%0 Journal Article %J Health Educ Res %D 2012 %T Process and outcome constructs for evaluating community-based participatory research projects: a matrix of existing measures. %A Sandoval, Jennifer A %A Lucero, Julie %A Oetzel, John %A Avila, Magdalena %A Belone, Lorenda %A Mau, Marjorie %A Pearson, Cynthia %A Tafoya, Greg %A Duran, Bonnie %A Iglesias Rios, Lisbeth %A Wallerstein, Nina %K Community-Based Participatory Research %K Forecasting %K Group Processes %K Humans %K Models, Theoretical %K Outcome and Process Assessment (Health Care) %K Reproducibility of Results %K Research Design %X

Community-based participatory research (CBPR) has been widely used in public health research in the last decade as an approach to develop culturally centered interventions and collaborative research processes in which communities are directly involved in the construction and implementation of these interventions and in other application of findings. Little is known, however, about CBPR pathways of change and how these academic-community collaborations may contribute to successful outcomes. A new health CBPR conceptual model (Wallerstein N, Oetzel JG, Duran B et al. CBPR: What predicts outcomes? In: Minkler M, Wallerstein N (eds). Communication Based Participatory Research, 2nd edn. San Francisco, CA: John Wiley & Co., 2008) suggests that relationships between four components: context, group dynamics, the extent of community-centeredness in intervention and/or research design and the impact of these participatory processes on CBPR system change and health outcomes. This article seeks to identify instruments and measures in a comprehensive literature review that relates to these distinct components of the CBPR model and to present them in an organized and indexed format for researcher use. Specifically, 258 articles were identified in a review of CBPR (and related) literature from 2002 to 2008. Based on this review and from recommendations of a national advisory board, 46 CBPR instruments were identified and each was reviewed and coded using the CBPR logic model. The 46 instruments yielded 224 individual measures of characteristics in the CBPR model. While this study does not investigate the quality of the instruments, it does provide information about reliability and validity for specific measures. Group dynamics proved to have the largest number of identified measures, while context and CBPR system and health outcomes had the least. Consistent with other summaries of instruments, such as Granner and Sharpe's inventory (Granner ML, Sharpe PA. Evaluating community coalition characteristics and functioning: a summary of measurement tools. Health Educ Res 2004; 19: 514-32), validity and reliability information were often lacking, and one or both were only available for 65 of the 224 measures. This summary of measures provides a place to start for new and continuing partnerships seeking to evaluate their progress.

%B Health Educ Res %V 27 %P 680-90 %8 2012 Aug %G eng %N 4 %R 10.1093/her/cyr087 %0 Journal Article %J AIDS Behav %D 2011 %T A preliminary randomized controlled trial of a nurse-delivered medication adherence intervention among HIV-positive outpatients initiating antiretroviral therapy in Beijing, China. %A Simoni, Jane M %A Chen, Wei-Ti %A Huh, David %A Fredriksen-Goldsen, Karen I %A Pearson, Cynthia %A Zhao, Hongxin %A Shiu, Cheng-Shi %A Wang, Xin %A Zhang, Fujie %K Adult %K Anti-HIV Agents %K CD4 Lymphocyte Count %K China %K Counseling %K Cross-Sectional Studies %K Drug Monitoring %K Electronics, Medical %K Female %K HIV Infections %K HIV-1 %K Humans %K Male %K Medication Adherence %K Middle Aged %K Nurses %K Outpatients %K RNA, Viral %K Treatment Outcome %K Viral Load %K Young Adult %X

We evaluated a nurse-delivered adherence intervention in a preliminary randomized controlled trial among 70 HIV-positive outpatients initiating antiretroviral therapy (ART) in Beijing, China. In both arms, participants received a 30-min educational session, a pillbox, and a referral to a peer support group. In the enhanced arm, participants could choose an electronic reminder device, three sessions of counseling either alone or with a treatment adherence partner, or both reminder and counseling. Survey assessments and blood draws occurred at baseline, post-intervention (13 weeks), and follow-up (25 weeks). Primary outcomes were 7-day and 30-day adherence assessed by self-report and electronic drug monitoring (EDM), and secondary outcomes were HIV-1 RNA viral load and CD4 count. The intervention was feasible and well received. It led to some improvement in self-reported and EDM-assessed adherence but not the biological outcomes. Providing counseling and facilitating the use of electronic reminders to patients initiating ART merits further investigation as a culturally viable means of promoting adherence in China.

%B AIDS Behav %V 15 %P 919-29 %8 2011 Jul %G eng %N 5 %R 10.1007/s10461-010-9828-3