Lessons learned from taking data collection to the "hood"

Journal of Ethnicity in Substance Abuse
Aline C Gubrium, Emma J Brown

Abstract

Culturally appropriate measures are needed to analyze the effectiveness of HIV prevention interventions. An effective strategy to ensure the culturally appropriateness of measures is the inclusion of participants from the targeted community via participatory action research. Conducting the research process within the community is one method of maximizing greater community participation. The purpose of this paper is to describe a method of pilot testing an instrument within community settings. Findings presented focus primarily on the process of the method, rather than on a statistical outcome testing of the instrument. The sample was 200 African-American women recruited in networks drawn from two rural and two mid-sized counties in North Florida. Methodological issues encountered and resolved through ongoing process evaluation are presented as lessons learned with recommendations and implications.

References

Apr 7, 1998·Medical Anthropology Quarterly·J H Jenkins
Jan 5, 2000·Public Health Nursing·J H BaldwinK A Abbott
Jun 27, 2002·Sexually Transmitted Infections·G P Garnett
Aug 9, 2002·Oral Oncology·María Teresa Canto, Susan S Devesa
Dec 11, 2002·Sexually Transmitted Infections·C A McGarrigleB Evans
Apr 30, 2003·Public Health Nursing·Emma J Brown, Joseph S Brown

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Citations

Jun 25, 2017·Nicotine & Tobacco Research : Official Journal of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco·Kylie MorphettCoral Gartner

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