Testing a digitally distributed method to recruit a network of community organizations to fight the consequences of the drug epidemic: A study in 13 American states

To mitigate the opioid epidemic, a concerted effort to educate, prevent, diagnose, treat, and engage residents is required. In this study, a digitally distributed method to form a large network of organizations was tested with 99 counties in regions with high vulnerability to hepatitis C virus (HCV)...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of community psychology 2022-09, Vol.50 (8), p.3455-3469
Hauptverfasser: Jung, Haesung, Sunderrajan, Aashna, Durantini, Marta, Sanchez, Edgardo, Windsor, Liliane, Chan, Man‐Pui Sally, O'Brien, Thomas, Fayaz Farkhad, Bita, Karan, Alex, Lee, Carol A., Kwon, Soonhyung, Albarracín, Dolores
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container_end_page 3469
container_issue 8
container_start_page 3455
container_title Journal of community psychology
container_volume 50
creator Jung, Haesung
Sunderrajan, Aashna
Durantini, Marta
Sanchez, Edgardo
Windsor, Liliane
Chan, Man‐Pui Sally
O'Brien, Thomas
Fayaz Farkhad, Bita
Karan, Alex
Lee, Carol A.
Kwon, Soonhyung
Albarracín, Dolores
description To mitigate the opioid epidemic, a concerted effort to educate, prevent, diagnose, treat, and engage residents is required. In this study, a digitally distributed method to form a large network of organizations was tested with 99 counties in regions with high vulnerability to hepatitis C virus (HCV). The method involved a cascade of contacts going from email to phone calls, to videoconferencing and measuring the number of contacts required, amount of time taken, and the proportion of success at recruiting at least one community organization per county. A recruitment period of 5 months and 2118 contact attempts led to the recruitment of organizations from 73 out of our 99 target counties. Organizations belonging to health departments required more attempts and time to recruit but ultimately enrolled at higher rates than did other organizations such as coalitions and agencies. Organizations from counties more (vs. less) vulnerable to HCV outbreaks required more attempts to recruit and, using multiple recruitment methods (e.g., emails, phone calls, and Zoom meetings), improved enrollment success. Overall, this method proved to be successful at remotely engaging a large‐scale network of communities with different levels of risk within a large geographic region.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/jcop.22846
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source MEDLINE; Sociological Abstracts; Access via Wiley Online Library
subjects Blood diseases
Coalitions
community engagement
Community organizations
Community structure
Counties
Epidemics
Epidemics - prevention & control
HCV
Hepatitis C
Hepatitis C - diagnosis
Hepatitis C - epidemiology
Hepatitis C - prevention & control
Humans
opioid use
Opioids
Organizations
Recruitment
Regions
rural health
Telephones
United States
title Testing a digitally distributed method to recruit a network of community organizations to fight the consequences of the drug epidemic: A study in 13 American states
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