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Research for Improved Health: A National Study of Community-Academic Partnerships October 2012

Research for Improved Health: A National Study of Community-Academic Partnerships October 2012.

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Research for Improved Health: A National Study of Community-Academic Partnerships October 2012

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  1. Research for Improved Health: A National Study of Community-Academic PartnershipsOctober 2012 • What is this Project? This study seeks to understand Community-Based Participatory Research (CBPR) partnerships in American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) and other communities facing health disparities. Specifically, this study will explore research partnerships to inform communities and universities about which CBPR practices can best enhance health equity. • What is the goal of this project? • The goal of this project is to learn more about the different ways CBPR partnerships are developed in Native and other communities, to identify characteristics of CBPR that are effective in partnerships with AI/AN and other communities, to understand how governance matters in research partnerships, and to learn about how CBPR can be used to develop health-enhancing policies and culturally-centered health interventions. • Who is the Audience? The audience includes tribal leaders and American Indian and Alaska Native community members involved in CBPR partnerships and other communities that face health disparities. • Who are the Research Partners? Research Partners include: National Congress of American Indians Policy Research Center (Malia Villegas, overall PI), University of New Mexico Center for Participatory Research (Nina Wallerstein, PI), University of Washington Indigenous Wellness Research Institute (Bonnie Duran, PI). • What Resources Are Available From This Project? • Partner Project Protocols that provide guidance to others working in partnered research projects • Qualitative Case Study Data Collection Instruments – Interview guides for Focus Groups and Individual Interviews • Quantitative Survey Instruments for Key Informant and Community Engagement Web-surveys • Interactive CBPR Model on the project website (narch.ncaiprc.org) • What Are the Recent Accomplishments of the Project? • Case studies are nearly complete and data analysis has begun. Social world maps, project timelines, and case study observations have been returned. • Approval processes for cases studies have been documented. • Web-based survey Key Informant and Community Engagement survey data collection is completed and data analysis has begun. • Partner evaluation is currently being conducted on the three research partner teams. • narch.ncaiprc.org

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