HEAL Connections Sharing Session: Communicating Your Research with Plain Language Materials

Thu, 12/7/2023 - 1:00pm - 2:30pm

Past event. This event already took place. Visit the HEAL Connections Sharing Sessions page for upcoming events.

Overview

Communicating research in plain language can be a challenge, but making your research accessible to stakeholders is worth the effort. Panelists in this HEAL Connections Sharing Session discussed how to create materials that communities can easily understand and use. The session featured presentations from teams who have successfully translated research results into a variety of formats, including one-pagers, videos, infographics, and self-published booklets called zines, for different audiences. The session also offered suggested resources to help teams get started. 

You can also watch the full recording on YouTube or view the session slides pdf  32.12 MB.

Topics Covered

  • The best practices for translating your research, choosing the best format for dissemination, navigating common pitfalls, and tailoring materials to your specific audience.
  • The importance of engaging community partners and people with lived experience in the review process to improve your final product and foster bi-directional communication.
  • How to partner with HEAL Connections and receive support in your creation of plain language materials.

Alexandra Collins, Ph.D., M.Sc.
Assistant Professor, Department of Epidemiology, Brown University School of Public Health

Dr. Alexandra (Alex) B. Collins (she/her) is a medical social scientist and an Assistant Professor in the Department of Epidemiology at the Brown University School of Public Health. She is also a faculty affiliate of the People, Place, and Health Collective. Collins uses community-engaged qualitative and ethnographic methods to examine social, structural, and environmental factors that impact people who use drugs across drug use risk environments, with a focus on how these intersect across social locations to shape drug use practices and health care access. She is particularly interested in how housing, criminalization, and built environmental factors impact access to harm reduction interventions; the impact of the changing drug supply on drug use practices and health outcomes; gendered experiences of drug use and overdose risk; and the implementation and effectiveness of harm reduction and treatment interventions.

Claire Macon
Research Assistant, People, Place, and Health Collective, Brown University

Claire Macon (she/her) is a Research Assistant at People, Place, and Health Collective (PPHC) at the Brown University School of Public Health where she conducts qualitative research on harm reduction and overdose-related interventions. Her work at PPHC builds off of previous direct service and organizing work related to houselessness, drug users’ rights and access, and sex workers' rights. Macon is also a Sex Work Support Group Coordinator at Project Weber/RENEW. She is interested in research that focuses on community-centered harm reduction strategies and understanding labor and survival amongst criminalized populations.

Julia Vail, M.A., PMP
Communications Project Manager, Duke Clinical Research Institute

Julia Vail (she/her) is a Communications Project Manager on the Duke Clinical Research Institute’s Research Communications & Engagement team. Vail manages internal and external communications for projects like the Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) Program and ACTIV-6, including efforts to return plain-language results summaries to participants and sharing them for broader public consumption. While managing communications for the Pediatric Trials Network (PTN), she collaborated on formative research to determine the best ways to return aggregate research results to adolescent participants and their caregivers. She has presented on best practices for returning research results at the Medical Writing and Lay Summaries Summit and during an Association of Clinical Research Professionals (ACRP) webinar. 

Maya Ragavan, M.D., M.P.H., M.S.
Assistant Professor, Department of Pediatrics, University of Pittsburgh

Dr. Maya Ragavan is an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics in the Division of General Academic Pediatrics. She is also the Associate Vice Chair of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Research for the Department of Pediatrics and Associate Core Director for the Clinical and Translational Science Institute Community PARTners Core. She completed her medical school from Northwestern University, pediatric residency from Stanford Children's Hospital, and a general academic pediatric fellowship from Boston Medical Center. Ragavan's research interests focus on preventing intimate partner violence (IPV), specifically by supporting IPV survivors in pediatric health care settings and examining the impact of cultural and structural racism on IPV survivors and their families. She also does work focused on engaging parents in supporting their adolescent-age children in developing healthy romantic relationships. She is deeply passionate about uplifting community voices through research and most of her research is conducted in partnership with community-based organizations. She is also interested in language equity in research and focuses her work on communities who speak languages other than English.

Joseph Amodei, M.F.A.
Assistant Professor, Department of Theater, Media Design, Lehigh University

Joseph Amodei (they/them) is a new media artist, theater designer, activist, and educator. Their work seeks to make material differences with and for people at the intersection of art, emerging technology, and community. Amodei grew up in North Carolina where they received a B.F.A. in studio art from UNC-Chapel Hill. Amodei completed their M.F.A. in video and media design at Carnegie Mellon. They are an Assistant Professor of Media Design in Lehigh University's Department of Theater. Recent work has explored immersive archive creation and virtual reality, mediated storytelling amplifying the Black history of the south, gameplay and gerrymandering, the HIV/AIDS crisis and performance of queer care, and human-centered design and issues of health equity. Learn more about their work.

The below resources are recommended further reading from our Communicating Your Research Through Plain Language Materials panelists.

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