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Time to prioritise the use of participatory research methods for people with intellectual disabilities

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 May 2025

Madiha Majid*
Affiliation:
School of Health Sciences, Institute of Mental Health, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK Coventry and Warwickshire Partnership Trust, Coventry, UK
Olamide Todowede
Affiliation:
School of Health Sciences, Institute of Mental Health, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK
Ashok Roy
Affiliation:
Coventry and Warwickshire Partnership Trust, Coventry, UK
Gerald Jordan
Affiliation:
Centre for Urban Wellbeing, Institute for Mental Health, School of Psychology, College of Life and Environmental Science, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK
Stefan Rennick-Egglestone
Affiliation:
School of Health Sciences, Institute of Mental Health, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK NIHR Nottingham Biomedical Research Centre, Institute of Mental Health, Mental Health & Clinical Neurosciences, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK
*
Correspondence: Madiha Majid. Email: Madiha.majid1@nottingham.ac.uk
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Summary

People with intellectual disability experience significant health inequality, and consequently poor health outcomes. Although research can facilitate change, there is a risk of researchers propagating inequity by selecting methods that exclude people with some forms of intellectual disability. We argue for participatory research methods that enable inclusion.

Information

Type
Guest Editorial
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Royal College of Psychiatrists

Intellectual disability affects approximately 1.5 million people in the UK. People with intellectual disability have poorer health outcomes and shorter life expectancy when compared with the general population, Reference White, Ding, Roberts, Magill, Keagan-Bull and Carter1 including due to significant physical health issues that contribute to premature mortality, such as epilepsy. For people with intellectual disability, mental health disorders are more common compared with the general population and the co-occurrence of other neurodevelopmental diagnoses is high. People with intellectual disability experience substantial health inequality. This has been evidenced through the COVID-19 pandemic, where health inequalities were exacerbated and people with intellectual disability were more likely to be admitted to hospital and die from COVID-19.

Successive reports and inquiries have sought to understand the health inequalities experienced by this population, and their causes. The Mencap report Death by Indifference highlighted how institutional injustice through discrimination, poor access to primary care, poor quality care in hospitals and lack of training of health professionals contributed to preventable deaths. The Michael Inquiry emphasised the failure of services to make reasonable adjustments for people with intellectual disability, and described how this contributed to avoidable ill health and poor outcomes. The Confidential Inquiry into Premature Deaths of People with Learning Disabilities further called into question the quality of health and social care, identifying delays in diagnosis and treatment. In response, the Learning from Lives and Deaths Report national programme reviewed the lives and deaths of people with intellectual disability and autism. Their work is informed by a team of individuals with intellectual disability, which also helps raise awareness of their findings, with ‘opportunities to empower people with ID [intellectual disability] to advocate for change’ Reference White, Ding, Roberts, Magill, Keagan-Bull and Carter1 that are clearly needed.

There have been significant concerns surrounding the care of people with intellectual disability and who also have mental health conditions, additional neurodevelopmental differences or behaviours that challenge. Through the Winterbourne View Hospital scandal of 2011, the physical and psychological abuse of people with intellectual disability and autism at this hospital was exposed. A subsequent national review of services identified that people with intellectual disability and autism were being inappropriately admitted to in-patient units due to inadequate community services, and often faced lengthy admissions. There were also concerns around the quality of person-centred care plans. The Transforming Care programme sought to address these challenging findings by creating change across all healthcare provision. 2 Subsequently, the provision of more appropriate community care has led to fewer hospital admissions.

Despite some improvement to mental health services for people with intellectual disability, Baroness Hollins’ 2023 report reviewing the care of those detained in mental health and specialist intellectual disability hospitals describes ‘heart-breaking’ care and outcomes for people with intellectual disability. This includes psychiatric admissions retraumatising patients through not meeting sensory and communication needs. 3 The report concludes that mental health services continue to contribute to the dehumanisation of people with intellectual disability. 3 The current healthcare system is not designed to meet the care needs of people with intellectual disability, and exacerbates barriers to care. Reference Ramsey, Albutt, Perfetto, Quinton, Baker and Louch4 Psychiatrists and other healthcare professionals working with people with intellectual disability understand the unique challenges experienced by the population they care for, and the systemic problems that limit the type and standard of care that we can provide. From an ethical perspective, we cannot claim to be providing just care in an unjust system where huge disparities exist; much change is needed before care is truly transformed.

