Good evidence, research, and guidelines alone aren’t enough to create change in practice, policy, or patient outcomes. Knowledge translation (KT) is the bridge between what we know and what we do - shaped by power, values, and relationships.

KT helps health professionals move beyond simply sharing information toward creating change that is inclusive, values-driven, and equitable.

This webinar will explore practical knowledge translation principles you can start applying right away to communicate complex ideas clearly, concisely, and with impact. These skills can support clearer care-planning conversations, stronger client engagement, and improved outcomes across healthcare settings.

In this 1.5h webinar, you will...

-What Knowledge translation (KT) is and why it matters for your practice
-Key concepts – knowledge transfer, exchange, translation, and mobilization
-Role of values and relationship building in KT at all levels
-Choosing KT strategies based on different goals, reach, audience
-Examples of KT products – related to food systems, food justice, determinants of health, communicating about health equity, community engagement
-KT scenarios in Practice (including private practice examples)

Join us for a practical webinar for dietitians on translating complex nutrition evidence into conversations that actually create change.
  • 1769102561-6f1dfe8999437659
    National Collaborating Centre for Determinants of Health
    Dianne has been with NCCDH since 2014. Formerly a registered dietitian for 26 years, her practice included 16 years of frontline public health nutrition focused mostly on reproductive and child health in rural settings with many diverse clients. As a white settler cis-gendered woman, her passion for meaningful engagement of people with lived expertise of inequities to inform public health priorities drives her motivation. Her work at NCCDH focuses on community engagement, language and terminology of health equity, mental health promotion, 2SLGBTQI+ health, environmental public health, food systems/justice and digital equity. Dianne earned a BSc at St. Francis Xavier University and an MSc at the University of Saskatchewan.
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