This grant develops an evidence-based, internet-based, depression care resource for consumers and providers, based at the medical school of a minority serving institution, Charles Drew University of Medicine and Science. This internet-based resource has been developed through a transparent, multi-stakeholder partnership that comprises consumer, community members, Los Angeles County, community safety net healthcare providers, mental health agencies, social service agencies (homeless shelters, senior centers, food banks, employment assistance centers), substance use agencies, and churches supported through the an NIMH funded study, Community Partners in Care (5R01MH078853). Both the current NIMH funded study and other depression care materials have been developed over a period of 20 years (Partners in Care, We Care and Witness for Wellness). Our partnership has been essential to adapting these resources for community settings in the current grant, Community Partners in Care and will continue to be essential in assuring that the products of this grant remain relevant and usable for all our stakeholders. This proposal builds upon nearly a decade of partnerships between Charles Drew University of Medicine and Science, UCLA, Healthy African American Families, QueensCare Health and Faith Partnership, and the Los Angeles Biomed Research Institute at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center to build and disseminate science to eliminate health disparities through partnered research and dissemination efforts.

Public Health Relevance

This grant develops an evidence-based, internet-based, depression care resource for consumers and providers, based at the medical school of a minority serving institution, Charles Drew University of Medicine and Science. This internet-based resource has been developed through a transparent, multi-stakeholder partnership that comprises consumer, community members, Los Angeles County, community safety net healthcare providers, mental health agencies, social service agencies (homeless shelters, senior centers, food banks, employment assistance centers), substance use agencies, and churches supported through the an NIMH funded study, Community Partners in Care (5R01MH078853). Both the current NIMH funded study and other depression care materials have been developed over a period of 20 years (Partners in Care, We Care and Witness for Wellness) and builds upon nearly a decade of partnerships between Charles Drew University of Medicine and Science, UCLA, Healthy African American Families, QueensCare Health and Faith Partnership, and the Los Angeles Biomed Research Institute at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center to build and disseminate science to eliminate health disparities through partnered research and dissemination efforts.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Library of Medicine (NLM)
Type
Resources Project Grant (NLM) (G08)
Project #
1G08LM011058-01
Application #
8113121
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZLM1-AP-G (J2))
Program Officer
Vanbiervliet, Alan
Project Start
2011-03-15
Project End
2014-03-14
Budget Start
2011-03-15
Budget End
2012-03-14
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2011
Total Cost
$96,472
Indirect Cost
Name
La Biomed Research Institute/ Harbor UCLA Medical Center
Department
Type
DUNS #
069926962
City
Torrance
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
90502
Choi, Kristen R; Sherbourne, Cathy; Tang, Lingqi et al. (2018) A Comparative Effectiveness Trial of Depression Collaborative Care: Subanalysis of Comorbid Anxiety. West J Nurs Res :193945918800333
Ong, Michael K; Jones, Loretta; Aoki, Wayne et al. (2017) A Community-Partnered, Participatory, Cluster-Randomized Study of Depression Care Quality Improvement: Three-Year Outcomes. Psychiatr Serv 68:1262-1270
Sherbourne, Cathy D; Aoki, Wayne; Belin, Thomas R et al. (2017) Comparative Effectiveness of Two Models of Depression Services Quality Improvement in Health and Community Sectors. Psychiatr Serv 68:1315-1320
Landry, Craig M; Jackson, Aurora P; Tang, Lingqi et al. (2017) The Effects of Collaborative Care Training on Case Managers' Perceived Depression-Related Services Delivery. Psychiatr Serv 68:123-130
Ngo, Victoria K; Sherbourne, Cathy; Chung, Bowen et al. (2016) Community Engagement Compared With Technical Assistance to Disseminate Depression Care Among Low-Income, Minority Women: A Randomized Controlled Effectiveness Study. Am J Public Health 106:1833-41
Lam, Christine A; Sherbourne, Cathy; Tang, Lingqi et al. (2016) The Impact of Community Engagement on Health, Social, and Utilization Outcomes in Depressed, Impoverished Populations: Secondary Findings from a Randomized Trial. J Am Board Fam Med 29:325-38
Chang, Evelyn T; Wells, Kenneth B; Gilmore, James et al. (2015) Comorbid depression and substance abuse among safety-net clients in Los Angeles: a community participatory study. Psychiatr Serv 66:285-94
Chung, Bowen; Ngo, Victoria K; Ong, Michael K et al. (2015) Participation in Training for Depression Care Quality Improvement: A Randomized Trial of Community Engagement or Technical Support. Psychiatr Serv 66:831-9
Chung, Bowen; Ong, Michael; Ettner, Susan L et al. (2014) 12-month outcomes of community engagement versus technical assistance to implement depression collaborative care: a partnered, cluster, randomized, comparative effectiveness trial. Ann Intern Med 161:S23-34
Chung, Bowen; Meldrum, Marcia; Jones, Felica et al. (2014) Perceived sources of stress and resilience in men in an African American community. Prog Community Health Partnersh 8:441-51

Showing the most recent 10 out of 11 publications