Research is vital to informing evidence-based practices in psychiatry, because knowledge produced by researchers can have a critical influence on changes to policy, practices and services. However, a random sample of 180 National Institute for Health Research (NIHR)-funded studies conducted in 2019–2020 found that 131 effectively excluded people with intellectual disability, including due to problems with research design, inadequate researcher training and capacity and consent procedures. Reference Bishop, Laugharne, Shaw, Russell, Goodley and Banerjee5 Included studies were assessed by a panel of 25 people with intellectual disability. Methods such as interviews or focus groups can exclude some people with intellectual disability, because these require face-to-face interactions with ‘in the moment’ verbal responses. Questionnaires and surveys will be limited to those with certain literacy and comprehension levels, or their completion may be dependent on support from carers or support workers. Researchers should consider the potential risks and harms to participants as a result of their research designs. It is important to consider whether participation will reflect similar power dynamics historically faced by people with intellectual disability from positions in authority, which may disempower people and perpetuate discrimination and oppression.

Participation of people with intellectual disability through advisory boards, or other forms of patient and public involvement, is important at different stages of research, and is a common way by which people with intellectual disability are included and actively involved in research. A major criticism of this type of inclusion is that advisory boards are generally made up of those with mild intellectual disability or from self-advocacy backgrounds; those with additional needs are not necessarily included in these processes. The disability rights movement slogan, ‘Nothing about us without us’, is a reminder that people with intellectual disability should be included in research. The use of advisory boards, in what sometimes appears to be a tokenistic tick-box exercise, is not sufficient for research to be described as inclusive, particularly when it has been demonstrated that people with moderate and severe intellectual disability are able to engage substantially in research and service development. Reference Tromans, Marten, Jaggi, Lewin, Robinson and Janickyj6 An intellectual disability should be considered a valuable form of diversity, and methods should be employed to enable participation of diverse groups. An awareness of intersectionality can be helpful to empower those who face additional disadvantage and those that may be further underserved; this may include people with intellectual disability with visual impairments or from minoritised ethnic backgrounds.

People with moderate, severe or profound intellectual disability and with additional communication needs risk being excluded from research when employing methods that do not support their participation. The dominant ableist narrative, by which researchers select methods that require participants to be physically, cognitively and socially able to discuss topics, actively discriminates and excludes from research the voices that are not able to participate as those without an intellectual disability. It also amplifies preconceptions about the needs of people with intellectual disability without having sufficient mechanisms in place to understand their lived experiences. Methods of inquiry that do not allow people with intellectual disability to be heard perpetuate epistemic injustices. From a human rights perspective, this discrimination is also problematic.

Just as participation within research can strengthen the argument for prioritisation of the provision of just and equitable care, there is an urgent need to involve people with intellectual disability and their carers in service development. We would argue that high-quality research can form part of the solution for influencing change: for example, large-scale qualitative research studies can provide a mechanism by which the health service experiences of people with intellectual disability can be seen and understood. It seems contradictory to be working in a health system that, on the surface, advocates for health equity and holistic, person-centred care, yet its research foundations inadequately include or capture the lived experience of people with intellectual disability. Should we then therefore be shocked when all aspects of health (mental health, physical health and public health, including health promotion and disease prevention) are staggeringly poor? From a social justice view, there lies a responsibility to address the inequity of participation in health research. Incorporating individuals in research in a way that meets their communication needs and allows their voices to be heard may be a good place to start.

