Knowledge Mobilizers: Creating impactful mental health supports through community engagement
Knowledge Mobilizers is a story series from the Knowledge Mobilization Hub that highlights knowledge mobilization (KM) projects around the university. At 間眅埶AV, KM is about collaborating on, and exchanging, research discoveries to create a positive impact in our far-reaching communities.
This past fall, I had the pleasure of speaking with professor Masahiro Minami from 間眅埶AVs Faculty of Education about the impact has had on mobilizing his clinical counseling and mental health services-research work in Rwanda.
Implementation science is the study of methods that promote the systematic uptake of evidence-informed interventions into practice to help improve health services and care. Minami describes implementation science as starting in the opposite direction of typical research.
Minami begins by connecting deeply with the community hes working with to identify the problem or issue, then leverages his clinical experience to begin formulating solutions, and finally he explores empirical evidence to refine and inform the intervention, which is then brought back to the community to review and test.
Minami explains that this approach to implementation science is important because some problems cant wait.
Finding mobilization success through implementation science in Rwanda
Minami was inspired by his clinical counselling practice clients who had experienced trauma, and their resilience. He was curious if this was observed in other contexts. He visited a number of post-conflict zones around the world to meet and connect and listen to peoples experiences.
Through these conversations, he learned about a forgiveness-based approach to reconciliation that a non-governmental organization (NGO) in Rwanda was providing as part of their efforts towards recovery from the .
The approach required the perpetrator to seek forgiveness from the survivor. In practice, this meant the survivor needed to forgive. Minami observed that this was difficult for survivors so he explored alternative approaches towards reconciliation.
Working closely with the NGO and community members, Minami developed an alternative program called, . The programs development process included integrating literature, clinical experience, and the lived experience of the community and partners. The program was tested with a small group of participants.
Now Minami is running a in preparation for a large-scale hybrid-design implementation-evaluation study. In the meantime, a number of communities have adopted and are benefitting from the program.
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