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A Rapid Review of Internet Mediated Research Methods with People with Dementia: Practical, Technical and Ethical Considerations

Journal

QUALITATIVE REPORT
Volume 26, Issue 11, Pages 3318-3341

Publisher

NOVA SOUTHEASTERN UNIV
DOI: 10.46743/2160-3715/2021.5089

Keywords

scoping review; dementia; online research; internet research; qualitative research; technology; inclusive research

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Research with People with Dementia (PwD) faces challenges due to disease symptoms and logistical issues. Internet-based methods have become a viable option during COVID-19, but require careful consideration of technical support and ethical concerns. Researchers must navigate practical, technical, and ethical challenges to effectively engage with PwD online.
Doing research with People with Dementia (PwD) can be challenging given that disease symptoms of anxiety, forgetfulness, and fluctuating mental capacity can make recruitment and data collection difficult. Once COVID-19 made face-to-face data collection impractical, using internet-based methods became an alternative option to continue with research. However, data collection with PwD over the internet requires strategies to observe, support, and enable them to engage with research, especially with qualitative approaches. Nine articles were selected via a decade rapid scoping review (undertaken March-June 2020) to identify qualitative online methods used with PwD and associated challenges. Methods used were online interviews, clinical assessment/telemedicine, and textual analysis from blogs, forum posts, and Tweets created by PwD. Practical challenges identified: the researchers' limited ability to manage the physical and social environment. Technical challenges identified: the need for a high degree of technical support for participants prior and during data collection. Ethical challenges identified, negotiating confidentiality, obtaining valid informed consent, and ensuring data security. Implicit findings found related to how researchers perceived and treated online data retrieved from the internet and how the challenges mentioned in the included articles did not link to dementia symptoms.

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