TY - JOUR
T1 - Co-producing ethics guidelines together with people with learning disabilities
AU - Bottomley, Mary
AU - Bradley, Jodie
AU - Clark, Lisa
AU - Collis, Bryan
AU - Srdanovic, Bojana Daw
AU - Farnsworth, Victoria
AU - Ferguson, Annie
AU - Goodley, Dan
AU - Fox, Andrew
AU - Hayden, Nikita K.
AU - Lawthom, Charlotte
AU - Lawthom, Rebecca
AU - Magwood, Claudia
AU - McLean, Robert
AU - Middleton, Ian
AU - Owen, Alison
AU - Prothero, Matty
AU - Rice, Simon
AU - Richards, Simon
AU - Runswick-Cole, Katherine
AU - Scargill, Kelly
AU - Shankar, Rohit
AU - Wood, Toni Ann
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors. British Journal of Learning Disabilities published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
PY - 2024/12
Y1 - 2024/12
N2 - Background: We are a research team of clinical, academic and advocacy-based researchers with and without learning disabilities, working on the Humanising Healthcare (for people with learning disabilities) project. The project is dedicated to finding and sharing healthcare practices that enhance the lives of people with learning disabilities. As part of our ethics applications to access National Health Service study sites for fieldwork, we worked together to write guiding principles for co-producing research ethics with researchers with learning disabilities. In this paper, we introduce these Participatory Ethics Good Practice Guidelines and reflect on our collaboration. Methods: We reflect on developing the Participatory Ethics Good Practice Guidelines. These guidelines were developed during online co-production meetings with our full research team, including advocacy-based organisation researchers, clinical researchers and university researchers. We considered consent, understanding research, and understanding research methods during the development of these Guidelines. Findings: We present ten guidelines for co-producing research with people with learning disabilities. Conclusions: Our findings may be helpful to researchers with learning disabilities, university and clinical researchers, funders, and those who work in research governance (e.g., ethics committees and university research departments).
AB - Background: We are a research team of clinical, academic and advocacy-based researchers with and without learning disabilities, working on the Humanising Healthcare (for people with learning disabilities) project. The project is dedicated to finding and sharing healthcare practices that enhance the lives of people with learning disabilities. As part of our ethics applications to access National Health Service study sites for fieldwork, we worked together to write guiding principles for co-producing research ethics with researchers with learning disabilities. In this paper, we introduce these Participatory Ethics Good Practice Guidelines and reflect on our collaboration. Methods: We reflect on developing the Participatory Ethics Good Practice Guidelines. These guidelines were developed during online co-production meetings with our full research team, including advocacy-based organisation researchers, clinical researchers and university researchers. We considered consent, understanding research, and understanding research methods during the development of these Guidelines. Findings: We present ten guidelines for co-producing research with people with learning disabilities. Conclusions: Our findings may be helpful to researchers with learning disabilities, university and clinical researchers, funders, and those who work in research governance (e.g., ethics committees and university research departments).
KW - co-production
KW - ethics
KW - inclusive research
KW - intellectual disability
KW - learning disability
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85186932613&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://pearl.plymouth.ac.uk/context/pms-research/article/2091/viewcontent/Brit_J_Learn_Disabil___2024___Bottomley___Co_producing_ethics_guidelines_together_with_people_with_learning_disabilities.pdf
U2 - 10.1111/bld.12590
DO - 10.1111/bld.12590
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85186932613
SN - 1354-4187
VL - 52
SP - 611
EP - 632
JO - British Journal of Learning Disabilities
JF - British Journal of Learning Disabilities
IS - 4
ER -