Health Research Policy and Systems (Apr 2025)

An integrated knowledge mobilization approach to substance use health

  • Sheena Taha,
  • Shea Wood,
  • Chandni Sondagar,
  • Eftyhia Helis,
  • Doris Payer,
  • Miguel Hernandez-Basurto

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12961-025-01313-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract The Canadian Centre on Substance Use and Addiction (CCSA) has a mandate to provide national leadership in evidence-informed analysis and knowledge mobilization to advance solutions that reduce substance-related harms. Doing this work effectively requires an understanding of the needs, priorities, perspectives and ideologies of multiple groups. Partnerships across various sectors support a full understanding and acknowledgement of the systems that create differential health outcomes for individuals and communities. CCSA has developed an integrated knowledge mobilization model to guide our work in supporting better substance use health outcomes. Our model begins by understanding the context a particular need (for example, research question and practice improvement) is occurring within. This involves engaging key partners with multiple viewpoints to understand the current situation, constraints and opportunities, including barriers to care, social and structural determinates of health and community strengths and assets. Based on this, the steps that follow involve determining the appropriate action and CCSA’s unique role to respond in alignment with partner and community priorities to advance solutions within the given context. This leads to an iterative process of generating and mobilizing knowledge. This integrated and collaborative approach ensures that responses are relevant to the identified knowledge gap, that recommendations reflect partners’ realities and that our efforts will achieve impact while minimizing the risk of harm. Through an iterative process of generating and mobilizing knowledge (for example, supporting the scale and spread of innovations, developing new tools and generating or tailoring evidence for a specific audience/context/substance/setting, among others), outputs such as increased awareness, knowledge, use of information and strengthened capacity occur. Together, these efforts contribute to the outcome of a healthier society for people living in Canada, where multiple forms of evidence advance substance use health. Meaningful engagement of partners and evaluation of our efforts are ingrained throughout the model to ensure our work has the intended effects. We share our approach for the consideration of other organizations (in the space of substance use health and otherwise) to engage partners in the development of evidence and other resources that can drive impactful programs, practice and policy.

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