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Community sharing: Contextualizing Western research notions of contamination within an Indigenous research paradigm

Authors :
Shauna Milne-Price
Du Feng
Mikayla Pitts
Shannen Keene
Alma Knows His Gun McCormick
Lorenda Belone
Rae B. Howe
Dottie Castille
Mark B. Schure
Nina Wallerstein
Suzanne Held
Jillian Inouye
Sarah Allen
Source :
Am J Community Psychol
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Zenodo, 2022.

Abstract

Báa nnilah is a chronic illness self-management program designed by and for the Apsáalooke (Crow) community. Arising from a collaboration between an Indigenous non-profit organization and a university-based research team, Báa nnilah’s development, implementation and evaluation have been influenced by both Indigenous and Western research paradigms. Báa nnilah was evaluated using a randomized wait-list control group design. In a Western Research Paradigm (WRP), contamination, or intervention information shared by the intervention group with the control group, is actively discouraged as it makes ascertaining causality difficult, if not impossible. This approach is not consonant with Apsáalooke cultural values that include the encouragement of sharing helpful information with others, supporting an Indigenous Research Paradigm’s (IRP) goal of benefiting the community. The purpose of this paper is to address contamination and sharing as an area of tension between WRP and IRP. We describe how the concepts of contamination and sharing within Báa nnilah’s implementation and evaluation are interpreted differently when viewed from these contrasting paradigms, and set forth a call for greater exploration of Indigenous research approaches for developing, implementing and evaluating intervention programs in Indigenous communities. (Improving Chronic Illness Management with the Apsáalooke Nation: The Báa nnilah Project.:NCT03036189)ClinicalTrials.gov:NCT03036189)

Details

ISSN :
03036189
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Am J Community Psychol
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0f944782990d349266d46a48ebab49d9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7235721