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CBPR as community health intervention: institutionalizing CBPR within community based organizations.
Prog Community Health Partnersh. 2008 Summer; 2(2):145-55.PC

Abstract

BACKGROUND

A community-academy partnership was created with a commitment to developing a program for institutionalizing community-based participatory research (CBPR) capacity within community-based organizations (CBOs), with the intention to enhance CBOs' existing capabilities to understand and improve community health.

OBJECTIVES

This article presents the design and conceptual foundations for a year-long CBPR education and training program in which CBO teams learn research design, discuss the principles of CBPR, design and implement a community health-related research project tailored to their program and community, conduct analyses, and initiate integration of the results into the organization and community. One objective is to integrate a commitment to and the practice of CBPR within CBOs' program and policies.

METHODS

An initial partnership was created between the Center for Border Health, El Paso, and Texas A&M University School of Rural Public Health, College Station. Three additional CBOs then joined the partnership and participated in the CBPR education and training program consisting of four stages: (1)3 intensive months devoted to learning about and creating a research design; (2) 6 months for implementation of the design; (3) 2 months for analyses, interpretation, and consolidation of results into one or more final products; and (4) 1 month for development of protocols for integrating research results into community health development.

RESULTS

In the first iteration, an interactive process evaluation was conducted during each program stage, plus a final year-end exit interview with each participating CBO. Evaluation demonstrated strong positive results and specific lessons learned. A proposal incorporating the lessons learned was presented to the funding source. A second iteration has been funded, with monies included to develop a formal outcome evaluation.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Texas A&M University System Health Science Center, School of Rural Public Health.No affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

20208248

Citation

May, Marlynn, and Jon Law. "CBPR as Community Health Intervention: Institutionalizing CBPR Within Community Based Organizations." Progress in Community Health Partnerships : Research, Education, and Action, vol. 2, no. 2, 2008, pp. 145-55.
May M, Law J. CBPR as community health intervention: institutionalizing CBPR within community based organizations. Prog Community Health Partnersh. 2008;2(2):145-55.
May, M., & Law, J. (2008). CBPR as community health intervention: institutionalizing CBPR within community based organizations. Progress in Community Health Partnerships : Research, Education, and Action, 2(2), 145-55. https://doi.org/10.1353/cpr.0.0019
May M, Law J. CBPR as Community Health Intervention: Institutionalizing CBPR Within Community Based Organizations. Prog Community Health Partnersh. 2008;2(2):145-55. PubMed PMID: 20208248.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - CBPR as community health intervention: institutionalizing CBPR within community based organizations. AU - May,Marlynn, AU - Law,Jon, PY - 2010/3/9/entrez PY - 2008/1/1/pubmed PY - 2010/6/23/medline SP - 145 EP - 55 JF - Progress in community health partnerships : research, education, and action JO - Prog Community Health Partnersh VL - 2 IS - 2 N2 - BACKGROUND: A community-academy partnership was created with a commitment to developing a program for institutionalizing community-based participatory research (CBPR) capacity within community-based organizations (CBOs), with the intention to enhance CBOs' existing capabilities to understand and improve community health. OBJECTIVES: This article presents the design and conceptual foundations for a year-long CBPR education and training program in which CBO teams learn research design, discuss the principles of CBPR, design and implement a community health-related research project tailored to their program and community, conduct analyses, and initiate integration of the results into the organization and community. One objective is to integrate a commitment to and the practice of CBPR within CBOs' program and policies. METHODS: An initial partnership was created between the Center for Border Health, El Paso, and Texas A&M University School of Rural Public Health, College Station. Three additional CBOs then joined the partnership and participated in the CBPR education and training program consisting of four stages: (1)3 intensive months devoted to learning about and creating a research design; (2) 6 months for implementation of the design; (3) 2 months for analyses, interpretation, and consolidation of results into one or more final products; and (4) 1 month for development of protocols for integrating research results into community health development. RESULTS: In the first iteration, an interactive process evaluation was conducted during each program stage, plus a final year-end exit interview with each participating CBO. Evaluation demonstrated strong positive results and specific lessons learned. A proposal incorporating the lessons learned was presented to the funding source. A second iteration has been funded, with monies included to develop a formal outcome evaluation. SN - 1557-0541 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/20208248/CBPR_as_community_health_intervention:_institutionalizing_CBPR_within_community_based_organizations_ L2 - http://muse.jhu.edu/cgi-bin/resolve_openurl.cgi?issn=1557-0541&volume=2&issue=2&spage=145&aulast=May DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -