Strengthening Transitions in Care Lab, IWK Health, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
Faculty of Health, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
Health Expect. 2023 Feb;26(1):1-15. doi: 10.1111/hex.13572. Epub 2022 Nov 8.
Engaging children and young people (CYP) with and without their parents in health research has the potential to improve the development and implementation of health interventions. However, to our knowledge, the scope of engagement activities used with this population and barriers to their engagement is unknown. The objective of this review was to identify and describe CYP engagement with and without their parents in the development and/or implementation of health interventions.
This scoping review included any primary research studies reporting on engaging CYP, with or without parents, in the design and/or implementation of health interventions. Healthcare professionals had to be involved over the course of the study and the study had to take place in either community, primary or tertiary care settings. The following databases were searched in May 2017, May 2020 and June 2021: Medline (OVID), CINAHL (EBSCO) and Embase (Elsevier). Two independent reviewers screened titles, abstracts and full-text articles and used a previously piloted extraction form to extract and summarize information from the included articles.
Twenty-eight articles discussing twenty-four studies were included. CYP engagement throughout the research cycle was limited. There were no observed differences in the reported presence of engagement, types of interventions or outcomes of engagement between studies engaging CYP or CYP and parents. Studies engaging CYP and parents contained limited information on how these relationships affected outcomes of engagement. Engagement was enabled primarily by the maintenance of resources and relationships among stakeholders.
Although CYP engagement often influenced health intervention and implementation design, they are inconsistently engaged across the research cycle. It is unclear whether parental involvement enhances CYP engagement. Future research should consider reporting guidelines to clarify the level of CYP and/or parent engagement, and enhance CYP engagement by fostering synergistic and sustainable partnerships with key stakeholders.
A parent partner with codesign experience contributed to the creation of the research questions, screened titles, abstracts and full texts, helped with data extraction and provided feedback on the manuscript.
让儿童和青少年(CYP)及其父母参与健康研究有可能改善健康干预措施的制定和实施。然而,据我们所知,目前尚不清楚针对这一人群使用的参与活动的范围以及他们参与的障碍。本综述的目的是确定并描述 CYP 及其父母在健康干预措施的制定和/或实施过程中的参与情况。
本范围综述包括任何报告 CYP 及其父母参与设计和/或实施健康干预措施的原始研究。研究过程中必须有医疗保健专业人员参与,研究必须在社区、初级或三级保健环境中进行。2017 年 5 月、2020 年 5 月和 2021 年 6 月,在以下数据库中进行了搜索:Medline(OVID)、CINAHL(EBSCO)和 Embase(Elsevier)。两名独立审查员筛选标题、摘要和全文文章,并使用先前试点的提取表格从纳入的文章中提取和总结信息。
讨论了 24 项研究的 28 篇文章被纳入。整个研究周期中 CYP 的参与度有限。在报告的参与情况、干预类型或参与结果方面,参与 CYP 或 CYP 和父母的研究之间没有观察到差异。参与 CYP 和父母的研究对这些关系如何影响参与结果的信息有限。主要通过维持利益相关者之间的资源和关系来实现参与。
尽管 CYP 的参与通常会影响健康干预和实施设计,但在整个研究周期中,他们的参与并不一致。目前尚不清楚父母的参与是否会增强 CYP 的参与。未来的研究应考虑报告指南,以明确 CYP 和/或父母参与的程度,并通过与主要利益相关者建立协同和可持续的伙伴关系来增强 CYP 的参与。
一位有共同设计经验的家长合作伙伴参与了研究问题的创建、标题、摘要和全文的筛选、数据提取,并对稿件提供了反馈。