scholarly journals Integrating Sex/Gender into Environmental Health Research: Development of a Conceptual Framework

Author(s):  
Gabriele Bolte ◽  
Katharina Jacke ◽  
Katrin Groth ◽  
Ute Kraus ◽  
Lisa Dandolo ◽  
...  

There is a growing awareness about the need to comprehensively integrate sex and gender into health research in order to enhance the validity and significance of research results. An in-depth consideration of differential exposures and vulnerability is lacking, especially within environmental risk assessment. Thus, the interdisciplinary team of the collaborative research project INGER (integrating gender into environmental health research) aimed to develop a multidimensional sex/gender concept as a theoretically grounded starting point for the operationalization of sex and gender in quantitative (environmental) health research. The iterative development process was based on gender theoretical and health science approaches and was inspired by previously published concepts or models of sex- and gender-related dimensions. The INGER sex/gender concept fulfills the four theoretically established prerequisites for comprehensively investigating sex and gender aspects in population health research: multidimensionality, variety, embodiment, and intersectionality. The theoretical foundation of INGER’s multidimensional sex/gender concept will be laid out, as well as recent sex/gender conceptualization developments in health sciences. In conclusion, by building upon the latest state of research of several disciplines, the conceptual framework will significantly contribute to integrating gender theoretical concepts into (environmental) health research, improving the validity of research and, thus, supporting the promotion of health equity in the long term.

2019 ◽  
Vol 44 (2) ◽  
pp. 114-130
Author(s):  
Małgorzata Dębiak ◽  
Katrin Groth ◽  
Marike Kolossa-Gehring ◽  
Arn Sauer ◽  
Myriam Tobollik ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Alissa Cordner ◽  
Grace Poudrier ◽  
Jesse DiValli ◽  
Phil Brown

Social science-environmental health (SS-EH) research takes many structural forms and contributes to a wide variety of topical areas. In this article we discuss the general nature of SS-EH contributions and offer a new typology of SS-EH practice that situates this type of research in a larger transdisciplinary sensibility: (1) environmental health science influenced by social science; (2) social science studies of environmental health; and (3) social science-environmental health collaborations. We describe examples from our own and others’ work and we discuss the central role that research centers, training programs, and conferences play in furthering SS-EH research. We argue that the third form of SS-EH research, SS-EH collaborations, offers the greatest potential for improving public and environmental health, though such collaborations come with important challenges and demand constant reflexivity on the part of researchers.


Author(s):  
David B. Resnik

This chapter discusses some of the key ethical issues that arise in environmental health research involving human subjects, including returning individualized research results, protecting privacy and confidentiality, research on environmental interventions, intentional exposure studies, research regulations, autonomy, beneficence, informed consent, payments to subjects, and protecting vulnerable human subjects. The chapter will discuss issues that are common to all research designs, as well as those unique to certain types of designs, such as intentional exposure studies. It will also address ethical issues that arose in two important cases, the Kennedy Krieger Institute lead abatement study, and the Children’s Environmental Exposure Research Study.


2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martine Vrijheid ◽  
Maribel Casas ◽  
Anna Bergström ◽  
Amanda Carmichael ◽  
Sylvaine Cordier ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Samantha Hajna ◽  
Nancy A. Ross ◽  
Simon J. Griffin ◽  
Kaberi Dasgupta

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