0202411140500: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
m (3 revisions imported) |
(No difference)
|
Revision as of 05:44, 2 October 2024
State completed
Start 2024-01-01
End 2024-07-04
Form updated 2024-10-02
Inputs
Danielle Pollock (link)
ID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6604-0609
Task: Lead author
Compensation: paid
Advisory board of Aboriginal Elders, researchers, and clinicians.
Task: prioritising this topic and deeming it important for the community, providing feedback (either orally or written) throughout each stage of the review and input into the interpretation of the narrative summaries, identifying relevant evidence sources—in particular grey literature sources
Method: Formal advisory board
Communication: providing oral or written feedback
This review is part of a larger research project aimed at reducing stillbirth among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and is supported by an advisory board of Aboriginal Noongar Elders living on Whadjuk Noongar Boodja in Western Australia, researchers (including Aboriginal researchers and bereaved parents), and clinicians (midwives and obstetricians). The advisory board were involved in this review by prioritising this topic and deeming it important for the community; providing feedback (either orally or written) throughout each stage of the review and input into the interpretation of the narrative summaries and identifying relevant evidence sources—in particular grey literature sources.
Outputs and impacts
Open-access peer-reviewed systematic review (link)
Impact: highlights a gap in the evidence and the need for further investigations to gain a comprehensive understanding of the cultural perspectives surrounding stillbirth in First Nations communities
Learning relating to the importance of including First Nations researchers in stillbirth research and amplifying the voices of First Nations Peoples in research to ensure their perspectives and experiences are adequately represented.
Learning: highlights the importance of including First Nations researchers in stillbirth research and amplifying the voices of First Nations Peoples in research to ensure their perspectives and experiences are adequately represented
highlights the importance of including First Nations researchers in stillbirth research and amplifying the voices of First Nations Peoples in research to ensure their perspectives and experiences are adequately represented. By doing so, we can foster a more collaborative and culturally safe approach, which has the potential to pave the way for improved stillbirth prevention and bereavement care that aligns with the needs and values of these communities.
Methods:
This review was conducted in accordance with the JBI methodology for a convergent integrated mixed method systematic review. This review was overseen by an advisory board of Aboriginal Elders, researchers, and clinicians. A search of eight databases (PubMed, MEDLINE, PsycInfo, CINAHL, Embase, Emcare, Dissertations and Theses and Indigenous Health InfoNet) and grey literature was conducted. All studies were screened, extracted, and appraised for quality by two reviewers and results were categorised, and narratively summarised.