Partnerships to address obesity disparities in Hawai'i: the PILI 'Ohana Project

Community-based participatory research (CBPR) is an approach to scientific research that is gaining broader application to address persistent problems in health care disparities and other hypothesis-driven research. However, information on how to form CBPR community-academic partnerships and how to...

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Veröffentlicht in:Hawaii medical journal (1962) 2008-09, Vol.67 (9), p.237-241
Hauptverfasser: Nacapoy, Andrea H, Kaholokula, Joseph Keawe'aimoku, West, Margaret R, Dillard, Adrienne Y, Leake, Anne, Kekauoha, B Puni, Palakiko, Donna-Marie, Siu, Andrea, Mosier, Sean W, Marjorie, K Mau
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container_end_page 241
container_issue 9
container_start_page 237
container_title Hawaii medical journal (1962)
container_volume 67
creator Nacapoy, Andrea H
Kaholokula, Joseph Keawe'aimoku
West, Margaret R
Dillard, Adrienne Y
Leake, Anne
Kekauoha, B Puni
Palakiko, Donna-Marie
Siu, Andrea
Mosier, Sean W
Marjorie, K Mau
description Community-based participatory research (CBPR) is an approach to scientific research that is gaining broader application to address persistent problems in health care disparities and other hypothesis-driven research. However, information on how to form CBPR community-academic partnerships and how to best involve community partners in scientific research is not well-defined. The purpose of this paper is to share the experience of the Partnership for Improving Lifestyle Interventions (PILl) 'Ohana Project in forming a co-equal CBPR community-academic partnership that involved 5 different community partners in a scientific research study to address obesity disparities in Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Peoples (i.e., Samoans, Chuukese, and Filipinos). Specifically, the paper discusses (1) the formation of our community-academic partnership including identification of the research topic; (2) the development of the CBPR infrastructure to foster a sustainable co-equal research environment; and (3) the collaboration in designing a community-based and community-led intervention. The paper concludes with a brief summary of the authors' thoughts about CBPR partnerships from both the academic and community perspectives.
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subjects Academies and Institutes
Community Health Services - organization & administration
Cooperative Behavior
Evidence-Based Medicine
Hawaii - epidemiology
Health Promotion
Health Status Disparities
Hospitals, Teaching
Humans
Obesity - epidemiology
Obesity - prevention & control
Program Evaluation
Risk Factors
Social Marketing
title Partnerships to address obesity disparities in Hawai'i: the PILI 'Ohana Project
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