142nd APHA Annual Meeting and Exposition

Annual Meeting Recordings are now available for purchase

300022
Developing a Framework for Planning, Implementing and Evaluating Academic-Community Partnership Efforts to Address Environmental Health Community Change

142nd APHA Annual Meeting and Exposition (November 15 - November 19, 2014): http://www.apha.org/events-and-meetings/annual
Wednesday, November 19, 2014 : 12:30 PM - 12:50 PM

Kristi Pettibone, PhD , Program Analysis Branch, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Morrisville, NC
There is increasing recognition of the importance of partnering with communities for science-based approaches to improve public health.  Community engagement is particularly important in issues of environmental health, where solutions frequently involve combinations of educational, behavioral, practice, and policy changes.  The National Institutes of Environmental Health Sciences’ Core Centers include Community Outreach and Engagement Cores (COECs) to support academic-community partnerships that incorporate science-based approaches in community change efforts. Because COECs’ activities, roles, and partnerships vary by issue and over time, it can be difficult to evaluate their cumulative impact on community health.  In this presentation, we present a framework for planning, implementing and evaluating community change.

The COEC framework incorporates three conceptual areas of work: community change, community based participatory research and translational research. This framework provides a tool for COECs, and others engaged in academic-community partnerships, to understand their place in community change efforts and to understand where a community is in addressing an issue, in order to provide support to community partners wherever they happen to be in the community change cycle. The framework is circular in structure in order to communicate the cyclical nature of community change.  Our framework recognizes that communities are dynamic and reflects the need for academic-community partnerships to be responsive to these changes.

Finally, this presentation will offer a set of evaluation questions designed to enable those engaged in academic-community partnerships to evaluate their efforts, process and progress in affecting community change as well as the impacts of the change on the community.

Learning Areas:

Conduct evaluation related to programs, research, and other areas of practice
Environmental health sciences
Planning of health education strategies, interventions, and programs
Systems thinking models (conceptual and theoretical models), applications related to public health

Learning Objectives:
Describe the purpose of the Community Outreach and Engagement Core Centers program Explain a framework that can be used to plan, implement and evaluate community change efforts. List evaluation questions that can be used to document efforts to affect community change, even when long-term policy or change has not been successful Discuss ideas for applying the framework to academic-community partnerships

Keyword(s): Environmental Health, Community-Based Partnership & Collaboration

Presenting author's disclosure statement:

Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: I have been an evaluator for federally-funded academic-community partnerships for more than 15 years, working with SAMHSA, CDC, NIH, and other HHS agencies.
Any relevant financial relationships? No

I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines, and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed in my presentation.