| Literature DB >> 29546171 |
Lindsay P Galway1, Margot W Parkes2, Diana Allen3, Tim K Takaro4.
Abstract
The shortcomings of public health research informed by reductionist and fragmented biomedical approaches and the emergence of wicked problems are fueling a renewed interest in ecological approaches in public health. Despite the central role of interdisciplinarity in the context of ecological approaches in public health research, inadequate attention has been given to the specific challenge of doing interdisciplinary research in practice. As a result, important knowledge gaps exist with regards to the practice of interdisciplinary research. We argue that explicit attention towards the challenge of doing interdisciplinary research is critical in order to effectively apply ecological approaches to public health issues. This paper draws on our experiences developing and conducting an interdisciplinary research project exploring the links among climate change, water, and health to highlight five specific insights which we see as relevant to building capacity for interdisciplinary research specifically, and which have particular relevance to addressing the integrative challenges demanded by ecological approaches to address public health issues. These lessons include: (i) the need for frameworks that facilitate integration; (ii) emphasize learning-by-doing; (iii) the benefits of examining issues at multiple scales; (iv) make the implicit, explicit; and (v) the need for reflective practice. By synthesizing and sharing experiences gained by engaging in interdisciplinary inquiries using an ecological approach, this paper responds to a growing need to build interdisciplinary research capacity as a means for advancing the ecological public health agenda more broadly.Entities:
Keywords: ecological; interdisciplinarity; interdisciplinary research; public health
Year: 2016 PMID: 29546171 PMCID: PMC5690363 DOI: 10.3934/publichealth.2016.2.389
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIMS Public Health ISSN: 2327-8994
Figure 1.Overview of research process
Figure 2.Main contributing disciplines
Summary of challenges and lessons learned from an interdisciplinary inquiry at the intersection of climate change, water, and health.
| Challenge that arose | Lesson(s) learned to navigate challenge |
| Disciplinary interpretation and understanding of the research question/issue | The need for reflective practice |
| Different disciplines interested in/focused on different scales | Zooming in, and zooming out |
| Negotiating unique languages, vocabularies, epistemologies, methodological orientations underlying different disciplinary traditions | Make the implicit, explicit |
| Lack of clarity about what should be/could be integrated | The need for frameworks that facilitate integration |
| Difficulties cultivating shared agreement on research methods | Emphasize learning-by-doing |
Figure 3.The Three Domains of Knowledge and Learning Framework (adapted from [48]).
Figure 4.Framework for reflective practice (adapted from [50])