| Literature DB >> 34367683 |
Leslie C Thompson1, Kara L Hall2, Amanda L Vogel3, Christina H Park1, Matthew W Gillman1.
Abstract
Large translational research initiatives can strengthen efficiencies and support science with enhanced impact when practical conceptual models guide their design, implementation, and evaluation. The National Institutes of Health (NIH) Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) program brings together data from 72 ongoing maternal-child cohort studies - involving more than 50,000 children and over 1200 investigators - to conduct transdisciplinary solution-oriented research that addresses how early environmental exposures influence child health. ECHO uses a multi-team system approach to consortium-wide data collection and analysis to generate original research that informs programs, policies, and practices to enhance children's health. Here, we share two conceptual models informed by ECHO's experiences and the Science of Team Science. The first conceptual model illuminates a system of teams and associated tasks that support collaboration toward shared scientific goals. The second conceptual model provides a framework for designing evaluations for continuous quality improvement of manuscript writing teams. Together, the two conceptual models offer guidance for the design, implementation, and evaluation of translational and transdisciplinary multi-team research initiatives. © The Association for Clinical and Translational Science 2021.Entities:
Keywords: Conceptual models; large research consortia; solution-oriented research; team science; transdisciplinary science
Year: 2021 PMID: 34367683 PMCID: PMC8327547 DOI: 10.1017/cts.2021.802
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Transl Sci ISSN: 2059-8661
Definitions
| Key term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Common Data | Similar or identical data elements collected at multiple study sites that are made available for use in consortium-wide analyses |
| Cores and Centers | Teams of investigators that coordinate administrative or operational activities, provide data management and analysis support, or supply various types of technical expertise to a research consortium |
| Continuous Quality Improvement | Evaluative monitoring of progress toward goals to iteratively enhance system operations, work environments, processes, outputs, and outcomes [ |
| End user Stakeholders | Organizations that use research results to develop programs, policies, and practices |
| End user Stakeholder Needs | Research evidence needs that, when addressed, allow end user stakeholders to enact solutions |
| Investigator | A researcher on a scientific project |
| Multi-Team System | Multiple teams working cooperatively with each team contributing to achieve shared superordinate goals [ |
| Quality | The degree of excellence inherent to system operations, work environments, processes, outputs, or outcomes [ |
| Research Consortium | A collective of independent research teams each contributing to shared scientific goals |
| Steering Committee | A committee of principal investigators and funding agency staff that govern the scientific direction of a consortium and make key operational decisions |
| Solution-oriented Research | A paradigm for framing scientific questions to produce study results that can directly inform programs, policies, and practices toward enhancing health [ |
| Team Functioning | The emergence of (a) affective qualities, e.g., trust and psychological safety [ |
| Team Science | Two or more investigators conducting scientific work together in an interdependent fashion |
| Transdisciplinarity | The integration of perspectives to produce scholarship that extends beyond the contributing investigators’ disciplines to yield innovative research [ |
| Translational Research | The scientific process for translating laboratory or clinical observations into interventions that improve health [ |
| Value | The degree of worth an individual, team, organization, or institution assigns to system operations, work environments, processes, outputs, or outcomes [ |
| Writing Team | A team that forms around a research idea, develops the idea into an analysis proposal, incorporates stakeholder perspectives/needs, conducts analyses, and publishes the analysis results |
Fig. 1.Multi-team system blueprint for generating solution-oriented research (reviewed in the Supplementary Video for Model 1).
Fig. 2.Writing team functioning in solution-oriented research (reviewed in the Supplementary Video for Model 2).