TY - JOUR
T1 - Aligning community-engaged research to context
AU - London, Jonathan K.
AU - Haapanen, Krista A.
AU - Backus, Ann
AU - Mack, Savannah M.
AU - Lindsey, Marti
AU - Andrade, Karen
N1 - Funding Information: Funding: The Harvard Chan NIEHS EHSCC is funded by NIEHS grant P30 ES000002. The UC Davis EHSCC is funded by NIEHS grant P30 ES023513. The high school student internship described in the UC Davis case study was funded by the Western Center for Agricultural Health and Safety (NIOSH U54 0H07550). The University of Arizona EHSCC is funded by NIEHS grant P30 ES006694. Funding Information: The Harvard Chan NIEHS EHSCC is funded by NIEHS grant P30 ES000002. The UC Davis EHSCC is funded by NIEHS grant P30 ES023513. The high school student internship described in the UC Davis case study was funded by the Western Center for Agricultural Health and Safety (NIOSH U54 0H07550). The University of Arizona EHSCC is funded by NIEHS grant P30 ES006694. Acknowledgments: The UC Davis Environmental Health Science Center?s Community Engagement Core is grateful for the partnership of Comit? Civico del Valle and Calipatria High School and early contributions from the Environmental Justice Coalition for Water. CCV?s Executive Director, Luis Olmedo, provided very valuable feedback on the manuscript; Harvard University, and more particularly, the Harvard Chan School of Public Health NIEHS Center for Environmental Health acknowledges the work of Traci Brown, PhD, former staff member, and the contributions of Angela Nath and Sonia Carter of the Boston Public Health Commission. The booklet ?Obesity and Asthma for health care professionals? is available at https://www.hsph.harvard.edu/niehs/ community-engagement/asthma-obesity-connection/; The University of Arizona?s Southwest Environmental Health Sciences Center is appreciative of American Indian partners; Elaine Wilson, is an enrolled member of the Navajo Nation and works with the National Tribal Water Council (NTWC), a technical and scientific body established to advocate for the best interests of federally-recognized Indian and Alaska Native Tribes in matters pertaining to water. She has provided guidance and consultation over the years of community engagement development; Melodie A. Lopez, MSW (Hopi/Navajo/ Pueblo/Mexican) is the President of Indigenous Strategies LLC, has been a writing collaborator in explaining the intricacies of tribal work to non-tribal faculty and staff. Funding Information: The CEC of the UC Davis UC Davis Environmental Health Sciences Center (EHSC)—established in 2014—has a mission to connect community organizations with UC Davis researchers with relevant expertise to pursue collaborative research projects. As part of its annual call for pilot project studies, the CEC (then managed by post-doctoral scholar Karen Andrade and directed by professor Jonathan London) worked with Colin Bailey, then the Executive Director of the Environmental Justice Coalition for Water (EJCW) and member of the EHSC’s Community Stakeholder Advisory Committee and Luis Olmedo, director of CCV to develop a proposal. London had worked with both EJCW and CCV on earlier environmental justice research projects and Andrade had significant experience with CBPR. Given EJCW and CCV’s interest in air pollution and asthma, the CEC sought out EHSC-affiliated faculty with relevant expertise and identified Kent Pinkerton and his lab, which is internationally renowned for its expertise in the respiratory health effects of air pollutants [38–42]. The Pinkerton Lab, CCV, and EJCW received funding through the EHSC in the form of a two-year pilot project grant from the UC Davis EHSC with 15% going to CCV to support their active engagement in the project using a CBPR approach. Shortly after the project was funded, the CEC’s leadership team underwent a transition, and Karen Andrade left for another position in her field. Funding Information: The CEC is in the dissemination and adoption phase of this project. The Obesity and Asthma Booklet for Health Care Providers is supported by the Boston Public Health Commission and is available to the Community Health Workers in the asthma and nutrition divisions. The CEC expects to reach out to the BPHC Community Health Workers, again, and to the health care professionals and the various community health centers over the next months. Publisher Copyright: © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
PY - 2020/2/2
Y1 - 2020/2/2
N2 - Community-engaged research is understood as existing on a continuum from less to more community engagement, defined by participation and decision-making authority. It has been widely assumed that more is better than less engagement. However, we argue that what makes for good community engagement is not simply the extent but the fit or alignment between the intended approach and the various contexts shaping the research projects. This article draws on case studies from three Community Engagement Cores (CECs) of NIEHS-funded Environmental Health Science Core Centers (Harvard University, UC Davis and University of Arizona,) to illustrate the ways in which community engagement approaches have been fit to different contexts and the successes and challenges experienced in each case. We analyze the processes through which the CECs work with researchers and community leaders to develop place-based community engagement approaches and find that different strategies are called for to fit distinct contexts. We find that alignment of the scale and scope of the environmental health issue and related research project, the capacities and resources of the researchers and community leaders, and the influences of the sociopolitical environment are critical for understanding and designing effective and equitable engagement approaches. These cases demonstrate that the types and degrees of alignment in community-engaged research projects are dynamic and evolve over time. Based on this analysis, we recommend that CBPR scholars and practitioners select a range of project planning and management techniques for designing and implementing their collaborative research approaches and both expect and allow for the dynamic and changing nature of alignment.
AB - Community-engaged research is understood as existing on a continuum from less to more community engagement, defined by participation and decision-making authority. It has been widely assumed that more is better than less engagement. However, we argue that what makes for good community engagement is not simply the extent but the fit or alignment between the intended approach and the various contexts shaping the research projects. This article draws on case studies from three Community Engagement Cores (CECs) of NIEHS-funded Environmental Health Science Core Centers (Harvard University, UC Davis and University of Arizona,) to illustrate the ways in which community engagement approaches have been fit to different contexts and the successes and challenges experienced in each case. We analyze the processes through which the CECs work with researchers and community leaders to develop place-based community engagement approaches and find that different strategies are called for to fit distinct contexts. We find that alignment of the scale and scope of the environmental health issue and related research project, the capacities and resources of the researchers and community leaders, and the influences of the sociopolitical environment are critical for understanding and designing effective and equitable engagement approaches. These cases demonstrate that the types and degrees of alignment in community-engaged research projects are dynamic and evolve over time. Based on this analysis, we recommend that CBPR scholars and practitioners select a range of project planning and management techniques for designing and implementing their collaborative research approaches and both expect and allow for the dynamic and changing nature of alignment.
KW - Community
KW - Community based participatory research
KW - Environmental health science
KW - Environmental justice
KW - University partnerships
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U2 - 10.3390/ijerph17041187
DO - 10.3390/ijerph17041187
M3 - Article
C2 - 32069817
SN - 1661-7827
VL - 17
JO - International journal of environmental research and public health
JF - International journal of environmental research and public health
IS - 4
M1 - 1187
ER -