Chronic Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Linking Individual Needs to Community and Clinical Services
For 15 years, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)-funded Arizona Prevention Research Center (AzPRC) has been engaged in academic community collaborative research to reduce chronic disease health disparities among the Latino border communities in Arizona, which positions the center well to contribute to CDC's current winnable battle of nutrition, physical activity and obesity. The AzPRC's research study Linking Individual Needs to Community and Clinical Services (LINKS) will implement and evaluate a CHW-delivered preventive program linking primary care settings dedicated to reaching the under-served with community services that are county-delivered or -based. By developing community-clinical linkages, the AzPRC will help ensure access to, and quality of, culturally relevant prevention and promotion efforts. These efforts will result in a sustainable and scalable CHW model program that reduces obesity and associated chronic disease, and improves overall health in under-served communities at the Arizona U.S.-Mexico border.
Over the past 15 years, CDC-funded AzPRC researchers have strengthened collaborations with
community partners while developing and implementing comprehensive diabetes prevention and
control programs (1998-2019), and policy intervention research (2009-2014) in Southern
Arizona border communities. The community health worker (CHW)-led diabetes programs were
successful in terms of community perception and health improvements. Despite this success,
disparities in chronic disease remained unacceptably high. The investigators developed and
implemented an innovative intervention research project, Acción Para La Salud (Acción), which
engaged CHWs in community-level advocacy to empower border communities to address root causes
of chronic disease. This community-based participatory research (CBPR) project recognized the
importance of addressing the social determinants of health to overcome health disparities in
chronic disease. The investigators have published results and processes of Acción.
Chronic disease and obesity health disparities continue to disproportionately affect Hispanic
populations along the U.S. Mexico border in part due to barriers to healthful nutrition,
adequate physical activity, and mental/emotional well-being as well as insufficient access to
culturally appropriate health care services. In collaboration with our border-wide Community
Action Board (CAB), the investigators are taking our intervention expertise one step further
by developing and testing novel CHW-led interventions that will link community and clinical
services.
In recent years, federally qualified community health centers (FQHCs), a major backbone of
the primary care system in reaching under-served populations across the US, have begun to
involve the CHW model into various services, often with a focus on chronic disease prevention
and control. While CHWs help improve the quality and cultural relevancy of health care,
improve patient centered care, and improve linkages between primary care and community
services, each clinic adapts practices within their clinic environment without clear
guidelines about best practices, or concrete evidence regarding activities best shown to lead
to improvement in health outcomes. In addition, there may not be clear linkages from the
clinic to CHW programs in the community that have been shown to be effective in chronic
disease control and prevention, and there are challenges in identifying mechanisms for the
sustainability of effective clinical or community programs. Our intervention research
proposes to fill these gaps by establishing clear guidance and best practices for CHW
involvement in primary care and community settings to prevent and manage chronic disease, and
to promote mental/emotional well-being.
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