Participatory research is a term used to describe research design and methods or approaches that have direct collaborations with those being studied for change. Participatory research has potential to understand the experiences of people with intellectual disability and gain insights that might otherwise be lost through less inclusive methods. It is both a method and an ideology where an individual’s experience, knowledge and reality are seen as valuable, with an awareness of power dynamics between researchers and participants. Participatory methods can be used at all stages of research, and have the power of bringing together different forms of knowledge to work towards making change a reality. Examples include photovoice, body-mapping and art-based methods. Evaluating the impact of participatory research in public health research has shown systemic changes, development of unanticipated projects and sustained efforts towards health improvement. Reference Jagosh, Macaulay, Pluye, Salsberg, Bush and Henderson7 Therefore, involving people with intellectual disability in research through participatory methods has potential to shape health policy and enable health service failings to be addressed.

High-quality research looking at treatment efficacy of common mental health conditions in people with intellectual disability is lacking. Randomised controlled trials help us understand whether an intervention is successful, although there remain significant concerns around the ethics of randomisation, capacity to consent and their impact on participant recruitment and ethical approvals, Reference Bishop, Laugharne, Shaw, Russell, Goodley and Banerjee5,Reference Tyrer, Oliver-Africano, Romeo, Knapp, Dickens and Bouras8 disproportionately affecting those with moderate to profound intellectual disability. Participatory research, however, can go a step further and offer insights into the successes or failures of interventions, by providing a deeper understanding of how the intervention is lived and experienced by different people and how it can be improved and sustained. This is important when making clinical decisions on evidence-based research. Although it may not be entirely achievable to accurately understand the experiences of those with severe or profound intellectual disability, participatory approaches, along with carer involvement, may attempt to reduce the biases of methods that exclude them. A mixed-methods approach that includes a component of participatory methodology may be a more balanced approach to maintaining quality while ensuring that research is inclusive.

Access to representative groups and fostering greater involvement of people with intellectual disability may require a focus on relationship and trust building, and on understanding the impact of participation. Utilising accessible venues or environments where individuals feel comfortable is important, in addition to the provision of accessible information in different formats where there are communication, literacy and language barriers. Reference Rabbitte and Adam9 Applying a personalised approach to improving the involvement of people with intellectual disability and their carers in research is therefore required. This may include the involvement of experienced multidisciplinary professionals and researchers who have experience in working with people with intellectual disability, such as speech and language therapists. Significant barriers to participatory methods will therefore include constraints in resources, such as funding and time required to develop and implement inclusive projects.

The pertinent questions remain: have we really learned from figures illustrating poor health outcomes if research methodology continues to employ methods that do not enable participation? How do we seek to address the barriers to care that contribute to these health outcomes, and make real change if the research community does not fully engage and include people with intellectual disability? Methods of inquiry that do not fully capture the experiences of people with intellectual disability can be harmful. We cannot ‘help and do no harm’ while turning a blind eye to the clear injustices that exist in both the clinical and research worlds. Utilising participatory methods may therefore be a stepping-stone in the right direction, where research starts with inclusivity and supporting individuals to participate. We are yet to see the implementation of radical and sustained changes where researchers actively seek out and incorporate the patient’s voice through participatory methods. There needs to be a strong cultural shift to enable discussions on how we can move forward and empower people with intellectual disability to participate in research. We propose meeting research participants with intellectual disability in a way that removes barriers, and employing methods that enable participation in research that involves them and directly impacts them. This perhaps, is not as radical as it seems.

Data availability

Data availability is not applicable to this article because no new data were created or analysed in this study.

Author contributions

M.M. prepared the draft of the paper. S.R.-E., O.T., G.J. and A.R. revised the draft before submission.

Funding

M.M. was supported by the Wellcome Trust (grant no. 223508/Z/21/Z). S.R.-E. was supported by NIHR Nottingham Biomedical Research Centre (no. NIHR203310). O.T. was supported by a UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) Citizen Science Collaboration Grant (funder reference BB/V011707/1). O.T. was supported by a UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) Citizen Science Collaboration Grant (funder reference BB/V011707/1). G.J. has no relevant sources of funding to declare.

Declaration of Interest

None.

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