'Telling our story... Creating our own history': caregivers' reasons for participating in an Australian longitudinal study of Indigenous children.
Katherine Ann ThurberAnna OlsenJill GuthrieRachael McCormickAndrew HunterRoxanne JonesBobby MaherCathy BanwellRochelle JonesBianca CalabriaRaymond LovettPublished in: International journal for equity in health (2018)
Our findings support the assertion that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people want to be involved in research when it is done 'the right way'. Footprints in Time has successfully recruited and retained the current-largest cohort of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children in Australia through the use of participatory research methodologies, suggesting effective study implementation and processes. Participants indicated ongoing commitment to the study resulting from perceptions of reciprocity and development of trust in the study. Footprints in Time can serve as a successful model of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health research, to promote good research practice and provides lessons for research with other Indigenous populations.