制定气候和健康研究的参与原则:来自社区知情研究项目的一个例子。

IF 0.8 4区 医学 Q4 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Abigail Ulman, Karen Lowrie, Garin Bulger, Mpp, Jeanne Herb, Tisha Holmes, William Butler
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:描述社区参与研究的共同学习和利益相关者参与原则变得越来越重要。由于世界各地的低收入社区、土著社区和有色人种社区不成比例地感受到环境危害(特别是气候变化)对社会、健康和经济的影响,因此与这些社区共同学习势在必行,以便他们的生活经验和知识指导知识库的建立和共享,并制定公平的解决方案。目的:本文为制定共同学习原则以指导气候适应和卫生公平创新提供了最新的理论和实践支持。我们描述了这一开发过程,其中包括文献综述和利益相关者参与。这一进程和由此产生的一套原则与社区卫生伙伴关系有关。在社区卫生项目开始之前采用指导设计、开发和实施的原则,将有助于确保这些项目是非采掘性的,并为受益人实现最大利益。方法:一个多所大学的研究团队在2022年的一项研究工作开始时采用了这种方法。该团队目前正在美国以外的地区进行基于原理的实地研究。气候灾害和结构性不平等造成健康差距的地点。结论:该小组的咨询委员会及其资助者对这些原则的发展以及西方研究人员以一种重视土著和传统社区作为合作伙伴和知识持有人的方式开展项目的前景表示了热情,这种方式有可能为所涉及的社区带来利益,包括提高促进健康、公平和福祉的活动的能力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Developing Engagement Principles for Climate and Health Research: An Example from a Community-Informed Research Project.

Background: Characterizing principles of co-learning and stakeholder engagement for community-engaged research is becoming increasingly important. As low-income communities, Indigenous communities, and communities of color all over the world disproportionately feel the social, health, and economic impacts of environmental hazards, especially climate change, it is imperative to co-learn with these communities, so their lived experience and knowledge guide the building and sharing of a knowledge base and the development of equitable solutions.

Objectives: This paper presents recent theoretical and practical support for the development of co-learning principles to guide climate adaptation and health equity innovations. We describe this development process, which included both a literature review and stakeholder engagement. The process and the resultant set of principles are relevant to community health partnerships. Adopting principles to guide design, development, and implementation prior to commencement of community health projects will help to ensure they are nonextractive and achieve maximum benefits for beneficiaries.

Methods: A multiuniversity research team adopted this approach at the outset of a research endeavor in 2022. The team is currently conducting principle-based field research in non-U.S. locations where climate hazards and structural inequities have created health disparities.

Conclusions: The team's advisory board and its funder expressed enthusiasm about the development of these principles and about the prospect of Western researchers conducting a project in a way that values Indigenous and traditional communities as partners and knowledge-holders and has the potential to bring benefits to the communities involved, including increased capacity for activities promoting health, equity, and well-being.

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CiteScore
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