From Awareness to Action: Evaluating the See Me. Hear Me. Respect Me Campaign
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This project is about the See Me. Hear Me. Respect Me. campaign.
The campaign was co-designed by people with disability and Queensland Health to help healthcare professionals and the community understand and respect people with disability. This survey is being run by researchers at Griffith University. The survey was co-created with people with disability.
What is the survey about?
This project is part of an evaluation. Evaluation means we are checking what worked and what didn't work. Your answers will help make healthcare experiences and campaigns better in the future. For more information about the survey you should download the Participant Information Sheet. We want to know about:
What you think about the campaign
If it helped you feel seen, heard or respected by healthcare professionals
What needs to change to make things even better
You can take the survey even if you don't know about the campaign
Who can do the survey?
People who are 18 years old or older
People who live in Queensland
People with disability or the significant others and carers of people with disability
You can take the survey below. You can also email dignityproject@griffith.edu.au and one of our researchers can help you complete the survey online or do an interview.
What you think matters
Your experiences are important to improving disability awareness in Queensland. You can help make health and community spaces more respectful, inclusive and fair for people with disability.
Anyone who completes the survey can opt in for a chance to win 1 of 3 $50 gift vouchers for your time.
This project is about the See Me. Hear Me. Respect Me. campaign.
The campaign was co-designed by people with disability and Queensland Health to help healthcare professionals and the community understand and respect people with disability. This survey is being run by researchers at Griffith University. The survey was co-created with people with disability.
What is the survey about?
This project is part of an evaluation. Evaluation means we are checking what worked and what didn't work. Your answers will help make healthcare experiences and campaigns better in the future. For more information about the survey you should download the Participant Information Sheet. We want to know about:
What you think about the campaign
If it helped you feel seen, heard or respected by healthcare professionals
What needs to change to make things even better
You can take the survey even if you don't know about the campaign
Who can do the survey?
People who are 18 years old or older
People who live in Queensland
People with disability or the significant others and carers of people with disability
You can take the survey below. You can also email dignityproject@griffith.edu.au and one of our researchers can help you complete the survey online or do an interview.
What you think matters
Your experiences are important to improving disability awareness in Queensland. You can help make health and community spaces more respectful, inclusive and fair for people with disability.
Anyone who completes the survey can opt in for a chance to win 1 of 3 $50 gift vouchers for your time.
The survey is voluntary. Voluntary means it is your choice if you want to take the survey. There are 21-24 questions in the survey. You can choose how many you answer, although you have to answer some. There are:
9 questions about you (like your age, gender, and where you live)
3 questions about your healthcare experiences
9-12 questions about the campaign depending on your answers
4 optional questions about the campaign that you don't have to answer
We think the survey should take about 10 to 15 minutes.
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