Publication | Open Access
Applying Community-Based Participatory Research Principles to the Development of a Smoking-Cessation Program for American Indian Teens: “Telling Our Story”
62
Citations
30
References
2006
Year
Smoking-cessation ProgramStory ”Health PreventionYouth AdvocacyParticipatory DevelopmentSocial SciencesTobacco ControlAi AdaptationCommunity BuildingHealth CommunicationParticipatory ResearchPublic HealthCommunity Health Sciences Community-engaged ResearchCivic EngagementPublic Health InterventionPublic InvolvementCommunity-based Participatory ResearchTobacco UseCommunity EngagementHealth PromotionTobacco AddictionCommunity HealthCommunity ParticipationCommunity DevelopmentCommunity EnvironmentCommunity-based ResearchCommunity Practice EducationSociologyHealth BehaviorCommunity Health SciencesAmerican IndianYouth Behavioral Health
Community-based participatory research provides communities and researchers with opportunities to develop interventions that are effective as well as acceptable and culturally competent. The present project responds to the voices of the North Carolina American Indian (AI) community and the desire for their youth to recognize tobacco addiction and commercial cigarette smoking as debilitating to their health and future. Seven community-based participatory principles led to the AI adaptation of the Not On Tobacco teen-smoking-cessation program and fostered sound research and meaningful results among an historically exploited population. Success was attributed to values-driven, community-based principles that (a) assured recognition of a community-driven need, (b) built on strengths of the tribes, (c) nurtured partnerships in all project phases, (d) integrated the community's cultural knowledge, (e) produced mutually beneficial tools/products, (f) built capacity through co-learning and empowerment, (g) used an iterative process of development, and (h) shared findings/ knowledge with all partners.
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