| Literature DB >> 32967674 |
Amédé Gogovor1,2,3,4, Tatyana Mollayeva5,6, Nicole Etherington7, Angela Colantonio5,6, France Légaré8,9,10,11.
Abstract
Sex and gender considerations are understood as essential components of knowledge translation in the design, implementation and reporting of interventions. Integrating sex and gender ensures more relevant evidence for translating into the real world. Canada offers specific funding opportunities for knowledge translation projects that integrate sex and gender. This Commentary reflects on the challenges and solutions for integrating sex and gender encountered in six funded knowledge translation projects. In 2018, six research teams funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research's Institute of Gender and Health met in Ottawa to discuss these challenges and solutions. Eighteen participants, including researchers, healthcare professionals, trainees and members of the Institute of Gender and Health, were divided into two groups. Two authors conducted qualitative coding and thematic analysis of the material discussed. Six themes emerged, namely Consensus building, Guidance, Design and outcomes effectiveness, Searches and recruitment, Data access and collection, and Intersection with other determinants of health. Solutions included educating stakeholders on the use of sex and gender concepts, triangulating perspectives of researchers and end-users, and participating in organisations and committees to influence policies and practices. Unresolved challenges included difficulty integrating sex and gender considerations with principles of patient-oriented research, a lack of validated measurement tools for gender, and a paucity of experts in intersectionality. We discuss our findings in the light of observations of similar initiatives elsewhere to inform the further progress of integrating sex and gender into the knowledge translation of health services research findings.Entities:
Keywords: Gender; healthcare; intersectionality; knowledge translation; research design; sex
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32967674 PMCID: PMC7509920 DOI: 10.1186/s12961-020-00625-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Res Policy Syst ISSN: 1478-4505
Description of the Institute of Gender and Health funded projects
| Project | Objective of research project | Setting/target population | Study design | Sex/gender analysis |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Does One Size Fit All? The Implications of Gender for Operating Room (OR) Team Performance, Teamwork Interventions, and Equitable Patient Outcomes (Team 1) | (1) To examine the interrelationship between OR team gender composition, individual clinician sex for each professional role, intraoperative teamwork performance and patient outcomes; (2) to qualitatively explore barriers and facilitators to effective teamwork in the OR according to clinicians’ gender and professional role using the Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF) | Two academic hospitals in Ontario, Canada Core OR team members (scrub and circulating nurses, anaesthesiologists, surgeons, residents, fellows) | (1) Prospective observational design with quantitative analysis; (2) qualitative interviews following the TDF | Explicit examination of individual sex, group gender norms, sex/gender differences; disaggregation of data |
| A gender transformative approach to improve outcomes and equity among persons with Traumatic Brain Injury (Team 2) | (1) Document important concepts and ideas for education on topics of sex and gender in the TBI context; (2) develop educational materials for patients with TBI, significant others and clinicians providing care that accounts for sex/gender; and (3) test the application of these educational materials for feasibility and effectiveness | Rehabilitation research-teaching hospital/adult patients with TBI; significant others; clinicians working with patients with TBI | Qualitative interviews Evidence synthesis Educational intervention, cluster-randomised trial in KT | Sex and gender analysis (taking into account biological sex, age, marital status, education and ethnicity) |
| Integrating and measuring the effect of sex, gender and gender transformative approaches to substance use treatment, prevention and harm reduction in Canada [ | To systematically review evidence on sex- and gender-related factors affecting the use and response to four substances – alcohol, nicotine, cannabis and opioids; to interview leaders and to survey Knowledge Attitudes and Practice (KAP) among workers in three pilot settings; to co-develop three interventions regarding sex and gender and substance use and responses and re-assess KAP among workers in three pilot sites | The substance use system via three pilot sites – (1) a territorial government addictions workers training programme; (2) a provincial addictions foundation that provides training, programming and information; and (3) a family service treatment centre and its aftercare system partners in a Canadian province | Systematic review of co-development of interventions in three pilot sites; before and after study of KAP before and after introducing sex and gender into three different aspects of the substance use system in Canada: Nunuvat addictions worker training course; Manitoba Addiction Foundation women’s treatment and Saskatchewan aftercare system components | Mixed methods: compilation of sex- and gender-related factors and evidence that affect substance use for women, men, and gender and sexual minorities; use of evidence to underpin the co-development of three pilot interventions in aspects of the substance use system |
| Modelling an approach to gender-conscious participatory action-oriented research and knowledge transfer favouring equality, equity and occupational/environmental health [ | Interventions to improve the inclusion of both sexes/genders in environmental and occupational health efforts by unions and other community groups Incorporation of sex-gender based analysis in occupational/environmental health interventions by graduate students who have been trained to do so | Workers facing health challenges; communities in the Amazon region affected by toxic exposures Graduate students in occupational (ergonomics) and environmental health | Multiple case studies based on interviews with researchers and community representatives; search for correlates of successful and unsuccessful incorporation of sex/gender considerations; mixed methods | Description of contexts, methods and impacts of intervention studies that have considered sex/gender to some extent in the process Comparison of successful and unsuccessful interventions |
| mATriCES-F: ApplicaTion des Connaissances axée sur le gEnre et le Sexe des personnes en contexte Francophone [Sex- and gender-oriented knowledge translation in Francophone contexts] (Team 5) | Increase sex- and gender-sensitive clinical behaviours and attitudes among French-speaking healthcare professionals in Canada through continuing professional development (CPD) activities | CPD developers, clinicians, patients and other CPD stakeholders from francophone communities in Ontario, Quebec and New Brunswick | Interventional non-randomised controlled trial | Data will be disaggregated by sex and will include sex-specific analysis |
| Transforming the practice of KT: Embedding gender (Team 6) | The objective of this study is to encourage knowledge translation (KT) intervention developers who are addressing the needs of older adults to use an intersectional approach when designing and implementing KT interventions; our goal is to develop and evaluate intersectionality-enhanced versions of KT frameworks and associated tools for three prioritised stages of KT | KT intervention developers from across Canada | Mixed methods | Data will be analysed by gender |
| Team 1, based in Ontario, Canada, is investigating the impact of gender on the effectiveness of teamwork in the operating room with clinicians in urban academic hospitals ( | |
| Team 2, based in Ontario, Canada, is documenting concepts and ideas for developing and testing educational materials on sex and gender for traumatic brain injury (TBI) care ( | |
| Team 3, is performing a systematic review on evidence on sex and gender factors affecting substance use (alcohol, cannabis, nicotine and opioids) and is using the evidence in three pilot interventions on substance use in Manitoba, Nunavut and Saskatchewan, Canada ( | |
| Team 4 seeks to model a sex- and gender-conscious participatory action approach in occupational health and environmental health interventions by unions and other community groups in the Amazon and in Quebec, Canada ( | |
| Team 5 aims to increase sex- and gender-sensitive clinical behaviours and attitudes through continuing professional development (CPD) activities in French-speaking urban and rural communities in Quebec, New Brunswick and Ontario, Canada ( | |
| Team 6, a pan-Canadian team, aims to develop and evaluate intersectional approaches to KT frameworks and associated tools with KT intervention developers working with older adults ( |