| Literature DB >> 32235385 |
Abstract
Increasingly, funders (i.e., national, public funders, such as the National Institutes of Health and National Science Foundation in the U.S.) and scholars agree that single disciplines are ill equipped to study the pressing social, health, and environmental problems we face alone, particularly environmental exposures, increasing health disparities, and climate change. To better understand these pressing social problems, funders and scholars have advocated for transdisciplinary approaches in order to harness the analytical power of diverse and multiple disciplines to tackle these problems and improve our understanding. However, few studies look into how to conduct such research. To this end, this article provides a review of transdisciplinary science, particularly as it relates to environmental research and public health. To further the field, this article provides in-depth information on how to conduct transdisciplinary research. Using the case of a transdisciplinary, community-based, participatory action, environmental health disparities study in California's Central Valley provides an in-depth look at how to do transdisciplinary research. Working with researchers from the fields of social sciences, public health, biological engineering, and land, air, and water resources, this study aims to answer community residents' questions related to the health disparities they face due to environmental exposure. Through this case study, I articulate not only the logistics of how to conduct transdisciplinary research but also the logics. The implications for transdisciplinary methodologies in health disparity research are further discussed, particularly in the context of team science and convergence science.Entities:
Keywords: community-based participatory research; convergence research; environmental health; health disparities; social sciences; social vulnerability; team science; transdisciplinary
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32235385 PMCID: PMC7177595 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17072303
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Key elements and descriptions, strategies, and challenges for understanding and doing transdisciplinary research with major studies from the extant literature.
| Key Elements | Description of Key Elements | Important Strategies | Significant Challenges | Major Studies in the Field |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Openness and respect | Ethic of openness and respect towards multiple perspectives | Institutional support for transdisciplinary approaches | Labor and time-intensive | Stokols, 2006 [ |
| Boundary-spanner | Boundary-spanner to bridge different discipline boundaries | Diverse team members | Difficult to evaluate | Harris & Lyon, 2013 [ |
| Flexibility | Flexibility to allow multiple pathways of integration and collaboration across discipline norms, frameworks and boundaries | Cross-disciplinary training and opportunities for shared problem solving | Disincentives including fear that research will not be perceived by discipline-specific communities as rigorous enough | Pohl, 2005 [ |
| Confidence and Trust | Mutual confidence and trust with a commitment to mutual learning | Capacity to build trust and confidence | More reasons for non-collaboration than collaboration | Annerstedt, 2010 [ |
| Communication | Communication across various discipline-specific languages | Shared language and goals in operationalizing the research | Academic publishing organized around disciplines | Black and Black, 2009 [ |
| Stability | Stability across expertise and subjectivity | Make and invest time to build collaborations | Difficulty in assigning roles to team members | Klein, 2008 [ |
| Complexity | Complexity that provides the opportunity to make best possible decisions given uncertainty in an imperfect world | Understanding what advances and hinders collaborative research to support and promote collaboration | The need to not define the problem of analysis too narrowly or broadly | Rosenfield & Kessel, 2008 [ |
Figure 1Satellite imagery of Kettleman City showing the community, two intersecting highways surrounded by agricultural land and hazardous waste landfill, Kettleman Hills (imagery from Landsat/Copernicus, Mazar Technologies, U.S. Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency (2020) accessed via Google Maps at a scale of 2000 feet).
Potential environmental stressors, sample type, and analytes of the case study.
| Potential environmental stressors | Sample type | Analytes |
|---|---|---|
| Diesel trucks (traffic) | Air quality monitoring | Particulate Matter (PM) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) |
| Chlorine by-products | Household water for cohort | Trihalomethanes (THMs), haloacetic acids (HAAs) |
| Landfill runoff, construction, agriculture | Serum/plasma for cohort | Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) |
| Trucks, landfill, pipes, agriculture, highway | Environmental health survey | Sociodemographics, perceptions of environmental health risks |
Figure A1A flowchart for doing transdisciplinary research. These key elements must be developed and sustained throughout the research process.
