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Health Behavior & Education
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josseybass.com
Table of Contents
Figures and Tables xi Foreword xiii David Satcher Dedication xvii Acknowledgments ixx The Editors xxiii The Contributors xxvii PART ONE: INTRODUCTION TO METHODS FOR COMMUNITY-BASED PARTICIPATORY RESEARCH FOR HEALTH 1 1. Introduction to Methods for CBPR for Health 3 PART TWO: PARTNERSHIP FORMATION AND MAINTENANCE 39 2. Developing and Maintaining Partnerships with Communities 43 3. Strategies and Techniques for Effective Group Process in CBPR Partnerships 69 4. Infrastructure for Equitable Decision Making in Research 97 PART THREE: COMMUNITY ASSESSMENT AND DIAGNOSIS 127 5. Insiders and Outsiders Assess Who Is “The Community”: Participant Observation, Key Informant Interview, Focus Group Interview, and Community Forum 133 6. Using Ethnography in Participatory Community Assessment 161 PART FOUR: DEFINE THE ISSUE, DESIGN AND CONDUCT THE RESEARCH 189 7. Community-Based Participation in Survey Design and Implementation: The Healthy Environments Partnership Survey 197 8. Using a CBPR Approach to Develop an Interviewer Training Manual with Members of the Apsáalooke Nation 225 9. The Application of Focus Group Methodologies to CBPR 249 10. Development, Evolution, and Implementation of a Food Environment Audit for Diverse Neighborhoods 277 11. CBPR and Ethnography: The Perfect Union 305 12. What’s with the Wheezing?: Methods Used by the Seattle-King County Healthy Homes Project to Assess Exposure to Indoor Asthma Triggers 335 PART FIVE: DOCUMENTATION AND EVALUATION OF PARTNERSHIPS 365 13. Documentation and Evaluation of CBPR Partnerships: The Use of In-Depth Interviews and Closed-Ended Questionnaires 369 PART SIX: FEEDBACK, INTERPRETATION, DISSEMINATION, AND APPLICATION OF RESULTS 399 14. Developing and Implementing Guidelines for Dissemination: The Experience of the Community Action Against Asthma Partnership 405 15. Collaborative Data Collection, Interpretation, and Action Planning in a Rural African American Community: Men on the Move 435 16. Collaborative Mapping for Health Equity: Making Place Visible 463 17. Photovoice as a CBPR Method: A Case Study with African American Breast Cancer Survivors in Rural Eastern North Carolina 489 18. Methods for Community-Based Participatory Policy Work to Improve Food Environments in New York City 517 19. Citizens, Science, and Data Judo: Leveraging Secondary Data Analysis to Build a Community-Academic Collaborative for Environmental Justice in Southern California 547 APPENDIXES 579 A. Instructions for Conducting a Force Field Analysis 581 B. Full Value Contract 585 C. Collaborative Revised Bylaws: Adopted/Amended: (Month, Day, Year) 589 D. Community Member Key Informant Interview Guide 601 E. Selected Healthy Environments Partnership Measures by Survey Categories, Indicating Source of Identification for Inclusion and Scale Items 605 F. Promoting Healthy Lifestyles Among Women: Focus Group Summary Analysis Form: Eastside and Southwest DetroitProcedures and Example Questions 613 G. Field Notes Guide 619 H. In-Depth, Semi-structured Interview Protocol: Detroit Community-Academic Urban Research Center, Detroit URC Board Evaluation 1996–2002 623 I. Closed-Ended Survey Questionnaire: Detroit Community-Academic Urban Research Center, Detroit URC Board Evaluation 1997–2007 627 J. Philosophy and Guiding Principles for Dissemination of Findings of Community Action Against Asthma Including Authorship of Publications and Presentations, Policies and Procedures, Access to Data, and Related Matters 639 K. Inspirational Images Project: Fact Sheet and Informed Consent Form for Study Participants 645 L. Inspirational Images Project: Informed Consent Form for Adults Who May Appear in Photographs 651 M. Southern California Environmental Justice Collaborative: Partnership Agreed-Upon Mechanism for Deciding on Research Activities 655 Communities for a Better Environment, Liberty Hill Foundation, and the Research Team Index 659 |