Making Research Work For Your Community:: A Guidebook To Successful Research Partnerships
Making Research Work For Your Community:: A Guidebook To Successful Research Partnerships
A Guidebook to Successful
Research Partnerships
About this guidebook
Since 2008, Natasha Ray, New Haven Healthy Start Consortium Coordinator and physician researchers from
the Yale Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program (YRWJFCSP) have partnered on a series of research
projects to address maternal health issues in New Haven, CT. During these partnerships, Natasha Ray, Kenn
Harris, Director of New Haven Healthy Start and community research faculty from the YRWJFCSP reflected on
what they experienced as best practices in community partnered research.
An opportunity arose between these two long standing research partners to gain a greater understanding
of and enhance the experiences of other community leaders (including other Healthy Start Programs) and
university researchers in collaborative relationships. In 2012 Natasha Ray, BSc and YRWJF Clinical Scholar,
Karen Wang, MD launched a qualitative study to gain insights from both community leaders in New Haven
and university researchers on practices that would benefit both partners.
This guidebook was created as a result of their work together and the findings of their interviews with
20+ community leaders and university researchers. It is intended to help communities and community
organizations in their decisions to:
Acknowledgements
The following research team, Advisory Committee and authors provided support leading
to the creation of this guidebook:
David Berg, Clinical Professor, Yale University School of Medicine
Amy Carroll-Scott, Associate Research Scientist, Community Alliance for Research and Engagement,
Yale School of Public Health; Assistant Professor of Community Health, Drexel University
Ann Greene, Board Member, West River Neighborhood Services Corporation
Kenn Harris, Director, New Haven Healthy Start, The Community Foundation for Greater New Haven
Georgina Lucas, Deputy Director, Director of Community Research Training,
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Clinical Scholars Program, Yale University School of Medicine
Marjorie Rosenthal, Assistant Director, Co-Director of Community Research Training,
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Clinical Scholars Program, Yale University School of Medicine
Barbara Tinney, Executive Director, New Haven Family Alliance
APPENDIX
Checklist. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Resources.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
The method(s) selected for a research project is dependent on the goals of the research and/or resources
available for the research.
The main characteristics of CBPR include, but are not limited to:
1. Recognizes that community as a unit of identify;
2. Builds on strengths and resources within the community;
3. Facilitates a collaborative, equitable partnership in all phases of the research, involving a power-sharing
process that attends to social inequities;
4. Fosters co-learning and capacity building among all partners;
5. Integrates and achieves a balance between knowledge generation and intervention for mutual benefit
of all partners;
6. Focuses on the local relevance of public health issues that recognize and attend to the multiple
determinants of health;
7. Involves systems development using a cyclical and iterative process;
8. Disseminates results to all stakeholders and involves partners in the dissemination process;
9. Involves a commitment to sustainability.
10. Openly addresses issues of race, ethnicity, racism, and social class, and embodies “cultural humility.”
Develop Research
Partnership and Research
▲
Disseminate
Support
and
▲
for
Implement Research
Community–University
Changes
Research Partnership
▲ ▲
▲ ▲
Analyze Conduct
Results Research
▲
1. Engage in all parts of the planning process to ensure you are an equitable and empowered partner
throughout the process.
Resources:
Conducting research can be resource-intensive, of both time and money. Here are potential investments:
• Ensuring the research process and research partnership doesn’t compromise your work or community relations
• Investment of staff energies and any other in-kind support for the project that takes resources away
from programs or other work
Administrative Hurdles:
“Talk about the money, get There are many administrative steps to starting and completing a partnership research project
stipends for the participants. between CBOs and university researchers, that may include:
Make sure that it works • Getting approval from your board of directors, your research committee, and other key stakeholders,
for you in your organization. such as community members.
If it doesn’t, there will
• Getting approval for subcontracts and the transfer of funds from university to CBOs to support research
always be more work than within the CBO
you thought there would
• Setting up correct process for payment of research staff within the CBO
be. There will always be
twists and turns in the • Ensuring that every member of the research team has human subjects training
road that you or they didn’t
anticipate.”
—Community Leader
What do you want from the research? What are your priorities?
W
hat plan do you have in place to ensure that your needs are met?
(for example: human capital, training, financial resources, access to data, plan for after project
is completed, MOU)
What are the administrative hurdles that you need to get over to participate in research?
If you decide on a CBPR approach, how will you adhere to the principles of community–based
participatory research?
Local
Community and university researchers affiliated with YCCI (Yale Center for Clinical Investigation),
CARE (Community Alliance for Research and Engagement), RWJFCSP (Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Clinical Scholars Program) developed Principles and Guidelines for Community-University Research
Partnerships and Beyond Scientific Publication: Strategies for Disseminating Research Findings, both
available online at yale.edu
• Y
CCI focuses on translating discoveries from laboratory into the clinic and then into community to improve
care and outcomes for patients. One pillar of its mission is community research and outreach—training future
researchers on community research, fostering interdisciplinary community-university collaborations, and
providing skills and resources for community partners. ycci.yale.edu
• CARE aims to improve the health of New Haven residents through community engagement, collaborative
community-based research, and dissemination of findings. care.yale.edu
• C
SP trains university researchers on community engagement and community-based participatory research.
The CSP program and its Steering Committee on Community Projects provide input for the university researchers
interested in developing community-engaged projects. rwjesp.yale.edu
• C
enter for Interdisciplinary Research on AIDS (CIRA) is an AIDS research center at Yale that facilitates
interdisciplinary research to advance science and improve outcomes for communities affected by HIV/AIDS.
Community and university researchers affiliated with CIRA developed the Community-Based HIV/AIDS
Research: Guidelines for Successful Partnerships. circa.yale.edu
• aking Research Work for Your Community: A Guidebook to Successful Reseacrh Partnership
M
by Natasha Ray and Karen Wang, MD
National
Community-Based Public Health Caucus www.sph.umich.edu/cbphcaucus
This group, affiliated with the American Public Health Association, is guided by the belief that ‘community lies
at the heart of public health, and that interventions work best when they are rooted in the values, knowledge,
expertise, and interests of the community itself’.
Community-Campus Partnership for Health (CCPH) www.ccph.info
CCPH is a nonprofit organization that promotes health equity and social justice through partnerships between
communities and academic institutions. It hosts many resources including toolkits for research partnership and
comprehensive list of more community-campus resources.
Detroit Community-Academic Urban Research Center (Detroit URC) www.detroiturc.org
The Detroit URC is a community-based participatory research (CBPR) partnership conducting research and
interventions to reduce and ultimately eliminate health inequities in the city of Detroit. This website contains
news and updates, networking opportunities, CBPR tools, policy advocacy resources and much more.
The Institute of Community Research (ICR) www.incommunityresearch.org
ICR is a nonprofit organization based in Hartford, CT whose focus is to use the tools of research to build
community capacity and foster collaborative community-based partnerships.