Community-engaged measurement of substance use, risk, and protective factors in Indigenous populations: a systematic review of measure development and validation studies ...
Many substance use related measures have not been evaluated or developed within American Indian, Alaska Native, or First Nations (Indigenous) populations, limiting generalizability and study outcome interpretation. Traditional measurement processes limit Indigenous engagement by centering researcher...
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Format: | Article in Journal/Newspaper |
Language: | unknown |
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OSF Registries
2023
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Online Access: | https://dx.doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/pc9kr https://osf.io/pc9kr/ |
Summary: | Many substance use related measures have not been evaluated or developed within American Indian, Alaska Native, or First Nations (Indigenous) populations, limiting generalizability and study outcome interpretation. Traditional measurement processes limit Indigenous engagement by centering researchers as decision makers in development and validation processes (Boateng et al., 2018; Clark & Watson, 2019). Strides have been made toward increasing AI governance in research, namely by working within a community-engaged research orientation (Wallerstein, 2021). Community-engaged research aims to ameliorate power disparities in research projects by emphasizing comprehensive collaboration. Within this framework, opportunities for collaboration with Indigenous people in measure development studies abound, enabling Indigenous people the power to define their own experiences and constructs through measurement (Walls et al., 2019). Substance use can be operationalized differently, and factors associated with ... |
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