2009
DOI: 10.3109/01612840903177456
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A Review of Community-Based Participatory Research: A Promising Approach to Address Depression Among Latinos?

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Cited by 21 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…Although mental health research has been moving toward a more comprehensive, community-based orientation (Miranda, Duan et al, 2003;Wells et al, 2004;Wells et al, 2006), CBPR has rarely been used to address mental health among minorities (Stacciarini, 2009). The ongoing communityacademic CBPR partnership, with its emphasis on collaboration of social players working with and for the community, offers a promising method to address current disparities.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 98%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Although mental health research has been moving toward a more comprehensive, community-based orientation (Miranda, Duan et al, 2003;Wells et al, 2004;Wells et al, 2006), CBPR has rarely been used to address mental health among minorities (Stacciarini, 2009). The ongoing communityacademic CBPR partnership, with its emphasis on collaboration of social players working with and for the community, offers a promising method to address current disparities.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…While CBPR has been used effectively with minority populations in the public health domain (Mosavel, Simon, van Stade, & Buchbinder, 2005;Scarinci, Garcés-Palacio, & Partridge, 2007), its application in mental health research is not well-documented (Stacciarini, 2009). To help bridge this gap, we initiated development of a culturallycompetent, community-based mental health intervention for rural Latinos supported by a CBPR community-academic partnership.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…CBPR has been described as an effective approach for working with minority and underserved populations, particularly in the public health field (Mosavel et al 2005;Scarinci et al 2007). However, CBPR, still in its incipient stages in the mental health arena (Mulvaney-Day et al 2006;Stacciarini 2009). Social, contextual, language, and cultural factors that some minority populations experience when they seek traditional mental health treatment (Organista 2007;Santiago-Rivera et al 2001;Shattell et al 2009;Stacciariniet al 2007) make CBPR approaches to research uniquely suited to impact mental health in minority populations.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Coordination of research activities including community engagement and obtaining funds to support both community and academic infrastructure can be overwhelming [57]. In addition, key steps of CBPR such as assessing the community’s needs, getting to know the community, and developing strong sustainable ties with partners takes significant time [28,58]. These challenges can result in practices where researchers are accused of adopting a ‘hit and run’ model of consultation, leading to distrust and frustration and undermining core values of CBPR [37,42].…”
Section: Case Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 99%