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Journal Article

Citation

Sulaiman-Hill R, Porter R, Schluter P, Beaglehole B, Dean S, Tanveer S, Boden J, Bell C. BJPsych Open 2024; 10(1): e27.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2024, Royal College of Psychiatrists)

DOI

10.1192/bjo.2023.641

PMID

38205604

Abstract

Recruiting participants for research from highly traumatised ethnic and faith communities requires a participatory and trauma-informed approach that considers logistic barriers, as well as trauma-related and culture-specific issues. Active community engagement through every stage of the project and employing community members in research roles can help build trust, identify and mitigate concerns early, prevent re-traumatization, and ensure that findings will be of value to the community. Some of these research challenges are discussed in the context of the Christchurch mosque terror attacks. These insights may be helpful for researchers and clinicians working in similarly challenging environments.


Language: en

Keywords

Muslim; ethnic diversity; stigma and discrimination; terrorist attack; Trauma and stressor-related disorders

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