HomeNews & TopicsResearchHealth research on South Asian communities must be led by South Asians

Health research on South Asian communities must be led by South Asians

Published on

Funding agencies in Canada need to review their policies for evaluating research proposals to ensure that South Asian research is conducted by South Asians, write authors in a commentary in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal).

Much of the health research conducted in Canada on South Asian diaspora communities has historically been marked by unequal power relations, rather than meaningfully engaging and benefitting these communities.

As the largest and fastest growing diverse visible minority in Canada, South Asian communities are diverse in language, culture, religion, migration history, and lived experience. Their health status and needs are equally diverse.

“When South Asian investigators do not lead the research, study findings are open to misguided interpretations that follow colonial bias and false cultural stereotypes, promote experimental bias, and uphold scientific and structural racism,” writes Dr. Gina Agarwal, a professor in the Department of Family Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, with coauthors. “This extractive practice, whereby the composition of the research team does not reflect the study population, is not uncommon and risks becoming worse as funding agencies and academic journals express interest in research examining and documenting the health patterns, practices, and lived experiences of racialized communities.”

Research teams conducting research on South Asian communities should include South Asian leads, and funders should include South Asian people in reviewing research grants.

“South Asian communities and academics must be meaningfully engaged in a health research process that acknowledges South Asian people as valuable health research leaders with lived experiences and expertise. This process should build accountability, ownership, and best practices in research involving South Asian participants and communities in Canada.”

“A call to stop extractive health research on South Asian diaspora communities in Canada” was published July 15, 2024.

Latest articles

RSV vaccination in older adults with health conditions is cost-effective

Targeting vaccination programs for respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) to older adults with underlying health...

Innovating care experience with artificial intelligence

At the beginning of this year, St. Joseph’s became one of Canada’s first academic...

Emergency care: Yet another challenging summer

For the third summer in a row, Canadians have faced overwhelmed emergency departments caused...

St. Michael’s-led research calls for screening program for ‘ticking time bomb’ abdominal aortic aneurysm

It’s been seven months since Daniel Hook had successful surgery at St. Michael’s Hospital...

More like this

Optimizing opioid prescriptions after the ED to reduce opioid overdoses, misuse

New research aims to help reduce the quantity of unused prescription opioids after emergency...

Many health-care providers are ill-equipped to recognize pain in abused children

McGill study finds only 13 per cent of those surveyed received training on child...

Vaping additives harm a vital membrane in the lungs, according to new Concordia research

Vitamin E binds itself to the pulmonary surfactant, inhibiting gas exchange and lung stability The...

New technology for advancing inclusive, equitable care

An imaging device developed by an Ontario start-up company is being studied at Hamilton...

World-first trial shows benefits of finding, treating undiagnosed asthma and COPD

It’s estimated that 70 per cent of people with asthma or COPD go undiagnosed....

Researchers outline how cells activate to cause fibrosis and organ scarring

New research led by Unity Health Toronto that examines how fibroblast cells in the...