Understanding the Lives of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Women with Traumatic Brain Injury from Family Violence in Australia: A Qualitative Study Protocol
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Study Aims
- Document the nature and context of the lives of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women who are living with the consequences of a head injury caused through family violence.
- Map and compare populations of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women living with a head injury and key issues for these populations across the three contrasting locations.
- Enrich the theoretical and applied understandings of the growing TBI population of Aboriginal and Torres Strait women and their experiences of change and reconstruction of self-identity after a head injury acquired through family violence.
- Develop outputs (such as resources) and a rigorous theoretical framework to inform government (national, state, local level) policies and programs.
2. Methods
2.1. Setting
2.2. Conceptual and Theoretical Innovation
2.3. Research Governance
2.4. Definition of Traumatic Brain Injury
2.5. Participants and Recruitment
2.5.1. Women Who Have Experienced a Head Injury through Family Violence
2.5.2. Family Members and Carers
2.5.3. Hospital Staff
2.5.4. Service Professionals, Community Groups, and National Advocacy Groups
2.6. Data Collection
2.7. Workshops
2.8. Data Analysis
2.9. Ethics
2.10. Consent
2.11. Potential Benefits and Risks
2.12. Dissemination
- Research translation workshops with services and hospital representatives as well as community presentations. Project partner policy papers for use by advocates involved in the project.
- Incorporating art, visual media, and other media to present essential information for community members about the key findings.
- Translating all findings into easy English versions of the final report.
3. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Participant Group | Examples | Sampling and Recruitment Method | Data Collection |
---|---|---|---|
Women who have experienced a head injury (or diagnosed TBI) as a result of family violence | Women (aged 18+) who have experienced a head injury (or diagnosed TBI) as a direct result of family violence | Convenience sampling via key staff within community-based service providers and community groups. Purposive sampling, as required, to include underrepresented groups (such as young women) | Individual interview or small group discussion |
Family members or caregivers of women | May include grandmother, parent, sister, guardian | Women who have experienced a head injury (or diagnosed TBI) as a direct result of family violence will be asked to nominate a family member or caregiver to participate in the project | Individual interview or small group discussion |
Hospital staff | Aboriginal Liaison Officers, Aboriginal Leadership staff, specialists, and allied health staff | Purposive and snowball sampling | Individual interview or small group discussion |
Community-based service providers | Family violence, legal and justice, health and community groups | Purposive and snowball sampling | Individual interview or small group discussion |
Workshops | Community leaders, service providers, hospital staff, national advocacy group, and policymakers | A selection of service provider and hospital staff will be directly invited to take part in a one-day workshop | Workshop discussion |
Participant Group | Topics |
---|---|
Women who have experienced a head injury (or diagnosed TBI) as a direct result of family violence |
|
Family members and carers |
|
Hospital staff |
|
Community-based service providers |
|
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Fitts, M.S.; Cullen, J.; Kingston, G.; Johnson, Y.; Wills, E.; Soldatic, K. Understanding the Lives of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Women with Traumatic Brain Injury from Family Violence in Australia: A Qualitative Study Protocol. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 1607. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20021607
Fitts MS, Cullen J, Kingston G, Johnson Y, Wills E, Soldatic K. Understanding the Lives of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Women with Traumatic Brain Injury from Family Violence in Australia: A Qualitative Study Protocol. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(2):1607. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20021607
Chicago/Turabian StyleFitts, Michelle S., Jennifer Cullen, Gail Kingston, Yasmin Johnson, Elaine Wills, and Karen Soldatic. 2023. "Understanding the Lives of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Women with Traumatic Brain Injury from Family Violence in Australia: A Qualitative Study Protocol" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 2: 1607. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20021607
APA StyleFitts, M. S., Cullen, J., Kingston, G., Johnson, Y., Wills, E., & Soldatic, K. (2023). Understanding the Lives of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Women with Traumatic Brain Injury from Family Violence in Australia: A Qualitative Study Protocol. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(2), 1607. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20021607