Competencies: Representation, Clinical Trials, Community Engagement, Vulnerable Populations, Regulatory and Quality Sciences, Regulatory Science, Ethical Considerations
Course Syllabus/Topics:
- Introduction to Work: SC CTSI Community Engagement Core
- Bridge between the community and academia
- Work in the communities of South, Central, Eastside of LA
- Scope of Work
- Understanding health issues important to communities, developing relationships, addressing areas of misinformation
- Community based participatory research
- An approach to community engaged research
- Rooted in equitable partnership
- Research participants as partners
- Researchers working in tandem with members of the population to help develop and conduct the research
- Community engagement
- Definition
- Involves partnerships and coalitions
- Partners can be groups, organizations, individuals, institutions
- Can lead to longer term partnerships that can advance research
- Can be achieved through time-limited project
- Questions to ask
- At the start or during a research project, important to ask:
- Why are you doing this research?
- What is driving this research?
- Why is this research important to you, the community, or both?
- Who are the potential partners in this research?
- How can participants be partners?
- Where is this work situated?
- Understanding Underrepresented Populations
- Understand
- Your participant population
- Why mistrust exists
- Why underrepresented populations are hard to reach
- The history of your participant population
- Develop effective strategies
- For engagement
- Recruitment and enrollment
- Retention
- Engaging Underrepresented Populations
- Building trust
- Understanding different populations
- Meeting people where they are
- Understand needs and preferences
- Age
- Literacy levels
- Use plain language
- Language barriers
- Use language that literally and colloquially translates
- Preferred communication methods
- Intentional composition of research teams
- Bilingual study team
- Community Advisory Board
- Receive input and feedback from community of focus, through all stages of the project.
- May include people from organizations or from the intended study population who can provide guidance for recruitment, retention and outreach.
- Recruitment and enrollment
- DON’T
- Rely on one recruitment method
- Rely on Google Translate (enlist community partners)
- Rely on community partners to do the work for you
- Expect people to come to you
- DO
- Build trust in your participant populations
- Go into the community and engage
- Know your participant population
- Think about composition of research teams
- Representative
- Culturally competent
- Speak the language of desired participant population
- Engage with community
- Be proactive
- Be flexible
- Have study material that is language-specific
- Convene an advisory board
- Retention
- Understanding how people want to be contacted
- Collect a variety of contact information
- Staying in touch
- Monthly check-ins (automated via survey platform, incentivizing contact info updates)
- At risk for loss outreach (different research associate attempts, try various forms of contact methods)
- Flexibility
- Lessons learned from COVID Pandemic
- Compensation and resources
- Considerations: appropriate amount, increasing accordingly, type of compensation, transportation assistance, community referrals (resources or services), snacks
- Disseminating findings
- Ensuring participants know what their data is contributing to
- Sharing findings with the community
- Using plain language to share findings
- Maintain trust and continues relationship
- Conclusion
- Community engaged approach sets the tone for the research project
- Build trust with the community you intend to involve in your study
- Create partnerships
- Intentional and representative research teams
- Culturally tailored and language appropriate material
- Dissemination of findings with study participants
- Questions and answers
- Thank you!
Acknowledgements
Accompanying text created by:
Roxy Terteryan, Project Administrator, SC CTSI (atertery@usc.edu)
Rushaanaaz Sokeechand, Student Worker