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Engagement in rapid public health research among young people from underserved communities: maximising opportunities and overcoming barriers

Engagement in rapid public health research among young people from underserved communities: maximising opportunities and overcoming barriers
Engagement in rapid public health research among young people from underserved communities: maximising opportunities and overcoming barriers
Background inclusion in public health research of young people from low-income households and those from minority ethnic groups remains low. It is recognised that there is a need to change the way in which research is conducted so that it becomes more inclusive. The aim of this work was to identify novel and innovative ways to maximise recruitment and inclusion of diverse participants when doing co-production within very short time frames for emergency responses.

Method: we conducted interviews with young people from low-income and minority ethnic backgrounds, and members or leaders of groups or organisations supporting or representing young people from underserved communities.

Results: a total of 42 participants took part in an interview. This included 30 young people from low income or minority ethnic backgrounds and 12 community leaders/service providers. Of the 30 young people, 26 participants identified as female and 12 participants identified as being from a minority ethnic background. Participants discussed a number of interrelated barriers to research involvement and identified ways in which barriers may be reduced. Prejudice and discrimination experienced by young people from underserved communities has led to substantial mistrust of educational and governmental establishments. Rigid and unfamiliar research practices further limit the involvement of young people. Four themes were identified as ways of supporting involvement, including: making opportunities available for young people, adaptations to research governance, understanding and acknowledging challenges faced by young people, and ensuring reciprocal benefits.

Conclusion: this research explored barriers to engagement in rapid public health co-production. Working with communities to co-produce rapid recruitment and research procedures to suit the needs and the context in which young people live is necessary.
DEI, co-production, diversity,, equity, inclusion, public health, research practice, young people, Equity and inclusion (DEI), Diversity, Young people, Research practice, Co-production, Public health
1471-2458
Denford, Sarah
8970b5a7-8cad-4356-ad0e-88297b67db37
Holt, Lydia
a320015f-f81c-4ecd-8fbb-621d9df4d07b
Essery, Rosie
6bf53e81-577f-4a95-ba45-11aa64d1ee53
Kesten, Joanna
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Cabral, Christie
e45df99c-4e9a-4d55-b9f0-923ee4b2a506
Weston, Dale
3d934fc9-ea44-4435-95bb-2dccc6d0b555
Horwood, Jeremy
17a93c97-cc9f-4914-ab17-9fdb7dc034e4
Hickman, Matthew
c511c269-325e-4854-ad42-0c9b963160a8
Amlôt, Richard
d93f5263-ea24-4b12-b505-f51694220b8e
Yardley, Lucy
64be42c4-511d-484d-abaa-f8813452a22e
Denford, Sarah
8970b5a7-8cad-4356-ad0e-88297b67db37
Holt, Lydia
a320015f-f81c-4ecd-8fbb-621d9df4d07b
Essery, Rosie
6bf53e81-577f-4a95-ba45-11aa64d1ee53
Kesten, Joanna
d76376a3-d948-4ae3-8057-00898a21a5fb
Cabral, Christie
e45df99c-4e9a-4d55-b9f0-923ee4b2a506
Weston, Dale
3d934fc9-ea44-4435-95bb-2dccc6d0b555
Horwood, Jeremy
17a93c97-cc9f-4914-ab17-9fdb7dc034e4
Hickman, Matthew
c511c269-325e-4854-ad42-0c9b963160a8
Amlôt, Richard
d93f5263-ea24-4b12-b505-f51694220b8e
Yardley, Lucy
64be42c4-511d-484d-abaa-f8813452a22e

Denford, Sarah, Holt, Lydia, Essery, Rosie, Kesten, Joanna, Cabral, Christie, Weston, Dale, Horwood, Jeremy, Hickman, Matthew, Amlôt, Richard and Yardley, Lucy (2024) Engagement in rapid public health research among young people from underserved communities: maximising opportunities and overcoming barriers. BMC Public Health, 24 (1), [2217]. (doi:10.1186/s12889-024-19762-6).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background inclusion in public health research of young people from low-income households and those from minority ethnic groups remains low. It is recognised that there is a need to change the way in which research is conducted so that it becomes more inclusive. The aim of this work was to identify novel and innovative ways to maximise recruitment and inclusion of diverse participants when doing co-production within very short time frames for emergency responses.

Method: we conducted interviews with young people from low-income and minority ethnic backgrounds, and members or leaders of groups or organisations supporting or representing young people from underserved communities.

Results: a total of 42 participants took part in an interview. This included 30 young people from low income or minority ethnic backgrounds and 12 community leaders/service providers. Of the 30 young people, 26 participants identified as female and 12 participants identified as being from a minority ethnic background. Participants discussed a number of interrelated barriers to research involvement and identified ways in which barriers may be reduced. Prejudice and discrimination experienced by young people from underserved communities has led to substantial mistrust of educational and governmental establishments. Rigid and unfamiliar research practices further limit the involvement of young people. Four themes were identified as ways of supporting involvement, including: making opportunities available for young people, adaptations to research governance, understanding and acknowledging challenges faced by young people, and ensuring reciprocal benefits.

Conclusion: this research explored barriers to engagement in rapid public health co-production. Working with communities to co-produce rapid recruitment and research procedures to suit the needs and the context in which young people live is necessary.

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DENFORD - 2024 BMC PUBLIC HEALTH - Engagement in rapid public health research - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 12 August 2024
Published date: 14 August 2024
Keywords: DEI, co-production, diversity,, equity, inclusion, public health, research practice, young people, Equity and inclusion (DEI), Diversity, Young people, Research practice, Co-production, Public health

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 493759
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493759
ISSN: 1471-2458
PURE UUID: 3b4a1352-1d62-4d37-ae73-06cdb19c6a95
ORCID for Lucy Yardley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3853-883X

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Date deposited: 12 Sep 2024 16:38
Last modified: 13 Sep 2024 01:36

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Contributors

Author: Sarah Denford
Author: Lydia Holt
Author: Rosie Essery
Author: Joanna Kesten
Author: Christie Cabral
Author: Dale Weston
Author: Jeremy Horwood
Author: Matthew Hickman
Author: Richard Amlôt
Author: Lucy Yardley ORCID iD

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