Human monitoring from an environmental justice perspective:supporting study participation of women of Turkish and Moroccan descent

Dublin Core

Title

Human monitoring from an environmental justice perspective:supporting study participation of women of Turkish and Moroccan descent

Author

Morrens, Bert
Hond, Elly Den
Schoeters, Greet
Coertjens, Dries
Colles, Ann
Nawrot, Tim S.
Baeyens, Willy
De Henauw, Stefaan
Nelen, Vera
Loots, IIse

Publisher

5/19/17

Language

English

Publication Date

20170519

Abstract

Background: Environmental justice research shows how socially disadvantaged groups are more exposed and more vulnerable to environmental pollution. At the same time, these groups are less represented and, thus, less visible in biomedical studies. This socioeconomic participation bias is a form of environmental injustice within research practice itself. Methods: We designed, implemented and evaluated a targeted recruitment strategy to enhance the participation of socially disadvantaged pregnant women in a human biomonitoring study in Belgium. We focused on women of Turkish and Moroccan descent and developed a setup using personal buddies that enabled information transfer about study conditions in the pre-parturition period as well as support and follow-up with questionnaires in the post-parturition period. Results: We identified four barriers to the participation of women with a vulnerable social and ethnic background which were related to psychosocial and situational factors. Lack of trust in researchers and no perceived study benefits were important personal barriers

Abstract Translated

the complex study design and difficult self-administered questionnaires were equally significant barriers. Conclusion: By investing in direct, person-to-person contact with trusted buddies and supported by practical advice about cultural and linguistic sensitivity, it was possible to increase study participation of socially disadvantaged people. Above all, this required openness and flexibility in the mind-set of researchers so that study design and procedures could be better grounded in the experiences and circumstances of underprivileged groups.

Primary Classification

18.5.3

Secondary Classification

18.5.3;16.1

Primary keywords

disadvantaged persons--[pri];pregnant women--[pri];research design--[pri]

Secondary keywords

interviews;minority groups;Muslims;questionnaires;selection of subjects;vulnerable populations

Subject

Belgium--[pri]

Subject

Morocco;Turkey

Subject

environmental justice--[pri];human biomonitoring--[pri]

Journal Article

Environmental Health2017 May 19; 16(1):48:9 p.

Note

Creative Commons License Attribution 4.0 International. Copyright © The Author(s). 2017

Call Number

citation

Bibliography

42 refs

ISSN

1476069X (online)

Collection

Citation

“Human monitoring from an environmental justice perspective:supporting study participation of women of Turkish and Moroccan descent,” Islamic Medical & Scientific Ethics, accessed January 17, 2025, https://imse.ibp.georgetown.domains/items/show/37824.