Lazarus Lisa, Shaw Ashley, LeBlanc Sean, Martin Alana, Marshall Zack, Weersink Kristen, Lin Dolly, Mandryk Kira, Tyndall Mark W
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, 216 Murray Street, Ottawa, ON K1N 5N1, Canada.
Harm Reduct J. 2014 Oct 13;11(1):26. doi: 10.1186/1477-7517-11-26.
Grounded in a community-based participatory research (CBPR) framework, the PROUD (Participatory Research in Ottawa: Understanding Drugs) Study aims to better understand HIV risk and prevalence among people who use drugs in Ottawa, Ontario. The purpose of this paper is to describe the establishment of the PROUD research partnership.
PROUD relies on peers' expertise stemming from their lived experience with drug use to guide all aspects of this CBPR project. A Community Advisory Committee (CAC), comprised of eight people with lived experience, three allies and three ex-officio members, has been meeting since May 2012 to oversee all aspects of the project. Eleven medical students from the University of Ottawa were recruited to work alongside the committee. Training was provided on CBPR; HIV and harm reduction; and administering HIV point-of-care (POC) tests so that the CAC can play a key role in research design, data collection, analysis, and knowledge translation activities.
From March-December 2013, the study enrolled 858 participants who use drugs (defined as anyone who has injected or smoked drugs other than marijuana in the last 12 months) into a prospective cohort study. Participants completed a one-time questionnaire administered by a trained peer or medical student, who then administered an HIV POC test. Recruitment, interviews and testing occurred in both the fixed research site and various community settings across Ottawa. With consent, prospective follow-up will occur through linkages to health care records available through the Institute for Clinical and Evaluation Sciences.
The PROUD Study meaningfully engaged the communities of people who use drugs in Ottawa through the formation of the CAC, the training of peers as community-based researchers, and integrated KTE throughout the research project. This project successfully supported skill development across the team and empowered people with drug use experience to take on leadership roles, ensuring that this research process will promote change at the local level. The CBPR methods developed in this study provide important insights for future research projects with people who use drugs in other settings.
基于社区参与式研究(CBPR)框架,“自豪”(渥太华参与式研究:了解毒品)研究旨在更好地了解安大略省渥太华市吸毒人群中的艾滋病毒风险和流行情况。本文的目的是描述“自豪”研究伙伴关系的建立。
“自豪”研究依靠同伴从吸毒生活经历中获得的专业知识来指导这个CBPR项目的各个方面。一个社区咨询委员会(CAC)自2012年5月起开始开会,监督项目的各个方面,该委员会由八名有生活经历的人、三名盟友和三名当然成员组成。招募了11名渥太华大学的医学生与该委员会合作。提供了关于CBPR、艾滋病毒和减少伤害以及进行艾滋病毒即时检测(POC)的培训,以便CAC能够在研究设计、数据收集、分析和知识转化活动中发挥关键作用。
2013年3月至12月,该研究招募了858名吸毒参与者(定义为在过去12个月内注射或吸食过大麻以外毒品的任何人)进入一项前瞻性队列研究。参与者完成了一份由经过培训的同伴或医学生发放的一次性问卷,然后进行艾滋病毒POC检测。招募、访谈和检测在固定研究地点和渥太华市的各种社区环境中进行。经同意,将通过与临床和评价科学研究所提供的医疗记录建立联系进行前瞻性随访。
“自豪”研究通过成立CAC、培训同伴成为社区研究人员以及在整个研究项目中整合知识转化、传播与交流(KTE),有效地让渥太华市吸毒人群社区参与进来。该项目成功支持了整个团队的技能发展,并使有吸毒经历的人有能力担任领导角色,确保这一研究过程将促进地方层面的变革。本研究中开发的CBPR方法为未来在其他环境中针对吸毒人群的研究项目提供了重要见解。