Community partnerships in emerging immigrant communities: Lessons learned addressing Latino childhood weight disparities

Latino children have disproportionately high childhood obesity rates, and U.S.‐born Latino children of immigrant parents experience higher overweight/obesity rates than other Latino children. Community‐based participatory research (CBPR) to engage Latino immigrant families and Latino‐serving communi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Public health Nursing 2021-03, Vol.38 (2), p.288-295
Hauptverfasser: DeCamp, Lisa Ross, Acosta, Jennifer, Bou Delgado, Laura, Guerrero Vazquez, Monica, Polk, Sarah
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Latino children have disproportionately high childhood obesity rates, and U.S.‐born Latino children of immigrant parents experience higher overweight/obesity rates than other Latino children. Community‐based participatory research (CBPR) to engage Latino immigrant families and Latino‐serving community organizations is one mechanism to address the lack of effective and practical interventions addressing childhood obesity disparities among Latino children. We present lessons learned from applying CBPR methods to a partnership focused on developing a child obesity treatment program for Latino immigrant families in an emerging Latino immigrant destination to inform the use of CBPR methods in other partnerships in emerging immigrant communities. We encountered challenges working within the partnership related to entrenched sociopolitical hierarchies that were not inclusive of immigrant community leaders, capacity building for partners with limited literacy and administrative experience, and how best to use complementary methods and frameworks to support a community‐engaged research process. This work is one way to promote shared learning among the community of researchers using CBPR and other engagement methods to partner with emerging immigrant communities. Together with our community partners, we can identify strategies to more effectively partner to promote health equity and work toward social justice for all members of our communities.
ISSN:0737-1209
1525-1446
DOI:10.1111/phn.12875