一项评估儿童期虐待幸存者参与英国研究形成、实施和传播的程度和质量的系统审查

S. Kennedy, S. Bewley, Jane Chevous, C. Perôt, M. Vigneri, L. Bacchus
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引用次数: 2

摘要

尽管对与遭受童年虐待有关的身心健康后果有了公认的了解,但在形成、开展和传播研究方面,幸存者的积极声音很少出现。为了探索英国儿童虐待成年幸存者参与的程度和质量,我们对“与”或“由”幸存者进行的研究进行了系统回顾,并根据幸存者之声宪章的原则共同制作的“幸存者研究参与阶梯”新工具分析了参与情况。对相关灰色文献和同行评议文献进行了检索,在删除重复文献后检索到662篇文献。其中,116篇关于英国儿童虐待成年幸存者的全文文章随后被评估为参与(不作为“受试者”参与),其中只有15篇(12.9%)报告了幸存者领导、共同制作、建议或咨询的活动,这些都被纳入了审查。从使用阶梯的评估和分析中,我们发现消费主义模式是主要的参与形式,幸存者在孤立的阶段担任咨询角色。幸存者主导的研究很少,但在幸存者研究人员计划、实施和传播他们的工作时出现了。本次审查发现,在涉及幸存者的研究活动的水平、质量和随后的报告方面,有相当大的改进机会。该仪器的使用需要复制、验证和进一步的现场测试。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A systematic review that evaluates the extent and quality of involving childhood abuse survivors in shaping, conducting and disseminating research in the UK
Despite a well-established understanding of the mental and physical health consequences associated with exposure to childhood abuse, the active voices of survivors are rarely present in shaping, conducting and disseminating research. To explore the extent and quality of involvement with adult survivors of childhood abuse in the UK, we performed a systematic review of research conducted ‘with’ or ‘by’ survivors, and analysed involvement against a new instrument, the Survivor Research Involvement Ladder, which was co-produced drawing from the principles of the Survivors Voices Charter. A search of relevant grey and peer-reviewed literature was conducted, which retrieved 662 sources after removing duplicates. Of these, 116 full-text articles on adult survivors of childhood abuse in the UK were subsequently assessed for involvement (beyond participation as ‘subjects’), of which only 15 (12.9 per cent) reported activities led, co-produced, advised or consulted on by survivors, and these were included in the review. From evaluations and analysis using the ladder, consumerist models were found to be the dominant form of involvement, with survivors filling advisory roles at isolated stages. Survivor-led research was scarce but emerged when survivor-researchers planned, conducted and disseminated their work. This review finds considerable opportunity for improvements in the level, quality and subsequent reporting of research activities involving survivors. The use of the instrument needs replication, validation and further field-testing.
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