| Literature DB >> 35282819 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Citizen science and models for public participation in health research share normative ideals of participation, inclusion, and public and patient engagement. Academic researchers collaborate in research with members of the public involved in an issue, maximizing all involved assets, competencies, and knowledge. In citizen science new ethical issues arise, such as who decides, who participates, who is excluded, what it means to share power equally, or whose knowledge counts. This article aims to present an ethics framework that offers a lens of understanding and heuristic guidelines to deal with ethical issues in citizen science.Entities:
Keywords: Citizen science; Ethics framework; Ethics work; Medical Research Ethics Committee; Patient and public engagement; Research ethics
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35282819 PMCID: PMC8919534 DOI: 10.1186/s12910-022-00761-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Ethics ISSN: 1472-6939 Impact factor: 2.652
Overview of the seven projects involved in the multiple case study
| Context | Citizens as co-researchers | Topic of the study | Period | Funding | Way of involvement |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Building the Community of Practice | Experts-by- experience of care with community care | Partnership, power, and collaboration | 2015–2021 | Partner organizations of the CvC | Partnership |
| Age Friendly City | Older adults | Age-friendliness of a neighborhood | 2016–2021 | Municipality | Control |
| Health promotion | Children and parents in poverty | Reinforcing stigmas | 2015–2019 | Fonds Nuts Ohra | Partnership |
| Service delivery unemployment | People without a job, dependent on social benefits | Experiential knowledge of being unemployed | 2017–2018 | Municipality | Partnership |
| Funding organization | Families in a vulnerable situation | Engagement in a funding organization | 2016–2021 | Fonds Nuts Ohra | Consultation |
| Psychiatry emergency care | Experts-by- experience of care in psychiatric crisis | Improvement of emergency care | 2016–2018 | Care institution | Partnership |
| Academic medical hospital | Young adults with a respiratory disease | Improvement of clinical care setting | 2018–2020 | Dutch Foundation for Asthma Prevention | Consultation |
| Arts and Health | Older adults | Value of arts and health | 2019–2021 | ZonMw | Consultation |
Ethics work framework for citizen science, reframed from Banks [36]
| Type of ethics work | Translation to ethical citizen science |
|---|---|
| Framing work | Being attentive to salient features of a situation and political listening (and viewing) Linking these features with structural mechanisms of marginalization Engaging in deliberations about these frames with citizen co-researchers and other stakeholders to co-create “new” frames |
| Role work | Playing a role in relation to others (researcher and researched, academic, and activist) and negotiating these roles Taking a position: sometimes being partial to the voice that is the least-heard, sometimes being impartial to being perceived as an academic |
| Emotion work | Being caring, compassionate, and empathic Building communicative spaces Seeing responsibilities of all involved in responding to others’ emotions |
| Identity work | Working that others see and experience the virtues of a caring ethical participatory researcher, for example towards the Medical Research Ethics Committees, funds, colleagues, citizens and clients Dialogue and deliberation about the ethos of a citizen science researcher and what ‘goodness’ means in relation to the people citizen science researchers work with |
| Reason work | Making decisions and justifying one’s decisions in ethically salient situations Conducting ethical reflections (individually and collaboratively) with those involved in the issue |
| Relationship work | Building trust and safety with attention to power relations and dependency so that everyone is seen, heard and valued Engaging in dialogue and deliberation with people, creating an open space for the experiences and perspectives of citizens Working on mutual, non-judgmental relationships through arts-based approaches, including representational knowledge |
| Performance work | Making visible aspects of this work to others Demonstrating oneself at work (accountability work) |