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Res Involv Engagem ; 7(1): 47, 2021 Jun 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34176521

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Engaging parents in child health research can facilitate choosing relevant research questions, recruiting participants who reflect the diversity of large communities, and disseminating study results to communities in accessible ways. MAIN BODY: Primary care well-child visit systems present a foundation for trusting relationships between families and clinicians, lending itself well to a system where health research is embedded into the delivery of health care. We provide an example of a practice-based research network called TARGet Kids!, which is a longitudinal cohort study of children from birth to adolescence. Researchers and clinicians have partnered with parents of children participating in TARGet Kids! to ensure child health research is centred on family values and preferences. A Parent And Clinician Team (PACT) was formed to set research priorities, co-design research protocols, troubleshoot issues, and communicate research to knowledge users. CONCLUSION: This partnership will facilitate child health research which is feasible, relevant and inclusive for improving children's health care and public health policy.


Including parents as partners in child health research can lead to choosing relevant research questions, recruiting children to participate who represent the general population, and sharing study results with communities. The structure of primary care offered to children presents an opportunity for building trusting relationships between families and clinicians, which may encourage parents and health care providers to participate in child health research. We provide an example of an ongoing study called TARGet Kids!, which includes children from birth to adolescence who attend regular health care visits. Researchers and clinicians have partnered with parents of children participating in TARGet Kids! to ensure child health research is centered on family values and preferences. A Parent And Clinician Team (PACT) was formed to set research priorities, design research studies together, troubleshoot issues, and communicate research findings back to health care providers, families, and policy makers. This partnership will lay a foundation for child health research which is practical, relevant to families and inclusive for improving children's health care and public health policy.

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