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Building a Community-Academic Partnership: Implementing a Community-Based Trial of Telephone Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Rural Latinos
Author(s) -
Eugene Aisenberg,
Meagan Dwight-Johnson,
Mary Claire O’Brien,
Evette Ludman,
Daniela Golinelli
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
depression research and treatment
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.738
H-Index - 27
eISSN - 2090-133X
pISSN - 2090-1321
DOI - 10.1155/2012/257858
Subject(s) - general partnership , medicine , participatory action research , community based participatory research , workforce , mental health , nursing , ethnic group , health equity , medical education , family medicine , public health , psychiatry , economic growth , sociology , political science , anthropology , law , economics
Concerns about the appropriate use of EBP with ethnic minority clients and the ability of community agencies to implement and sustain EBP persist and emphasize the need for community-academic research partnerships that can be used to develop, adapt, and test culturally responsive EBP in community settings. In this paper, we describe the processes of developing a community-academic partnership that implemented and pilot tested an evidence-based telephone cognitive behavioral therapy program. Originally demonstrated to be effective for urban, middle-income, English-speaking primary care patients with major depression, the program was adapted and pilot tested for use with rural, uninsured, low-income, Latino (primarily Spanish-speaking) primary care patients with major depressive disorder in a primary care site in a community health center in rural Eastern Washington. The values of community-based participatory research and community-partnered participatory research informed each phase of this randomized clinical trial and the development of a community-academic partnership. Information regarding this partnership may guide future community practice, research, implementation, and workforce development efforts to address mental health disparities by implementing culturally tailored EBP in underserved communities.

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