Adjust your own oxygen mask before helping those around you: an autoethnography of participatory research

Abstract Background There is a need to unpack the empirical, practical, and personal challenges within participatory approaches advocated to optimize implementation. The unpredictable, chaotic nature of participatory approaches complicates application of implementation theories, methods, and strateg...

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Main Authors: Abby M. Steketee, Thomas G. Archibald, Samantha M. Harden
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-09-01
Series:Implementation Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13012-020-01002-1
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spelling doaj-18e6c0d517564c6bb01521ea8ca20d1c2020-11-25T02:52:42ZengBMCImplementation Science1748-59082020-09-0115112010.1186/s13012-020-01002-1Adjust your own oxygen mask before helping those around you: an autoethnography of participatory researchAbby M. Steketee0Thomas G. Archibald1Samantha M. Harden2Department of Human Nutrition, Foods, and Exercise, Virginia TechDepartment of Agricultural, Leadership, and Community Education, Virginia TechDepartment of Human Nutrition, Foods, and Exercise, Virginia TechAbstract Background There is a need to unpack the empirical, practical, and personal challenges within participatory approaches advocated to optimize implementation. The unpredictable, chaotic nature of participatory approaches complicates application of implementation theories, methods, and strategies which do not address researchers’ situatedness within participatory processes. As an implementation scientist, addressing one’s own situatedness through critical reflection is important to unearth how conscious and unconscious approaches, including ontological and epistemological underpinnings, influence the participatory context, process, and outcomes. Therefore, the aim of this exploratory work is to investigate the heretofore blind spot toward the lived experience of implementation researchers within the participatory process. Methods We developed an integrated research-practice partnership (IRPP) to inform the implementation of a gestational weight gain (GWG) control program. Within this IRPP, one investigator conducted a 12-month autoethnography. Data collection and triangulation included field notes, cultural artifacts, and systematic timeline tracking. Data analysis included ethnographic-theoretical dialogue and restorying to synthesize key events and epiphanies into a narrative. Results Analysis revealed the unpredicted evolution of the GWG program into a maternal health fair and three themes within the researchers’ lived experience: (1) permeable work boundaries, (2) individual and collective blind spots toward the ontological and epistemological underpinnings of implementation paradigms, and (3) maladaptive behaviors seemingly reinforced by the research culture. These themes contributed to the chaos of implementation and to researchers’ experience of inadequate recovery from cognitive, emotional, and practical demands. These themes also demonstrated the importance of contextual factors, subjectivity, and value-based judgments within implementation research. Conclusion Building on extant qualitative research guidelines, we suggest that researchers anchor their approach to implementation in reflexivity, intentionally and iteratively reflecting on their own situatedness. Through this autoethnography, we have elucidated several strategies based on critical reflection including examining philosophical underpinnings of research, adopting restorative practices that align with one’s values, and embracing personal presence as a foundation of scientific productivity. Within the predominant (post-) positivism paradigms, autoethnography may be criticized as unscientifically subjective or self-indulgent. However, this work demonstrates that autoethnography is a vehicle for third-person observation and first-person critical reflection that is transformative in understanding and optimizing implementation contexts, processes, and outcomes.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13012-020-01002-1ImplementationNovel methodsEpistemologyKnowledge translationContextEngagement
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Abby M. Steketee
Thomas G. Archibald
Samantha M. Harden
spellingShingle Abby M. Steketee
Thomas G. Archibald
Samantha M. Harden
Adjust your own oxygen mask before helping those around you: an autoethnography of participatory research
Implementation Science
Implementation
Novel methods
Epistemology
Knowledge translation
Context
Engagement
author_facet Abby M. Steketee
Thomas G. Archibald
Samantha M. Harden
author_sort Abby M. Steketee
title Adjust your own oxygen mask before helping those around you: an autoethnography of participatory research
title_short Adjust your own oxygen mask before helping those around you: an autoethnography of participatory research
title_full Adjust your own oxygen mask before helping those around you: an autoethnography of participatory research
title_fullStr Adjust your own oxygen mask before helping those around you: an autoethnography of participatory research
title_full_unstemmed Adjust your own oxygen mask before helping those around you: an autoethnography of participatory research
title_sort adjust your own oxygen mask before helping those around you: an autoethnography of participatory research
publisher BMC
series Implementation Science
issn 1748-5908
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Abstract Background There is a need to unpack the empirical, practical, and personal challenges within participatory approaches advocated to optimize implementation. The unpredictable, chaotic nature of participatory approaches complicates application of implementation theories, methods, and strategies which do not address researchers’ situatedness within participatory processes. As an implementation scientist, addressing one’s own situatedness through critical reflection is important to unearth how conscious and unconscious approaches, including ontological and epistemological underpinnings, influence the participatory context, process, and outcomes. Therefore, the aim of this exploratory work is to investigate the heretofore blind spot toward the lived experience of implementation researchers within the participatory process. Methods We developed an integrated research-practice partnership (IRPP) to inform the implementation of a gestational weight gain (GWG) control program. Within this IRPP, one investigator conducted a 12-month autoethnography. Data collection and triangulation included field notes, cultural artifacts, and systematic timeline tracking. Data analysis included ethnographic-theoretical dialogue and restorying to synthesize key events and epiphanies into a narrative. Results Analysis revealed the unpredicted evolution of the GWG program into a maternal health fair and three themes within the researchers’ lived experience: (1) permeable work boundaries, (2) individual and collective blind spots toward the ontological and epistemological underpinnings of implementation paradigms, and (3) maladaptive behaviors seemingly reinforced by the research culture. These themes contributed to the chaos of implementation and to researchers’ experience of inadequate recovery from cognitive, emotional, and practical demands. These themes also demonstrated the importance of contextual factors, subjectivity, and value-based judgments within implementation research. Conclusion Building on extant qualitative research guidelines, we suggest that researchers anchor their approach to implementation in reflexivity, intentionally and iteratively reflecting on their own situatedness. Through this autoethnography, we have elucidated several strategies based on critical reflection including examining philosophical underpinnings of research, adopting restorative practices that align with one’s values, and embracing personal presence as a foundation of scientific productivity. Within the predominant (post-) positivism paradigms, autoethnography may be criticized as unscientifically subjective or self-indulgent. However, this work demonstrates that autoethnography is a vehicle for third-person observation and first-person critical reflection that is transformative in understanding and optimizing implementation contexts, processes, and outcomes.
topic Implementation
Novel methods
Epistemology
Knowledge translation
Context
Engagement
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13012-020-01002-1
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