Community-Engaged Research on Social Capital and Older Adults’ Health: Lessons Learned

IF 0.9 Q3 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY Gateways-International Journal of Community Research and Engagement Pub Date : 2022-06-30 DOI:10.5130/ijcre.v15i1.7832
R. Rooks, Sarah Mccarthy, Britanie Graybeal, Stephen Griffin
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Abstract

Most adults in the United States prefer to age in their own homes and communities. However, many ageing-in-place models rely on expensive external services, negatively affecting access by lower socioeconomic status (SES) and other vulnerable groups. This article documents two pilot projects conducted by a community-academic partnership that examined associations between social capital, ageing in community, and health among older adults. The first project explored the association between social capital and health across community SES levels. The second project explored one type of social capital, timebanking, and its association with health. We highlight here our lessons learned from these community-engaged research (CER) projects: (1) Our partnership needed to improve our study design and data collection by enhancing our recruitment strategies, community site partnerships, survey instrument and data matching, and research team workload allocation issues. (2) We should have validated our instruments for use with older adults who had mild cognitive and visual impairments, acknowledged how community SES differences influenced our data collection, and included more research assistant support during our community meetings. (3) We would have benefited from protocol development for recording and responding to issues raised by participants. Our projects also led us to relational insights, such as reinforcing the need to foster clear communication across team members, involving community advisory boards earlier in the CER process, seeking network input on research strategies to meet older adults’ needs, and developing plans to sustain long-term relationships. We hope these lessons learned are useful to other community-engaged researchers.
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社会资本与老年人健康的社区参与研究:经验教训
在美国,大多数成年人喜欢在自己家里或社区里安度晚年。然而,许多就地老龄化模式依赖于昂贵的外部服务,对社会经济地位较低的群体和其他弱势群体的获取产生了负面影响。本文记录了由社区-学术伙伴关系开展的两个试点项目,这些项目研究了社会资本、社区老龄化和老年人健康之间的关系。第一个项目探讨了社会资本与健康之间的关系。第二个项目探讨了一种社会资本,即时间银行及其与健康的关系。我们在此强调从这些社区参与研究(CER)项目中吸取的经验教训:(1)我们的合作伙伴关系需要改进我们的研究设计和数据收集,包括加强我们的招聘策略、社区站点合作、调查工具和数据匹配以及研究团队工作量分配问题。(2)我们应该验证我们的仪器是否适用于有轻度认知和视觉障碍的老年人,承认社区SES差异如何影响我们的数据收集,并在我们的社区会议中纳入更多的研究助理支持。(3)制定记录和回应与会者提出的问题的协议将使我们受益。我们的项目也让我们对关系有了深刻的认识,比如加强团队成员之间清晰沟通的必要性,在CER过程的早期让社区咨询委员会参与进来,在研究策略上寻求网络投入,以满足老年人的需求,以及制定维持长期关系的计划。我们希望这些经验教训对其他从事社区工作的研究人员有用。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
28.60%
发文量
5
审稿时长
34 weeks
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