Commitment issues: How to get my community organization to say yes to an integrated KT project
February 24, 2017
Speaker
Chris McBride, Executive Director, Spinal Cord Injury BC
Objectives:
- Appreciate the important role community organizations (research users) can play in integrated knowledge translation (iKT)
- Understand what often prevents community organizations from engaging in iKT projects
- Understand what it takes for a community organization to commit to an iKT partnership
Resources
- Presentation Slides (PDF)
- Commitment Issues Part 1 (Chris McBride): How to get my organization to say yes to an integrated KT project
- Commitment Issues Part 2 (Heather Gainforth): How to foster long-term collaborations with community organizations – a researcher’s perspective
- Applied Behaviour Change (ABC) Lab
- Canadian Disability Participation Project (an alliance of university, public, private and government sector partners working together to enhance community participation among Canadians with physical disabilities)
- Why Spinal Cord Injury Research Needs You (video)
- Stopwatch series (ICORD research participation promo) (videos)
- How SCI BC Helps People with Spinal Cord Injuries (video)
- SCI BC in 2016: Little Things Big Impact (video)
- The Spin Magazine
- Spinal Cord Injury Sexual Health
Upcoming webinar
Dr. Lindsay Nettlefold, senior scientist with the Active Aging Research Team at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada
Dr. Sarah Munro, assistant professor, Department of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, University of British Columbia; knowledge translation program head, Centre for Health Evaluation and Outcome Science; co-director of the Contraception and Abortion Research team
Dr. Sonia Singh, hospitalist physician and osteoporosis consultant, Peace Arch Hospital
Date
February 03, 2023
Implementation Science 101: What works in theory & practice for clinical interventions
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