JMIR Research Protocols (Jan 2022)

The Future of Disability Research in Australia: Protocol for a Multiphase Research Agenda–Setting Study

  • Jennifer Smith-Merry,
  • Mary-Ann O'Donovan,
  • Angela Dew,
  • Bronwyn Hemsley,
  • Christine Imms,
  • Gemma Carey,
  • Simon Darcy,
  • Kathy Ellem,
  • Gisselle Gallego,
  • John Gilroy,
  • Adam Guastella,
  • Manjula Marella,
  • Keith McVilly,
  • Jenny Plumb

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/31126
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
p. e31126

Abstract

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BackgroundFor people with disabilities to live a good life, it is essential that funded research in health and social care addresses their interests, meets their needs, and fills gaps in our understanding of the impact that services, systems, and policies may have on them. Decisions about research funding should be based on an understanding of the research priorities of people with disabilities, their supporters and allies, disability researchers, service providers, and policy makers working in the field. ObjectiveThe aim of this protocol is to describe the research design and methods of a large-scale, disability research agenda–setting exercise conducted in 2021 in Australia. MethodsThe research agenda–setting exercise involves 3 integrated phases of work. In the first phase, a previous audit of disability research in Australia is updated to understand previous research and continuing gaps in the research. Building on this, the second phase involves consultation with stakeholders—people with disabilities and their supporters and family members, the disability workforce, and people working within services and connected sectors (eg, aging, employment, education, and housing), academia, and public policy. Data for the second phase will be gathered as follows: a national web-based survey; a consultation process undertaken through the government and nongovernment sector; and targeted consultation with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, children with disabilities and their families, people with cognitive disability, and people with complex communication needs. The third phase involves a web-based survey to develop a research agenda based on the outcomes of all phases. ResultsWe have started working on 2 parts of the research prioritization exercise. Through the research-mapping exercise we identified 1241 journal articles and book chapters (referred to as research papers) and 225 publicly available reports (referred to as research reports) produced over the 2018-2020 period. Data collection for the national survey has also been completed. We received 973 fully completed responses to the survey. Analysis of these data is currently underway. ConclusionsThis multi-method research agenda–setting study will be the first to provide an indication of the areas of health and social research that people across the Australian disability community consider should be prioritized in disability research funding decisions. Project results from all phases will be made publicly available through reports, open-access journal publications, and Easy Read documents. International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID)DERR1-10.2196/31126