AI Article Synopsis

  • The GROWH initiative focuses on improving reproductive health in the Gulf Coast by fostering collaborations between communities and scientists through community-engaged research.
  • The Community Outreach and Dissemination Core (CODC), consisting of various academic and community partners, developed and evaluated a new curriculum aimed at enhancing knowledge and skills related to community-based participatory research (CBPR).
  • The curriculum proved successful in boosting awareness of CBPR methods among partners and strengthening their relationships, paving the way for future projects in community engagement and environmental health.

Article Abstract

Background: The Transdisciplinary Research Consortium for Gulf Resilience on Women's Health (GROWH) addresses reproductive health disparities in the Gulf Coast by linking communities and scientists through community-engaged research. Funded by the National Institutes of Environmental Health Sciences, GROWH's Community Outreach and Dissemination Core (CODC) seeks to utilize community-based participatory research (CBPR) and other community-centered outreach strategies to strengthen resilience in vulnerable Gulf Coast populations. The CODC is an academic-community partnership comprised of Tulane University, Mary Queen of Vietnam Community Development Corporation, Bayou Interfaith Shared Community Organizing, and the Louisiana Public Health Institute (LPHI).

Methods: Alongside its CODC partners, LPHI collaboratively developed, piloted and evaluated an innovative CBPR curriculum. In addition to helping with curriculum design, the CODC's community and academic partners participated in the pilot. The curriculum was designed to impart applied, practical knowledge to community-based organizations and academic researchers on the successful formulation, execution and sustaining of CBPR projects and partnerships within the context of environmental health research.

Results: The curriculum resulted in increased knowledge about CBPR methods among both community and academic partners as well as improved relationships within the GROWH CODC partnership.

Conclusion: The efforts of the GROWH partnership and curriculum were successful. This curriculum may serve as an anchor for future GROWH efforts including: competency development, translation of the curriculum into education and training products, community development of a CBPR curriculum for academic partners, community practice of CBPR, and future environmental health work.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5589199PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.15344/2394-4978/2016/187DOI Listing

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