Investigator

Benjamin F Crabtree

Distinguished Professor · Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Family Medicine and Community Health

BFCBenjamin F Crabtr…
Papers(1)
fRAP 2.0: a community…
Collaborators(5)
Carlos Roberto JaenMichael TopmillerSusan E HansenWilliam L MillerAutumn M Kieber-Emmons
Institutions(4)
Rutgers Cancer Instit…University of Texas H…American Academy of F…Lehigh Valley Health …

Papers

fRAP 2.0: a community engagement method applied to cervical cancer disparities among Hispanic women

focused Rapid Assessment Process (fRAP) 2.0 is a community engagement approach combining geospatial mapping with rapid qualitative assessment in cyclical fashion within communities to capture multifactorial and multilevel features impacting primary care problems. fRAP 2.0 offers primary care researchers a methodology framework for exploring complex community features that impact primary healthcare delivery and outcomes. The fRAP 2.0 study design expands the fRAP from a sequential design to a cyclical process of geospatial mapping and rapid qualitative assessment in search of modifiable contextual factors. Research participants are stakeholders from various socioecological levels whose perspectives inform study outcomes that they may use to then become the agents of change for the very problems they helped explore. Here, we present a proof-of-concept study for fRAP 2.0 examining disparities in cervical cancer mortality rates among Hispanic women in Texas. The primary outcomes of interest are features at the community level, medical health system level and regional government policy levels that offer opportunities for collaborative interventions to improve cervical cancer outcomes. In this study, geospatial mapping of county and ZIP code-level variables impacting postdiagnosis cervical cancer care at community, medical and policy levels were created using publicly available data and then overlaid with maps created with Texas Cancer Registry data for cervical cancer cases in three of the largest population counties. Geographically disparate areas were then qualitatively explored using participant observation and ethnographic field work, alongside 39 key informant interviews. Roundtable discussion groups and stakeholder engagement existed at every phase of the study. Applying the fRAP 2.0 method, we created an action-oriented roadmap of next steps to improve cervical cancer care disparities in the three Texas counties with emphasis on the high disparity county. We identified local change targets for advocacy and the results helped convene a stakeholder group that continues to actively create on-the-ground change in the high-disparity county to improve cervical cancer outcomes for Hispanic women.

228Works
1Papers
5Collaborators

Positions

1999–

Distinguished Professor

Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School · Family Medicine and Community Health

1993–

Research Director/Professor

University of Nebraska Medical Center · Family Medicine

1985–

Assistant Professor

University of Connecticut Health Center · Family Medicine

Education

1986

PhD

University of Connecticut · Medical Anthropology

1982

MA

University of South Florida · Medical Anthropology

1971

BS

Washington College · Biology

Links & IDs
0000-0003-2292-6835

Scopus: 7006733030