The Community Transformation Map: A Maturity Tool for Planning Change in Community Health Improvement for Equity and Well-Being
Transforming communities to be healthier and more equitable prosents a systemic challenge best addressed by those with native knowledge of the system. Community coalitions are a promising structure for tackling local health inequities, if they approach the change process with multiple local stakehol...
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Veröffentlicht in: | American journal of orthopsychiatry 2021, Vol.91 (3), p.322-331 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Transforming communities to be healthier and more equitable prosents a systemic challenge best addressed by those with native knowledge of the system. Community coalitions are a promising structure for tackling local health inequities, if they approach the change process with multiple local stakeholders and with systemic change in mind. Maturity models offer a framework for system assessment by defining sequential stages toward ideal development. Providing coalitions with a structure for self-assessing community change, the Community Transformation Map (CTM) is a maturity model that operationalizes concepts hypothesized to foster systemic change. This 40-item tool encourages self-assessment, dialogue, and reconciliation of community transformation priorities via an appreciative inquiry process. The CTM was created and applied with 18 community coalitions participating in the 100 Million Healthier Lives initiative. It was iteratively drafted with representatives from across the initiative. These coalitions self-administered the CTM four times over 24 months. Coalitions used the CTM to reconcile perspectives, identify priorities, and create transformation action plans. After the fourth administration, ten semistructured interviews were conducted with coalition members. Thematic analysis revealed good contextual validity. Coalitions saw value in the CTM's productive dialogue and the shared understanding it created, but reported perceived burden in conducting repeated administration. The CTM's value is in structuring community members' reflection on complex, systemic problems. The CTM is rooted in international improvement and change principles and continues to be adapted for other change initiatives.
Public Policy Relevance Statement
New millennium public health requires extensive collaboration and new ways of thinking about problems that affect entire systems. Community-based health coalitions understand different parts of their local system and should be leveraged for assessing local concerns and deciding what actions are needed. The CTM's feasibility and perceived value as a user-led tool of community transformation suggests funders and policymakers should incentivize the time and resources needed for communities to create shared understanding of local systemic problems and potential ways forward. |
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ISSN: | 0002-9432 1939-0025 |
DOI: | 10.1037/ort0000526 |