Including People with Spinal Cord Injury in Research as Participants, Partners, and Personnel
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Summary of Recommendations
- “Update the NIH mission statement”—Removing the phrase “reducing disability” would shift the focus away from the medical model of disability belief that people with disabilities are flawed and need to be fixed.
- “Establish an NIH Office of Disability Research”—This would be in line with other offices created for specific populations. Here, the purpose would be to advance strategies supporting the inclusion of people with disabilities as members of the scientific workforce as well as research participants and to advance disability-related research.
- “Establish an NIH Disability Equity and Access Coordinating Committee”—This committee would serve as a resource for the Office of Disability Research and other diversity and equity efforts across NIH by seeking input from multiple disability groups in the community to suggest strategies for training and anti-ableism initiatives, how to best gather and report data on disability, and how to prevent discrimination and harassment from disability disclosure.
- “Develop an internal, NIH-wide effort to identify and address any structural ableism that may exist and promote disability inclusion by”:
- “Fostering support for the equity, inclusion, and belonging of people with disabilities within NIH culture and structure”—Similar efforts exist to address structural racism.
- “Advancing disability inclusion and anti-ableism through training, communication, policies, and accessibility”—A multi-pronged approach is needed to overcome the pervasiveness of ableism.
- “Review policy, culture, and structure to identify opportunities to promote disability inclusion in the NIH-funded research workforce”—NIH should lead the field by collecting and using data to develop evidence-based strategies to promote the best practices and programs that successfully promote the inclusion of people with disabilities in the scientific workforce.
- “Expand efforts to include disability communities and the perspectives of individuals with disabilities”—Their input would help understand factors that perpetuate structural ableism, how to improve equity, inclusion, and access within NIH as well as across the external scientific community, how to increase disability cultural competency, as well as the experiences of researchers with disabilities with NIH grant application and review processes in a quantifiable manner.
- “Conduct research on disability health and health care disparities and equity by”:
- “Formally designating people with disabilities as a health disparity population”—Extensive evidence confirms that people with disabilities meet this legal designation, yet much is still needed to fully understand these health disparities and the factors that contribute to the inequities so that they can be overcome.
- “Funding and promoting research on health and health care disparities experienced by people with disabilities”—This would also include analyzing grant applications and award data for potential barriers that contribute to the underfunding of health disparities research on people with disabilities.
- “Collecting data on disability wherever demographic information is collected within NIH data systems”—This should be performed in collaboration with other Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) partners to promote best practices in gathering and reporting disability data and to compare experiences of people with disabilities across the DHHS.
- “Supporting inclusion of disabled people as research participants”—Although people with disabilities make up 26% of the US population, they are often excluded from research. Community engagement efforts should be made to actively recruit individuals with disabilities as research participants.
- “Ensure that disability inclusion and anti-ableism are core components of all NIH diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility (DEIA) efforts”—Disability exclusion and ableism are structural issues that need to be addressed consistently across all NIH-wide DEIA efforts and should involve a senior advisor with lived experience of disability who has expertise in disability inclusion, equity, and research.
- “Maintain accountability for disability inclusion efforts”—This should be performed through monitoring all the efforts described in the above recommendations and by sharing results publicly.
3. Contextualization for SCI Research Field
3.1. Inclusion of People with SCI as Research Participants
3.2. Inclusion of People with SCI as Research Partners
3.3. Inclusion of People with SCI in the Scientific Workforce
4. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Anderson, K.D. Including People with Spinal Cord Injury in Research as Participants, Partners, and Personnel. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 6466. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20156466
Anderson KD. Including People with Spinal Cord Injury in Research as Participants, Partners, and Personnel. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(15):6466. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20156466
Chicago/Turabian StyleAnderson, Kim D. 2023. "Including People with Spinal Cord Injury in Research as Participants, Partners, and Personnel" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 15: 6466. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20156466
APA StyleAnderson, K. D. (2023). Including People with Spinal Cord Injury in Research as Participants, Partners, and Personnel. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(15), 6466. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20156466