Special issue: three models of community-based participatory research.
- Authors
- Weiner, Janet; McDonald, Jasmine A
- Year
- 2013
- Journal
- LDI issue brief
- PMID
- 23610796
Community-based participatory research (CBPR) is a collaborative process between community-based organizations and academic investigators. It has the potential to make research more responsive to existing needs and to enhance a community's ability to address important health issues. But CBPR is often unfamiliar territory to academic investigators and community organizations alike. We interviewed CBPR investigators at Penn and community leaders to ascertain best practices in CBPR and to compare academic and community perspectives. A number of models of community-academic partnerships emerged, each with its own advantages and disadvantages. The perspectives of the investigators sometimes matched those of the community leaders, but diverged in important ways.
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In this knowledge base
| Title | Year | PMID |
|---|---|---|
| Rethinking the Way We Do Research: The Benefits of Community-Engaged, Citizen Science Approaches and Nontraditional Collaborators. | 2017 | 29028120 |
External
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| Community Training Institute for Health Disparities: Outcomes of a Formal Opportunity for Community Capacity Building to Increase Health Equity in Southern Puerto Rico. | Jiménez-Chávez J et al. | — | 2025 | → |
| Towards a learning healthcare community in the Bronx: evaluating the Bridging Research, Accurate Information and Dialogue (BRAID) model. | McNeilly SM et al. | — | 2025 | → |
| Design and rationale of the social determinants of the risk of hypertension in women of reproductive age (SAFE HEART) study: An American Heart Association research goes red initiative. | Metlock FE et al. | — | 2024 | → |
| Evaluation of a depression care model for the hill tribes: a family and community-based participatory research. | Singkhorn O et al. | — | 2023 | → |
| Community- Based Approaches to Cancer Prevention in Rural Thailand Based on Experiences of Accredited Health Professionals. | Saranrittichai K et al. | — | 2020 | → |
| Global health research partnerships in the context of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). | Addo-Atuah J et al. | — | 2020 | → |
| Promoting First Relationships®: Implementing a Home Visiting Research Program in Two American Indian Communities. | Oxford M et al. | — | 2020 | → |
| A Transdisciplinary Approach is Essential to Community-based Research with American Indian Populations. | Heinzmann J et al. | — | 2019 | → |
| Developing an Awareness Campaign to Reduce Second Hand Smoke Among Disadvantaged Families-A Participatory M-Health Approach. | Weinmann T et al. | — | 2018 | → |
| Strategies used and lessons learned by community assistants in organising regional forums for cancer education in Iowa, USA. | Daly JM et al. | — | 2018 | → |
| Rethinking the Way We Do Research: The Benefits of Community-Engaged, Citizen Science Approaches and Nontraditional Collaborators. | Dick DM | — | 2017 | → |
| The Value of Social Network Analysis for Evaluating Academic-Community Partnerships and Collaborations for Social Determinants of Health Research. | Bright CF et al. | — | 2017 | → |