Journal

Progress in Community Health Partnerships: Research, Education, and Action

Papers (3)

Community-Engaged Research Informing Upstream Determinants of Cancer Prevention for People with Criminal Legal System Involvement

Abstract: Background: Cancer prevention and early detection efforts traditionally focus on knowledge about and access to screening services; however, upstream approaches such as health care policy interventions are equally important. Our research team collaborated with women with criminal legal system involvement (CLSI) to prioritize upstream determinants of cervical cancer for future intervention. Objectives: To convene stakeholder groups of women with CLSI involvement, public health researchers, and health care providers to identify upstream determinants of cervical cancer and to create policy priorities for prevention and early detection. Methods: We combined storytelling methods and community-engaged research to enhance the collaborative relationship of a community advisory board composed of our stakeholder group. In this article, we describe the processes and effects of our work. Lessons Learned: The combined method of storytelling and community-engaged research methods allowed us to create meaningful narratives that enriched our outreach efforts but hindered full collaborative leadership of the work. All processes were affected by COVID-19 restrictions and by the preference of women with CLSI to participate independently. As the work evolved, the reach of our community advisory board extended beyond its original mandate to broaden the strategic vision of our research team. Conclusions: Partnering with community members through community-engaged research and storytelling informed not just the research at hand, but also moved the work of a team beyond their funded initiatives.

"We Are a Powerful Movement": Evaluation of an Endometrial Cancer Education Program for Black Women

U.S. Black women with endometrial cancer (EC) have a 90% higher mortality rate than White women, driven in part by advanced stage at diagnosis. Black women have expressed reasons for care-seeking delay: misattribution of postmenopausal bleeding, symptom endurance, and community silence regarding vaginal bleeding. In this community-based participatory research study, we adapted, implemented, and evaluated an education program addressing these factors. We adapted an evidenced-based education curriculum-Community Empowerment Partners (CEPs©)-using Public Health Critical Race Praxis and the Health Belief Model. Black EC survivors completed CEPs-EC training and committed to lead community sessions. Our mixed-methods evaluation measured baseline and follow-up knowledge (10-point scale) and social and clinical empowerment (three Likert-scaled items) and assessed change in each construct with linear mixed-effects models and Generalized Estimating Equation models, respectively. The process evaluation examined fidelity, feasibility, and acceptability using qualitative data from coaching and national peer educator calls, with directed content analysis. Thirteen ambassadors completed training; 10 completed community sessions with 109 total attendees, 62 with complete data. Among community participants, CEPs-EC participation was associated with increased knowledge of 2.02 points (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.06-2.99; p = 0.0001). Social empowerment increased (odds ratio, 8.85; 95% CI, 1.90-41.20), reinforced by qualitative data. There was no change in clinical empowerment. Process data illustrated facilitators of success: session tailoring, leveraging social networks, mentorship, and group-level motivation. This is the first intervention addressing EC survival among Black women. Results demonstrate efficacy in improving EC knowledge and empowerment, providing the evidence base for a larger public health campaign.

Publisher

Project MUSE

ISSN

1557-055X