Advancing health equity and racial and Indigenous justice requires convincing broad, diverse audiences to work together to disrupt the current systems and structures. In this blog, we’ll share with you some tactics you can use to reduce jargon to make your communications more accessible.
Learnings from a small, intimate gathering of Indigenous research scholars in Pray, Montana facilitated by Drs. Melissa Walls and Joseph Gone to discuss the significance of Indigenous Ways of Knowing in addressing health inequities and promoting health.
Ensuring evidence drives action requires that the people who need to use it to make decisions have access to it. In this blog, we delve into some considerations for ensuring research is shared through accessible language and platforms.
Over the course of 2024, Evidence for Action (E4A) and Partners for Advancing Health Equity (P4HE), with co-organizers across the country, will convene five Ways of Knowing symposia.
Authors discuss the partnership between E4A and a team at Johns Hopkins Center for Indigenous Health and close collaboration to shape the Indigenous-Led Solutions to Advance Health Equity and Wellbeing Call for Proposals.
The research team shared information about adapting their randomized controlled trial that was intended to evaluate the impact the EYPC civics curriculum on student health and community wellbeing in rural Illinois.