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Journal of Transcultural Nursing
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Disseminating the Results of Participant-Focused Research

Jacquelyn H. Flaskerud, RN, PhD

UCLA School of Nursing

Nancy Anderson, RN, PhD

UCLA School of Nursing

Participant-focused research (PFR) includes the fisubjectsfl as full partners in the research process. As such, participants share in the products or outcomes of research. PFR goes beyond the traditional research approach of disseminating findings to other scientists and clinicians and includes participants and community residents in sharing the skills, knowledge, and resources of the study with the objective of empowering the participants. This article demonstrates the use of PFR in disseminating the results or products of study to the participants through two examples of long-term research projects conducted in Los Angeles. The first example is a community-based study of HIV prevention with low-income Latina women. The second example is an ethnographic study of health concerns and risks among adolescents in juvenile detention. These examples provide two approaches to dissemination of research findings and benefits to the participants and the community.

Journal of Transcultural Nursing, Vol. 10, No. 4, 340-349 (1999)
DOI: 10.1177/104365969901000412


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