Vandermorris Ashley, Wigle Jannah, Tam Michelle, Peresin Joelle, Dalal Siya, Kwong Ingrid, Little Morgan, Polakovic Mia, Begun Stephanie, Imran Mohlil, Kosevic Andjela, Nayab Ajwa, Ray Madeline, Byman Heidi, Gammond Journey, Rathwell Stephanie, Wall Lilith, Toulany Alene, McKinnon Britt, Brown Hilary, Harrison Megan E
The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids), Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Health Promot Pract. 2024 Dec 18:15248399241298836. doi: 10.1177/15248399241298836.
Engaging adolescents and young people as partners in research is increasingly acknowledged as a vital strategy to ensure diverse voices are heard and to catalyze social change. This article, coauthored by adolescent and adult researchers, presents the methodological approach and outcomes of a youth-led participatory action research (YPAR) study in which three teams of youth researchers developed and implemented projects examining equity-related factors affecting adolescent sexual and reproductive health and rights (ASRHR) in Ontario, Canada. Teams of four assigned-female youth researchers aged 16-19 years were recruited from three priority regions through purposive sampling. Selected youth completed a paid 5-day virtual YPAR training. Each youth team, supported by adult research mentors, identified key ASRHR issues in their region and developed a related research question. Each team then determined their study's design, obtained institutional ethics approval, and conducted data collection, analysis, and interpretation. Based on their findings, teams proposed potential solutions and communicated results to multiple stakeholders. Methodologically, the YPAR process amplified youth voices through a social justice-framed approach to examining ASRHR. Centering the perspectives, values, and experiences of youth positively impacted the youth researchers themselves, while yielding results that were relevant, meaningful, adolescent-responsive, and culturally informed. Results from the youth-led projects identified multiple barriers to accessing sexual and reproductive health services and products. Policy and practice implications encompassed concerns related to geographical accessibility, equity, service provider competence, and content of sexuality education curricula.
让青少年和年轻人作为研究伙伴越来越被视为一项至关重要的策略,以确保多元声音得到倾听并推动社会变革。本文由青少年研究人员和成年研究人员共同撰写,介绍了一项由青年主导的参与式行动研究(YPAR)的方法和成果。在该研究中,三个青年研究团队开展并实施了项目,调查影响加拿大安大略省青少年性与生殖健康及权利(ASRHR)的公平相关因素。通过目的抽样从三个重点地区招募了由四名16至19岁指定女性青年研究人员组成的团队。被选中的青年完成了为期5天的付费虚拟YPAR培训。每个青年团队在成年研究导师的支持下,确定了所在地区关键的ASRHR问题,并提出了相关研究问题。然后每个团队确定其研究设计,获得机构伦理批准,并进行数据收集、分析和解读。基于研究结果,各团队提出了潜在解决方案,并将结果传达给多个利益相关者。在方法上,YPAR过程通过一种以社会正义为框架的方法来审视ASRHR,从而放大了青年的声音。以青年的观点、价值观和经历为中心,对青年研究人员自身产生了积极影响,同时得出了相关、有意义、适合青少年且具有文化内涵的结果。青年主导项目的结果确定了获得性与生殖健康服务和产品的多重障碍。政策和实践方面的影响包括与地理可及性、公平性、服务提供者能力以及性教育课程内容相关的问题。