Journal Club Entry on Transdisciplinary Public Health Research

Hi everyone!

I see our KTTC community has grown quite a bit since my last face-to-face meeting. It’s great to see an influx of new posts on the blog! It’s also great to see that the first VSS is up and running (unfortunately and somewhat ironically, I have my ‘Engaged Scholarship’ class Thursdays and have been unable to participate).

Anyways, I’m posting because this coming Thursday it’s my turn to present at our faculty’s PhD Journal Club (to those I haven’t met, I’m at the University of Alberta’s School of Public Health). Presenting at the journal club entails selecting an article of relevance to your work, and submitting a summary of it and some corresponding discussion questions to the group. I’ve selected an article on the pitfalls of transdisciplinary [public health] research. I think this article will speak to a lot of KTTCers who have attempted research and practice in a transdisciplinary context. So I thought I would post the link to the article and my summary here. If you have thoughts on the discussion questions, that’s great! Otherwise consider this a quasi-annotated bibliographic entry for the blog. I hope everyone is having a productive winter term!

Regards,

Elaine

Journal Club Entry:

Canning, C.G., Hird, M., & Smith, G. (2010). The pitfalls of the “add-and-stir” approach to transdisciplinary public health research. Critical Public Health, 20(2), 145-155. http://www.tandfonline.com.login.ezproxy.library.ualberta.ca/doi/abs/10.1080/09581590903342077

In the above article, Canning, Hird, & Smith (2010) critique current approaches to transdisciplinary public health research (TPHR) arguing that they tend to favour methodological but not epistemological integration. They refer to this as the ‘add and stir’ approach whereby natural scientists and social scientists partner to study complex public health problems without first uncovering and integrating each other’s epistemological stances. Resultantly, social scientists’ participation tends to be restricted to a social-constructivist approach focused on social, economic, ethical, and political issues, while natural scientists continue to produce positivistic studies of material things. The authors argue that this arrangement either reduces complex health problems to basic parts or conceptualizes the issue too broadly, impeding the discovery of cause-and-effect relationships. Moreover, the ‘add-and-stir’ approach negates the potential of TPHR to “define innovate ways of understanding complex social and biological issues.” (p.150). The authors suggest a better approach for studying complex public health issues would be to embrace an epistemology such as realism, which views “the complex interplay between the social and material as never having been epistemologically distinct” (p. 148). They conclude with recommendation for improving TPHR including: 1) critically analyzing the epistemological component of all team research, 2) reorienting research training around TPHR, and 3) focusing more on knowledge translation.

Discussion points and questions

The authors assert that TPHR “has become a major imperative across all sectors of society and knowledge domains” and that the CIHR among other funders mandate TPHR in the relevant funding calls.

o If so, why are so many ‘add-and-stir’ research projects funded?

o Do funding agencies appreciate the distinctions between multidisciplinarity, interdisciplinarity, and transdisciplinarty enough to appreciate epistemologically conscious research designs?

Public health researchers are increasingly faced with a dual imperative of increasing their knowledge translation activities and engaging with other researchers from outside their subdiscipline to produce TPHR.

o Does the push for KT complement or undermine efforts towards TPHR? In what ways?

Canning, Hird and Smith assert that making epistemological assumptions explicit and adopting an integrative and flexible epistemology is key to producing high- quality TPHR.

o How comfortable are you with examining your own epistemological assumptions and exploring new ways of knowing?