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Two communities, one highway and the fight for clean air: the role of political history in shaping community engagement and environmental health research translation.

Linda Sprague MartinezNoelle C DimitriSharon RonNeelakshi HuddaWig ZamoreLydia LoweBen EchevarriaJohn L DurantDoug BruggeEllin Reisner
Published in: BMC public health (2020)
The ISF was helpful in informing the team's thinking related to systems and structures needed to translate research to practice. However, although municipal stakeholders are increasingly sympathetic to and aware of the health impacts of TRAP, there was not a local legislative or regulatory precedent on how to move some of the proposed TRAP-related policies into practice. As such, we found that pairing the ISF with a community organizing framework may serve as a useful approach for examining the dynamic relationship between science, community engagement and environmental research translation. Social workers and public health professionals can advance TRAP exposure mitigation by exploring the political and social context of communities and working to bridge research and community action.
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