Protecting children in research: safer ways to research with children who may be experiencing violence or abuse
Protecting children in research: safer ways to research with children who may be experiencing violence or abuse
Children participating in research, like other children, may be being maltreated. There is also potential for exposure to abuse during research. Research training, practices and protocols to respond to disclosure and discovery of abuse to protect both researchers and children may not be sufficiently robust. Our aim was to compare and contrast research practices reported in the literature related to protecting children and to recommend safer ways to conduct research. The simultaneous increase in research with children, along with an increased willingness to listen to child victims of abuse, means that researchers must consider the protection of children in the research setting. Twenty-three papers were identified in a literature review. These studies reported a wide variation of ethical considerations, methods, methodology and came from different disciplines. From the 23 papers, two overarching themes were identified: social justice and research and safer research. To make research safer teams should consider training, safety protocols and support for child protection, which includes support to report safeguarding concerns to social care. Further work is required to ensure that training, protocols and support are effective in facilitating researchers to identify and make appropriate child abuse referrals. Ethics practices in abuse research need further debate
child abuse, child protection, ethics, maltreatment, research
1-10
Randall, D.
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Anderson, A.
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Taylor, J.
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23 June 2015
Randall, D.
21b02c15-4d2c-4491-b4ae-e8008c1a093e
Anderson, A.
c3371376-d35e-4984-9658-b2ac80b5f5b3
Taylor, J.
a98e31be-d5c2-4442-a3e9-472af9399f52
Randall, D., Anderson, A. and Taylor, J.
(2015)
Protecting children in research: safer ways to research with children who may be experiencing violence or abuse.
Journal of Child Health Care, .
(doi:10.1177/1367493515587060).
Abstract
Children participating in research, like other children, may be being maltreated. There is also potential for exposure to abuse during research. Research training, practices and protocols to respond to disclosure and discovery of abuse to protect both researchers and children may not be sufficiently robust. Our aim was to compare and contrast research practices reported in the literature related to protecting children and to recommend safer ways to conduct research. The simultaneous increase in research with children, along with an increased willingness to listen to child victims of abuse, means that researchers must consider the protection of children in the research setting. Twenty-three papers were identified in a literature review. These studies reported a wide variation of ethical considerations, methods, methodology and came from different disciplines. From the 23 papers, two overarching themes were identified: social justice and research and safer research. To make research safer teams should consider training, safety protocols and support for child protection, which includes support to report safeguarding concerns to social care. Further work is required to ensure that training, protocols and support are effective in facilitating researchers to identify and make appropriate child abuse referrals. Ethics practices in abuse research need further debate
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Protecting children in research. Safer ways to research with children.pdf
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Published date: 23 June 2015
Keywords:
child abuse, child protection, ethics, maltreatment, research
Organisations:
Faculty of Health Sciences
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 380836
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/380836
ISSN: 1367-4935
PURE UUID: 9488fb56-37a8-4480-afe1-1889455b4acd
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Date deposited: 21 Sep 2015 08:46
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 21:05
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Author:
D. Randall
Author:
A. Anderson
Author:
J. Taylor
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