Coloured illustration of a map and different provinces, with location pins scattered about. It is a promotional graphic for casebook projects of patient and community engagement in health research.

This casebook project is one of many featured in the lived experience in research road map resource, developed by the BC SUPPORT Unit. Explore the full set of casebook projects.

Critical participatory action research with racialized adolescents and young adults with lived experiences of cancer

Project team members include:

  • Principle investigator: Cheryl Heykoop
  • Team members: Tiffany T. Hill, Ian R. Cooper, Rabi Qureshi, Vinesha Ramasamy, Nellie G. Yee, Param K. Gill, Ada J. Okonkwo-Dappa, Jennifer Wolfe

What is this project about?

In this 18-month participatory research project, we engaged 27 racialized adolescents and young adults (AYAs) with cancer in Canada. Drawing on creative and critical methodologies, our work examined structural racism in cancer care and highlighted AYAs’ needs for support, advocacy, community, and meaningful engagement to reimagine more equitable care systems and futures.

Below: Artwork created by adolescents and young adults with lived experiences of cancer, as part of the project. This piece is called: “To the surgeon charged with saving lives.”

A traditional artwork piece showing a bee ontop and a spider on the bottom, with red, blue and green leaves and foliage in the background. The colours are bright.

Who did you partner with for your project?

We partnered with 27 AYAs who identified as racialized, had lived experience with cancer, and received treatment in Canada.

How did partners with lived experience contribute during key stages of your research project?

Research stage

Data analysis

How we partnered

Following an extensive multi-coder thematic analysis of 18 AYA interview transcripts, the project team identified five preliminary themes.

We then invited AYAs to participate in a creative, participatory analysis process to explore and expand on these themes in greater depth. Nine racialized AYAs participated in six weekly, facilitated two-hour sessions.

During these sessions, AYAs engaged in a range of creative activities including poetry, participatory photography, postcard and canvas making, free writing, and found poetry. Alongside these practices, AYAs participated in open discussions, building on each other’s ideas, making connections across their experiences, and contributing to shared meaning-making and co-theorizing.

Research stage

Knowledge translation

How we partnered

Over several months, three project team members and three racialized AYA partners co-authored a peer-reviewed journal article in Critical Race Inquiry. This process functioned as a model of participatory authorship, combining collective and independent writing supported by four 2-hour virtual sessions and ongoing email communication.

Early discussions focused on commitments, responsibilities, and shared approaches to co-authorship. Writing involved free writing and responses to prompts, guided by flexible timelines that accounted for AYAs’ lives and cancer experiences. AYAs identified access to shared resources, thematic summaries, and data as particularly sustaining, contributing to collaborative knowledge production and shared authorship throughout the process.

What’s your advice for someone who wants to collaborate with partners with lived experience?

How can someone learn more about your project?

Visit our website: Anew Research Collaborative

Read our journal articles:

Acknowledgments and thanks

The project team would like to thank:

  • Anew Research Collaborative
  • Royal Roads University
  • Canadian Institutes for Health Research
  • Michael Smith Health Research BC

This project was collected as part of a casebook that demonstrates patient-oriented research in BC.

Explore the casebook