIAN peoples often involves participatory research (PR) approaches. This article assesses community-level protections described in the scientific literature on PR involving AIAN communities. A scoping review search in PubMed and PsychInfo for articles published between January 2000 and June 2017 yielded an AIAN PR article dataset. Of 178 articles, a subset of 23 articles that described aspects of community protections were analyzed for descriptions of community-level protection practices. We identified the presence or absence of a description of four community protection measures in each article: a tribal research department, the development of community-level mechanisms for research regulation if not present, community collaboration throughout the research process, and project employment of a community member. The development of community-level mechanisms for research regulation was described in 39% of the articles. Ninety-one percent of these articles described community collaboration during the research process. Seventeen percent included descriptions of all four community-level protection measures. The extent and consistency to which community-level protections are described is variable; the current literature lacks reporting on community-level protection practices specific to tribal communities.Entities:
Keywords: Alaska Native; Indians; Indigenous; North American; ethics; participatory research; research; scoping review; tribal sovereignty
Year: 2019 PMID: 31463160 PMCID: PMC6713452 DOI: 10.3390/socsci8040127
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soc Sci (Basel) ISSN: 2076-0760
Figure 1.Article selection flow chart.
Inclusion criteria alignment with participatory research (PR) principles.
| PR Principles | Community Group Involved in Research Project | Community-Level Decision-Making Power over the Research Project | Ongoing Input from Community Members for Project | Tribal-Level Regulation over Research | Relationships Established Prior to Project | Relationships Maintained beyond Described Project |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Recognize community as a unit of identity | ||||||
| Build on community strengths and resources | ||||||
| Equitable partnership in all research phases and involves power-sharing process | ||||||
| Promotes co-learning and capacity building among all partners | ||||||
| Integrates and achieves a balance between research and action for the mutual benefit of all partners | ||||||
| Emphasizes health problems of local relevance that attend to multiple determinants of health and disease | ||||||
| Involves systems development through a cyclical and iterative process | ||||||
| Disseminates findings and knowledge gained to all partners and involves all partners in the dissemination process | ||||||
| Requires a long-term process and commitment to sustainability. | ||||||
| Addresses issues of race, ethnicity, racism, and social class and embraces “Cultural Humility” | ||||||
| Recognition of tribal sovereignty (i.e., research oversight, data governance) | ||||||
| Understand implications of diversity of AIAN people | ||||||
Community-level protection measures across scoping review articles (N = 23).
| Article | Research | Setting | Tribal Research | Development
of | Community | Project Employment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ( | PR | Rural | NR | Y | Y | NR |
| ( | PR | Rural and Urban | NR | N | Y | Y |
| ( | CBPR and PR | Rural | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| ( | CBPR | Rural | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| ( | CBPR and TPR | Rural | Y | NR | NR | Y |
| ( | CBPR | Rural | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| ( | CBPR | Rural and Urban | N | Y | Y | Y |
| ( | CBPR | Rural | NR | NR | Y | NR |
| ( | CBPR | Rural | NR | NR | Y | NR |
| ( | CBPR and TPR | Rural | NR | Y | Y | Y |
| ( | CPBR | Rural | NR | Y | Y | Y |
| ( | CBPR | Rural | NR | NR | Y | NR |
| ( | CBPR | Rural and Urban | NR | NR | Y | N |
| ( | CBPR | Rural and Urban | N | NR | Y | Y |
| ( | CBPR | Rural | Y | Y | Y | NR |
| ( | CBPR | Rural | NR | NR | Y | NR |
| ( | CBPR | Rural and Urban | NR | NR | Y | Y |
| ( | CBPR | Rural | Y | NR | Y | NR |
| ( | CBPR | Rural | NR | Y | Y | Y |
| ( | CBPR | Rural | NR | NR | Y | Y |
| ( | CBPR and TPR | Rural | NR | Y | Y | Y |
| ( | CBPR and TPR | Rural and Urban | Y | NR | Y | Y |
| ( | PR | Rural | NR | NR | Y | NR |
NR = not reported, Y = yes, N = no.