Understanding the inclusion and participation of adults from Black African Diaspora Communities (BAFDC) in health and care research in the UK: a realist review protocol

Eleanor Hoverd*, Violet Effiom, Dionne Gravesend, Lorna Hollowood, Tony Kelly, Esther Mukuka, Taiwo Owatemi, Ify Sargent, Shane Ward, Rachel Spencer, Dawn Edge, Jeremy Dale

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Introduction: People from Black African Diaspora Communities (BAFDC) experience poorer health outcomes, have many long-term conditions and are persistently under-represented in health and care research. There is limited focus on programmes, or interventions that support inclusion and participation of people from BAFDC in research. Through coproduction, this realist review seeks to provide a programme theory explaining what context and mechanisms may be required, to produce outcomes that facilitate inclusion and participation for people from BAFDC in health and care research, in the UK.

Methods and analysis: A group of people from BAFDC with lived and professional experience, representing all levels of the health and care research system, will coproduce a realist review with a team of African-Caribbean, white British and white British of Polish origin health and care researchers. They will follow Pawson’s five steps: (1) shaping the scope of the review; (2) searching for evidence; (3) document selection and appraisal; (4) data extraction and (5) data synthesis. The coproduction group will help to map the current landscape, identifying key issues that may inhibit or facilitate inclusion. Data will be extracted, analysed and synthesised following realist logic analysis, identifying and explaining how context and mechanisms are conceptualised in the literature and the types of contextual factors that exist and impact on inclusion and participation. Findings will be reported in accordance with Realist and Meta-narrative Evidence Synthesis Evolving Standards .

Ethics and dissemination: The coproduction group will agree an ethical approach considering accountability, responsibility and power dynamics, by establishing a terms of reference, taking a reflexive approach and coproducing an ethical framework. Findings will be disseminated to BAFDC and the research community through arts-based methods, peer-reviewed publications and conference presentations, agreeing a coproduced strategy for dissemination. Ethical review is not required.

PROSPERO registration number: CRD42024517124.
Original languageEnglish
Article numbere082564
Number of pages10
JournalBMJ open
Volume14
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 29 Mar 2024

Bibliographical note

Funding:
EH is funded by the NIHR (Health Education England/National Institute for Health and Care Research Clinical Doctoral Research Fellowships programme, grant number 302121). SS is part funded by the NIHR Applied Research Collaboration (ARC) West Midlands (grant number NIHR200165)], the NIHR Health Protection Research Unit (HPRU) Gastrointestinal Infections (grant number NIHR200910), the NIHR HPRU Genomics and Enabling data (grant number NIHR200892), the NIHR West Midlands Evidence Synthesis Group (grant number NIHR153453) and the NIHR Health Determinants Research Collaboration Coventry (not yet awarded).

Keywords

  • clinical trial
  • health equity
  • health policy
  • health services
  • health services accessibility
  • patient participation

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