Designing for dissemination and sustainability to promote equitable impacts on health

BM Kwan, RC Brownson, RE Glasgow… - Annual Review of …, 2022 - annualreviews.org
Designing for dissemination and sustainability (D4DS) refers to principles and methods for
enhancing the fit between a health program, policy, or practice and the context in which it is …

[HTML][HTML] Knowledge translation approaches and practices in Indigenous health research: a systematic review

MEM Ninomiya, R Maddox, S Brascoupé… - Social Science & …, 2022 - Elsevier
Abstract Knowledge translation (KT) is a critical component of any applied health research.
Indigenous Peoples' health research and KT largely continues to be taught, developed …

[PDF][PDF] Arts-based approaches to public engagement with research

S Ball, B Leach, J Bousfield, P Smith… - Rand Corporation …, 2021 - rand.org
There is growing interest in the use of approaches to public engagement with research that
use the arts to facilitate engagement. However, there is a lack of systematic and …

Supported employment for youth with intellectual disability: Promoting occupational justice

M Engelbrecht, L van Niekerk… - Journal of Occupational …, 2023 - Taylor & Francis
Introduction: Youth with intellectual disabilities are severely marginalized in accessing
employment. South African policies recognize this group as a priority in youth development …

Fostering the conduct of ethical and equitable research practices: the imperative for integrated knowledge translation in research conducted by and with indigenous …

J Jull, M Morton-Ninomiya, I Compton… - Research Involvement and …, 2018 - Springer
Plain English summary Integrated knowledge translation is a research approach in which
researchers work as partners with the people for whom the research is meant to be of use. A …

A decolonizing method of inquiry: using institutional ethnography to facilitate community-based research and knowledge translation

ME Morton Ninomiya, N Hurley… - Critical Public Health, 2020 - Taylor & Francis
This paper describes how a study using institutional ethnography (IE) was used as a
decolonizing method of inquiry in a rural Indigenous community in Canada. IE honors lived …

Reflections on applying institutional ethnography in participatory weight stigma research with young women

AR Ferdinands, TLF McHugh… - … Journal of Qualitative …, 2022 - journals.sagepub.com
Inspired by consciousness-raising practices of North American second-wave feminism,
Dorothy Smith developed institutional ethnography (IE) as an alternative to established …

[PDF][PDF] The role of communication in addressing sociocultural factors that influence pregnant women to drink alcohol in Durban, KwaZulu-Natal.

UJ Akpan - 2021 - ciazabezalkoholu.pl
ABSTRACT The World Health Organisation report (WHO, 2016) states that one in 10 women
consumes alcohol during pregnancy globally, and 20% of these women binge drink …

Healthy settings: barriers and facilitators to a healthy campus community

P Hansen-Ketchum, JA MacDonald… - … Journal of Health …, 2020 - search.proquest.com
This paper provides a synopsis of findings from the first two phases of a larger campus-
based participatory action research study, which examines the factors that contribute to …

Homelessness During the Pandemic: The Use of Arts to Mobilize Knowledge

J Hughes, J Karabanow, K Doll, H Wu… - International Journal …, 2023 - ojs.lib.uwo.ca
The following is a review of three arts-based research projects developed to mobilize
knowledge in understandable ways for diverse populations regarding the stories of people …