Building CapaCITY/É for sustainable transportation: protocol for an implementation science research program in healthy cities

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Winters, Meghan
Fuller, Daniel
Cloutier, Marie-Soleil
Harris, M Anne
Howard, Andrew
Kestens, Yan
Kirk, Sara
Macpherson, Alison
Moore, Sarah
Rothman, Linda
Shareck, Martine
Tomasone, Jennifer R
Laberee, Karen
Stephens, Zoe Poirier
Sones, Meridith
et al.
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2024
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Abstract

Introduction Improving sustainable transportation options will help cities tackle growing challenges related to population health, congestion, climate change and inequity. Interventions supporting active transportation face many practical and political hurdles. Implementation science aims to understand how interventions or policies arise, how they can be translated to new contexts or scales and who benefits. Sustainable transportation interventions are complex, and existing implementation science frameworks may not be suitable. To apply and adapt implementation science for healthy cities, we have launched our mixed-methods research programme, CapaCITY/É. We aim to understand how, why and for whom sustainable transportation interventions are successful and when they are not.

Methods and analysis Across nine Canadian municipalities and the State of Victoria (Australia), our research will focus on two types of sustainable transportation interventions: all ages and abilities bicycle networks and motor vehicle speed management interventions. We will (1) document the implementation process and outcomes of both types of sustainable transportation interventions; (2) examine equity, health and mobility impacts of these interventions; (3) advance implementation science by developing a novel sustainable transportation implementation science framework and (4) develop tools for scaling up and scaling out sustainable transportation interventions. Training activities will develop interdisciplinary scholars and practitioners able to work at the nexus of academia and sustainable cities.

Ethics and dissemination This study received approval from the Simon Fraser University Office of Ethics Research (H22-03469). A Knowledge Mobilization Hub will coordinate dissemination of findings via a website; presentations to academic, community organisations and practitioner audiences; and through peer-reviewed articles.

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BMJ Open

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14

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4

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© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated, and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.

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Winters, M; Fuller, D; Cloutier, M-S; Harris, MA; Howard, A; Kestens, Y; Kirk, S; Macpherson, A; Moore, S; Rothman, L; Shareck, M; Tomasone, JR; Laberee, K; Stephens, ZP; Sones, M; et al., Building CapaCITY/É for sustainable transportation: protocol for an implementation science research program in healthy cities, BMJ Open, 2024, 14 (4), pp. e085850

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