Inclusive Research in Health, Rehabilitation and Assistive Technology: Beyond the Binary of the ‘Researcher’ and the ‘Researched’
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. How Does This Influence Our Knowing and Doing?
3. What Do Disability Inclusive Research Principles Look Like in the Fields of Health and Rehabilitation?
…being listened to, to be understood, and have a right to interact on our terms, and have the outcomes we choose in a timeframe we choose. We need to sit and talk as equals respectfully. We don’t need to be talked down to. We also need to feel relaxed, and know it’s okay for us to speak up. After generations of control of our people, and being kept away from education and its benefits, we still feel the effects…We don’t expect much, but what we do expect is respect, dignity, understanding, and choice. You need to talk to us mobs in the terms we understand. We don’t understand everything you are talking about, so talk to us in our words, don’t use your jargon, bring it down, right down, to an equal level where we get it, we understand and we feel comfortable.
Thanks for your presentation. It is excellent. I do however, need a separate video file and ppt [PowerPoint] file for consistency. All other presenters have sent the two separate files. Sorry for the inconvenience, but can you please send the two files separately, as per the instructions.
If you were talking to people about making a conference accessible, people will talk about interpreters, ramps, things like that. Or a deafblind person who needs tactile interpreting. Or a person with intellectual disability who needs cognitive accessibility. But I need virtual accessibility… and to drop me…just because I am the only one talking about it, its terrible.
When you come to me with a questionnaire, and it says to me, is my answer a or b, and I say well actually my answer is c,d,e,f and sometimes z, then I don’t want the researcher to say well sorry that’s impossible, I want them to say ‘hey wow—you are the person with the disability’… my lived experience is real, I want to be believed as a person with disability and if what I say doesn’t fit with your paradigm, that means your paradigm is wrong. If what I say is something that your theory says is impossible, that doesn’t mean that my experience hasn’t happened, it means your theory needs to be revised, and that what collaborative research is about—that my experience is just as important as your theory or your paradigm.
When learning about how to do good research, you are told about all the steps you need to take to ensure rigor in the planning, execution and reporting. You learn about the pros and cons of each methodology. For surveys, the advantages are that they enable you to obtain a large amount of data from a representative sample, so that the results are generalizable to a specific population. One of the disadvantages of surveys being that the data is unlikely to contain the same level of depth as interviews or focus groups. You learn how to analyze data, and in the case of closed-ended questions, where respondents select ‘other’, about techniques you can use to interrogate those responses to identify themes, or the most common responses. You learn that it is not a requirement to provide every possible breakdown of the data, rather you need to present the highlights, or those findings that are statistical and/or have practical significance. So, consequently, if only one participant answers ‘z’, their response gets left out of the findings. The same is true in research using interviews or focus groups as the methodology. Thematic analysis of the data similarly requires the researcher(s) to examine the data to identify common themes that come up repeatedly. However, there are instances where a response is a one-off, there is no theme, and whilst it is not included in the findings I can see how this could lead participants such as RB feeling that their voice had not been heard, or worse still completely ignored when reading the findings.
RB also mentioned the need for theories to sometimes be revised, which can often be easier said than done, as people (i.e., reviewers, editors) can be much more accepting of ‘confirming’ evidence. For example, …a review in 2005 found significant results are more likely to be published (Dubben and Beck-Bornholdt 2005). The source of this problem is unknown, is it failure of the researcher(s) to write up the study, failure to submit for review, or failure for the paper to be accepted by a journal. Consequences of leaving non-significant findings unreported, apart from an unproductive expenditure of time and funding, are the potential to impede progress, prevent the creation of new theories or the revision of existing theories. Ferguson and Heene (2012) reported that publication bias can lead researchers to conduct studies and analyze results in ways that minimizes the danger of non-significant results. This too, is something I have encountered in the very early stages of my research career. I recall running an experiment and analyzing the data and the results being insignificant. However, rather than our data and findings offering the potential to revise an existing theory, I was told that our non-significant findings were due to having some outliers in the sample. I was subsequently asked to re-advertise and repeat the study with some ‘replacement’ participants, and re-run the analysis. In such a pursuit to obtain statistically significant findings that support an existing theory, it seemed like we were potentially removing important information about the variability we had encountered, and overestimating the true effect of the existing theory.
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | R.B. chooses to describe herself with these words. |
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Disability Inclusive Research Principles (Johnson and Walmsley 2010) | Plain Language Explanations Developed by the Authors of This Paper |
---|---|
Research that is informed by and/or led by people with disability | Research that is important to, and/or led by, people with disability
|
Ownership | Identifying who the research belongs to
|
Inclusive and participatory | Research is inclusive and people with disability are part of the research team
|
Co-presenting | Sharing of research activities and findings includes people with disability as co-presenters
|
Materials that are accessible | Information is accessible
|
A range of types of activities | Research activities are flexible
|
Research that transfers through to real life | Research should support people to have a better life
|
Re-defining what research is | Change what research is
|
“The right people asking the right questions and getting the right answers” | Think about the questions we should ask and who should be invited to answer these questions
|
Consent | Consent
|
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Layton, N.; Bould, E.; Buchanan, R.; Bredin, J.; Callaway, L. Inclusive Research in Health, Rehabilitation and Assistive Technology: Beyond the Binary of the ‘Researcher’ and the ‘Researched’. Soc. Sci. 2022, 11, 233. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11060233
Layton N, Bould E, Buchanan R, Bredin J, Callaway L. Inclusive Research in Health, Rehabilitation and Assistive Technology: Beyond the Binary of the ‘Researcher’ and the ‘Researched’. Social Sciences. 2022; 11(6):233. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11060233
Chicago/Turabian StyleLayton, Natasha, Em Bould, Ricky Buchanan, Jonathon Bredin, and Libby Callaway. 2022. "Inclusive Research in Health, Rehabilitation and Assistive Technology: Beyond the Binary of the ‘Researcher’ and the ‘Researched’" Social Sciences 11, no. 6: 233. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11060233
APA StyleLayton, N., Bould, E., Buchanan, R., Bredin, J., & Callaway, L. (2022). Inclusive Research in Health, Rehabilitation and Assistive Technology: Beyond the Binary of the ‘Researcher’ and the ‘Researched’. Social Sciences, 11(6), 233. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11060233