Khan Zeba, Seiyad Hajar, Jacob Kaiya, Arhinson Ayla, Williams Aleyah, Munro Sarah
Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Youth Partner, Toronto, Canada.
Res Involv Engagem. 2025 Jan 31;11(1):9. doi: 10.1186/s40900-025-00681-8.
Contraception care is recognized as a basic human right, however, many individuals continue to face challenges in accessing adequate care. For youth, factors that influence access to prescription contraception include affordability, availability, acceptability, and youth awareness of these options. As a result, contraception uptake in Canada remains low, with 22.9% of sexually active 15 to 24-year-olds reporting that they did not use a condom or another form of contraception the last time they had sex. Collaborating with youth and meaningfully engaging them in all stages of the research process may help us better understand and develop solutions and services that yield stronger usability among youth.
We engaged in a co-design process to involve youth in the generation of research recruitment materials. In this article, we offer a rich description of the experiences of youth as embedded researchers and contribute to the methodology of co-design research by highlighting specific characteristics in our approach that facilitated youth engagement. Through a series of six virtual workshops, four youth research assistants and eight youth advisors engaged in discussion activities that generated ideas for the recruitment materials for a research study called 'Ask Us: Youth Voices to Improve Contraception Access'. Our strategies included the (i) Re-distribution of Power to Enable Youth Participation, (ii) Use of Technology to Promote Collaboration and Confidentiality and (iii) Emphasizing Reciprocal Knowledge Building, to facilitate meaningful youth participation.
The co-design sessions resulted in the creation of the Ask Us study recruitment materials ( www.askusproject.ca ) and youth informed the chosen wording, colour scheme, images, and more. Our purposeful steps to involve embedded youth research assistants, acknowledge the differences and redistribution of power among researchers and youth advisors, use technology to promote collaboration and confidentiality and emphasize reciprocal knowledge sharing led to a meaningful co-design experience for us as youth research assistants. We argue that deeper considerations of accountability by academic researchers and embedded youth research assistants can further promote youth participation by enabling spaces where youth feel safe.
避孕护理被视为一项基本人权,然而,许多人在获得充分护理方面仍面临挑战。对于年轻人来说,影响获得处方避孕药具的因素包括可承受性、可及性、可接受性以及年轻人对这些选择的认知。因此,加拿大的避孕措施使用率仍然很低,22.9% 的15至24岁性活跃青年表示,他们上次性行为时未使用避孕套或其他避孕方式。与年轻人合作并让他们切实参与研究过程的各个阶段,可能有助于我们更好地理解并开发出在年轻人中可用性更强的解决方案和服务。
我们开展了一个共同设计过程,让年轻人参与研究招募材料的生成。在本文中,我们详细描述了作为嵌入式研究人员的年轻人的经历,并通过突出我们方法中促进年轻人参与的具体特征,为共同设计研究方法做出贡献。通过一系列六次虚拟研讨会,四名青年研究助理和八名青年顾问参与了讨论活动,为一项名为“问我们:改善避孕措施可及性的青年声音”的研究生成了招募材料的想法。我们的策略包括:(i)重新分配权力以促进青年参与;(ii)利用技术促进合作和保密;(iii)强调相互知识构建,以促进年轻人有意义地参与。