Improving Cancer Survivorship Care for Latino Adolescent, Young Adult Survivors through Community-Partnered Participatory Research

Minority adolescent and young adult (AYA) cancer survivors experience disparities in receipt of survivorship care. This study describes the infrastructure of a community-partnered participatory research (CPPR) project between a community-based organization and a National Cancer Institute (NCI)-desig...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of participatory research methods Vol. 2; no. 3
Main Authors Casillas, Jacqueline N, Ganz, Patricia A, Kahn, Katherine, Stuber, Margaret, Bastani, Roshan, Schwartz, Lindsay F, Morales, Sonia, Macadangdang, Joshua, Lidington, Emma K, Quintana, Karla, Gonzalez, Amri, Casas, Esther, Barboa, Elvia
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States University of Cincinnati 2021
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Summary:Minority adolescent and young adult (AYA) cancer survivors experience disparities in receipt of survivorship care. This study describes the infrastructure of a community-partnered participatory research (CPPR) project between a community-based organization and a National Cancer Institute (NCI)-designated cancer center to develop culturally-tailored interventions to improve Latino AYA cancer survivor knowledge regarding their need for survivorship care. Research team participants included the community organization and NCI cancer center directors, a research coordinator, a community liaison, and cross-training program interns. Through use of Jones's theoretical framework, additional stakeholders from academic and community settings were identified and invited to participate in the research team. A process evaluation and qualitative interviews were conducted to assess equal partnership between community and academic stakeholders and determine if the infrastructure followed the five core principles of CPPR. A grounded theory approach was used to analyze qualitative data. CPPR between an NCI-designated cancer center and a community-based organization is a new research model for conducting minority AYA cancer survivor outreach. Open communication was critical in engaging the Latino community to discuss their survivorship needs. Community stakeholders were key to infrastructure success through fostering a cohesive partnership with and acting as the voice of the Latino community. Implementing a cross-training program promoted continued engagement of community members with academic partners. Proper infrastructure development is critical to building successful research partnerships in order to develop culturally-tailored interventions to improve survivorship care knowledge.
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ISSN:2688-0261
2688-0261
DOI:10.35844/001c.29534