Synergies, partnership outcomes, and lessons learned: a qualitative evaluation of cancer center-coalition engagement.

IF 4.1 Q2 ONCOLOGY
Aubrey Villalobos, Paula Darby Lipman, Jennifer Beebe-Dimmer, Evelinn A Borrayo, Katherine J Briant, Amanda Bruegl, Craig Dee, Sarah Chavez, Bettina Drake, Selisha Snowy Johnson, Kara Kikuchi, Jennifer Leeman, Jan Lowery, Jason A Mendoza, Myra Parker, Lisa Purvis, Kelly Wells Sittig, Hayley S Thompson, Mary Wangen, Stephanie B Wheeler
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Nine National Cancer Institute-Designated Cancer Centers received supplemental funding to expand community outreach and engagement activities through a partnership with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-funded comprehensive cancer control coalitions. This article reports on an evaluation of these awards focused on organizational relationships and partnership outcomes.

Methods: The National Cancer Institute, community outreach and engagement, and coalition representatives co-designed the evaluation, which involved document review and 18 semistructured interviews with 16 community outreach and engagement and 19 coalition representatives. Artificial intelligence-generated interview transcripts were dual-coded in NVivo, version 20/R1, software.

Results: The funding generated a diverse collection of projects and partnerships. Community outreach and engagement-coalition synergies and lessons learned were evident in the following domains: infrastructure; community and partner engagement; data monitoring; and intervention implementation, evaluation, and dissemination. Outcomes of this funding initiative were evident in the following domains: strengthened partnerships, expanded knowledge, improved health or health-care programs and policies, and thriving communities.

Conclusions: Fostering community outreach and engagement-coalition partnerships created opportunities to use synergies and build capacity for engagement across multiple domains, contributing to enhanced trust and implementation of interventions across the cancer continuum. The findings provide examples and lessons on which cancer centers and coalitions can capitalize. Successful collaborative relationships were based on identifying shared goals and complementary expertise and roles, sharing financial and other resources, and a commitment to authentic and open dialogue. Although modest and short term, supplemental funding can strengthen organizational relationships and promote effective collaboration on community-facing activities; it can also lead to improved research engagement and translation of evidence to practice.

协同效应、伙伴关系成果和经验教训:癌症中心-联盟参与的定性评估。
背景:九个国家癌症研究所(NCI)指定的癌症中心获得了补充资金,通过与疾病控制和预防中心(CDC)资助的综合癌症控制联盟合作,扩大社区外展和参与(COE)活动。本文报告了对这些奖项的评估,重点是组织关系协同效应和伙伴关系结果。方法:NCI、COE和联盟代表共同设计了评估,包括文献回顾和对16名COE和19名联盟代表的18次半结构化访谈。人工智能生成的访谈记录在NVivo 20/R1中进行双编码。结果:资金产生了各种各样的项目和伙伴关系。在基础设施、社区和伙伴参与、数据监测以及干预措施的实施、评价和传播等领域,coe -联盟的协同作用和经验教训是显而易见的。这一供资倡议的成果明显体现在以下领域:加强伙伴关系、扩大知识、改善健康或保健方案和政策,以及繁荣的社区。结论:促进coe -联盟伙伴关系为利用协同效应和建立跨多个领域参与的能力创造了机会,有助于在整个癌症连续体中增强信任和实施干预措施。这些发现为癌症中心和联盟提供了协同机会的例子和教训。成功的合作关系是基于确定共同的目标和互补的专业知识和角色,共享财务和其他资源,以及对真实和开放对话的承诺。补充资金虽然数额不大,而且是短期的,但可以加强组织关系,促进面向社区活动的有效合作;它还可以提高研究参与度,并将证据转化为实践。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
JNCI Cancer Spectrum
JNCI Cancer Spectrum Medicine-Oncology
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
80
审稿时长
18 weeks
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