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Community-Based Participatory Health Research: Issues, Methods, and Translation to Practice

Editorial SPRINGER PUBLISHING CO. (NY)

Community-Based Participatory Health Research: Issues, Methods, and Translation to Practice
-5% dto.    90,00€
85,50€
Ahorra 4,50€
No disponible, consulte disponibilidad
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Community-Based Participatory Health Research: Issues, Methods, and Translation to Practice

Editorial SPRINGER PUBLISHING CO. (NY)

-5% dto.    90,00€
85,50€
Ahorra 4,50€
No disponible, consulte disponibilidad
Envío gratis
España peninsular

Detalles del libro

"

?Community-Based Participatory Research (CBPR) has become the preferred model for conducting research in communities. Most scientists who conduct such research now recognize that working in partnership with the community is preferable, and more ethical, than conducting research on a community?. As Surgeon General of the United States, I direct a number of programs aimed at encouraging Americans to avoid tobacco, engage in physical activity, consume more nutritious diets, and protect their health in other ways. We need more effective methods to persuade, motivate, and enable individuals and communities to adopt these healthier lifestyles, and it is through CBPR that we will be able to discover these methods.?

From the Foreword by Regina M. Benjamin, MD, MBA, U.S. Surgeon General

?The editors of this book bring together in one place both a description of epidemiological methods and a discussion of community-level issues. It is a volume that will prove useful to those who wish to conduct contemporary community-based research.?

? Praise for the First Edition from the Foreword
David Satcher, Former Surgeon General of the United States

This second edition of a highly regarded textbook on the foundations of and strategies for achieving fertile community-based health care research has been completely revised and updated. It now includes new chapters on translating research into practice, evaluating research, and applying community-based participatory research (CBPR) principles to service, education, and evaluation. The book also updates a crucial chapter on the voices of community stakeholders and an important study of the ethical issues surrounding the Tuskegee Syphilis Study. Edited by renowned professors of community-based research, the text is distinguished by its how-to approach and focus on practical research methods.

The text discusses the unique challenges of conducting CBPR and addresses ways to build and sustain community partnerships. It explores ethical issues regarding health care research, includes input from community stakeholders, and describes national and international support for CBPR. Research methods covered include qualitative studies, surveys, and intervention trials. Applications of CBPR illustrate how to translate research into practice and community-based participatory approaches to service, education, and evaluation.

The second edition includes new chapters on:

  • Building and sustaining researcher/community partnerships
  • National and international investments in and support for CBPR
  • Surveys and methods for conducting CBPR
  • Translating research into practice
  • Community-based participatory approaches to service, education, and evaluation

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Biografía del autor
Dr. Daniel S. Blumenthal is principal investigator for the Prevention Research Center at Morehouse School of Medicine. He is professor and chair of the school's Department of Community Health and Preventive Medicine and associate dean for Community Programs. He is a graduate of Oberlin College and the University of Chicago School of Medicine. He completed his residency in pediatrics at Charity Hospital of New Orleans (Tulane Division) and received his master of public health degree from Emory University. He is board certified in both pediatrics and preventive medicine. ||Dr. Ralph J. DiClemente is the Charles Howard Candler Professor of Public Health and associate director, Emory Center for AIDS Research. He holds concurrent appointments as professor in the School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Division of Infectious Diseases, Epidemiology, and Immunology; and the Department of Psychiatry. He was most recently chair, Department of Behavioral Sciences and Health Education at the Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University. Dr. DiClemente was trained as a health psychologist at the University of California San Francisco where he received his PhD in 1984 after completing an MSPH in Behavioral Sciences at the Harvard School of Public Health and his undergraduate degree at the City University of New York. Dr. DiClemente has published extensively in the area of HIV/STD prevention, particularly among adolescents and young adults. He has authored more than 200 articles, chapters and books. |Ronald L. Braithwaite, PhD, is Professor, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Morehouse School of Medicine. He is also Director of Research at the Department of Family Medicine and Professor, Department of Community Health and Preventive Medicine at Morehouse. |Selina A. Smith, PhD, MDiv, Associate Professor, Morehouse School of Medicine (MSM), Atlanta, Georgia, Dr. Smith has worked in cancer and community-based participatory research for the past 19 years. She holds a Bachelor of Science in Food and Nutrition from Florida State University (Tallahassee, Florida), a Master of Science (Florida International University, Miami, Florida) and Doctorate in Human Nutrition (Howard University, Washington, DC). She also earned a Master of Divinity Degree from Emory University (Atlanta, Georgia) in 2005. Her specific areas of interest are translational research, health disparities research, cancer epidemiology and cancer control and prevention. Before joining the faculty of MSM's Department of Community Health and Preventive Medicine in 1998, Dr. Smith was a faculty member at the University of Miami School of Medicine (Miami, Florida) and Georgetown University College of Medicine (Washington, DC). She currently serves as the Community Outreach Core Director and Evaluator of the MSM component of the MSM/TU/UAB Cancer Center Partnership. She is also funded by the Collaborative Community Engagement Research Program of the Atlanta Clinical and Translational Science Institute and the MSM Cancer Education Program.