Community Partners in Care: Leveraging Community Diversity to Improve Depression Care for Underserved Populations.

Dmitry Khodyakov, P. Mendel, Elizabeth L. Dixon, Andrea Jones, Zoe Masongsong, K. Wells
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引用次数: 21

Abstract

Research suggests that the quality and outcomes of depression treatment for adults can be substantially improved through "collaborative care" programs. However, there is a lack of resources required to implement such programs in vulnerable communities. Our paper examines the planning phase of the Community Partners in Care (CPIC) initiative, which addresses this problem through a unique approach in which academic institutions partner directly with a wide range of community-based and service organizations in all phases of the project fielded in two underserved communities in Los Angeles. CPIC offers a unique opportunity to understand how diverse organizations can work together to address community depression care needs and to analyze the potential strengths and tradeoffs of coordinating among such varied entities. This article focuses on intra-group dynamics that surround the process of participatory research and reports results of the first wave of process evaluation of the planning phase of the CPIC initiative. Our analysis explores two main themes: Community-Partnered Participatory Research and benefits and challenges of collaboration in diverse groups.
社区合作伙伴在护理:利用社区多样性,以改善抑郁症护理服务不足的人群。
研究表明,通过“合作护理”项目,成人抑郁症治疗的质量和结果可以得到显著改善。然而,在脆弱社区实施此类计划所需的资源不足。我们的论文考察了社区护理合作伙伴(CPIC)计划的规划阶段,该计划通过一种独特的方法解决了这一问题,在洛杉矶两个服务欠缺的社区,学术机构在项目的所有阶段直接与广泛的社区和服务组织合作。CPIC提供了一个独特的机会来了解不同的组织如何合作来解决社区抑郁症护理需求,并分析这些不同实体之间协调的潜在优势和权衡。本文侧重于围绕参与性研究过程的群体内部动态,并报告了太平洋太平洋合作中心倡议规划阶段第一波过程评价的结果。我们的分析探讨了两个主要主题:社区合作参与式研究和不同群体合作的好处和挑战。
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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