Questions from the 86-item community health survey to identify residents’ environmental health concerns to inform subsequent environmental and biological sampling (n = 45).
| Question | Percentage (Number of Respondents) |
|---|---|
| How or low is the level of environmental pollution (i.e., air, water, land) in your neighborhood? | |
| Very high | 40.7 (22) |
| Somewhat high | 11.1 (6) |
| Somewhat low | 7.4 (4) |
| Low | 3.7 (2) |
| Very low | 1.0 (1) |
| Environmental pollution impacts your community’s health. | |
| Strongly agree | 57.4 (31) |
| Agree | 18.5 (10) |
| Neutral/no opinion | 3.7 (2) |
| Disagree | 1.9 (1) |
| Strongly disagree | 1.9 (1) |
| Environmental pollution impacts your household’s health. | |
| Strongly agree | 55.6 (30) |
| Agree | 13 (7) |
| Neutral/no opinion | 7.4 (4) |
| Disagree | 5.6 (3) |
| Strongly disagree | 1.9 (1) |
| Environmental pollution impacts your personal health. | |
| Strongly agree | 50.0 (27) |
| Agree | 20.4 (11) |
| Neutral/no opinion | 5.6 (3) |
| Disagree | 5.6 (3) |
| Strongly disagree | 1.9 (1) |
| You feel worried about your health due to environmental pollution. | |
| Strongly agree | 53.7 (29) |
| Agree | 9.3 (5) |
| Neutral/no opinion | 7.4 (4) |
| Disagree | 7.4 (4) |
| Strongly disagree | 3.7 (2) |
Survey question on environmental issues of concern for residents of Kettleman City.
| Which of the Following Environmental Issues are You Most Concerned About? Check All that Apply | Percentage (Choice Count) |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Trash/ wood burning | 7.22 (21) |
| Dust (fields, roads, wind storms) | 10.39 (30) |
| Fields and ditches burning | 5.54 (16) |
| Pollen | 7.63 (22) |
| Cigarettes | 4.52 (13) |
| Bad smells | 9.35 (27) |
| Automobile exhaust | 6.26 (18) |
| Industrial air pollution | 9.03 (26) |
|
| |
| Heating | 5.44 (16) |
| Cooling | 5.44 (16) |
| Plumbing | 4.47 (13) |
| Weatherproofing | 3.42 (10) |
| Electrical | 4.47 (13) |
| Mold | 6.89 (20) |
| Indoor air quality | 6.56 (19) |
|
| |
| Sewage/septic systems | 6.56 (19) |
| Solid waste | 4.42 (13) |
| Trash/illegal dumping | 9.58 (28) |
|
| |
| Industrial water pollution | 9.98 (29) |
| Agricultural practices | 8.29 (24) |
| Sewage disposal | 6.13 (18) |
| Chemical spills | 7.94 (23) |
|
| |
| Handling | 5.79 (17) |
| Disposal | 7.48 (22) |
| Storage | 6.15 (18) |
| Transportation | 7.25 (21) |
|
| |
| Sun exposure (skin damage) | 6.92 (20) |
| Flooding | 1.73 (5) |
| Fire | 5.46 (16) |
| Insects (mosquitoes) | 9.65 (28) |
Summary of institutional barriers to doing transdisciplinary research with recommendations to reduce these barriers.
| Level of Institutional Barrier | Institutional Barrier | Recommendation to Reduce Barrier |
|---|---|---|
| Departments, colleges, university, discipline | Lack of understanding of the value, significance, rigor, and difficulty of transdisciplinary research across a range of evaluators | Increased communication of value, significance, rigor, and difficulty of transdisciplinary research to relevant decisionmakers (i.e., departments, committees on academic personnel, external reviewers, deans, provosts) |
| Discipline | Lack of specific outlets to promoting, sharing, and describing transdisciplinary research processes and findings | Development of practice-oriented journals, transdisciplinary journals, and special issues of journals |
| Departments, colleges | Lack of communication of evaluation criteria for transdisciplinary research | Department prepared guidelines with evaluation criteria and examples that could follow examples of community-engaged and public scholarship contributions to knowledge |
| University | Lack of policies and procedures that adequately takes into account recent changes in research activities | Update academic senate manuals (i.e., Academic Personnel Manuals) personnel manuals to provide guidance to more meaningfully evaluate transdisciplinary scholarship |
| Department, college, university, discipline | Lack of evaluation criteria for team science, convergence research, and collaborative scholarship | Use of new evaluation tools such as CRediT taxonomy to account for work contributed to collaborative research |