4.4 Review

Children, young people and parent engagement in health intervention design and implementation: A scoping review

Journal

HEALTH EXPECTATIONS
Volume 26, Issue 1, Pages 1-15

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/hex.13572

Keywords

children; engagement; health interventions; parent; young people

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Engaging children and young people (CYP) with and without their parents in health research has the potential to improve the development and implementation of health interventions. However, the scope of engagement activities and barriers to their engagement in this population are unknown. This review found limited CYP engagement throughout the research cycle, with no observed differences between studies engaging CYP or CYP and parents. The studies also lacked information on how these relationships affected the outcomes of engagement. Engagement was primarily enabled by maintaining resources and relationships among stakeholders.
Introduction Engaging children and young people (CYP) with and without their parents in health research has the potential to improve the development and implementation of health interventions. However, to our knowledge, the scope of engagement activities used with this population and barriers to their engagement is unknown. The objective of this review was to identify and describe CYP engagement with and without their parents in the development and/or implementation of health interventions. Methods This scoping review included any primary research studies reporting on engaging CYP, with or without parents, in the design and/or implementation of health interventions. Healthcare professionals had to be involved over the course of the study and the study had to take place in either community, primary or tertiary care settings. The following databases were searched in May 2017, May 2020 and June 2021: Medline (OVID), CINAHL (EBSCO) and Embase (Elsevier). Two independent reviewers screened titles, abstracts and full-text articles and used a previously piloted extraction form to extract and summarize information from the included articles. Results Twenty-eight articles discussing twenty-four studies were included. CYP engagement throughout the research cycle was limited. There were no observed differences in the reported presence of engagement, types of interventions or outcomes of engagement between studies engaging CYP or CYP and parents. Studies engaging CYP and parents contained limited information on how these relationships affected outcomes of engagement. Engagement was enabled primarily by the maintenance of resources and relationships among stakeholders. Conclusions Although CYP engagement often influenced health intervention and implementation design, they are inconsistently engaged across the research cycle. It is unclear whether parental involvement enhances CYP engagement. Future research should consider reporting guidelines to clarify the level of CYP and/or parent engagement, and enhance CYP engagement by fostering synergistic and sustainable partnerships with key stakeholders. Patient or Public Contribution A parent partner with codesign experience contributed to the creation of the research questions, screened titles, abstracts and full texts, helped with data extraction and provided feedback on the manuscript.

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