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Perceptions of Trauma Research with a Sample of At-Risk Youth

NCJ Number
311392
Journal
Journal of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics Volume: 8 Issue: 4 Dated: 2013 Pages: 67-76
Author(s)
Ann T. Chu; Anne P. Deprince
Date Published
October 2013
Length
10 pages
Abstract

Growing body of research demonstrates that participants generally report favorable perceptions of participating in trauma research. However, questions remain on the long-term impact of asking at-risk youth about trauma in settings where such questions are unexpected. Perceptions of participation were examined in the current longitudinal study comprising a sample of adolescent girls recruited from the child welfare system to participate in a healthy relationship project. Over a year, teens (n = 180) completed four research sessions during which they were interviewed about interpersonal trauma exposure and trauma-related symptoms. Results indicated that adolescents reported stable, favorable benefit-to-cost ratios over time. Perceptions of research participation and symptom severity did not impact retention.

(Publisher abstract provided.)