The mission of the CWRU Prevention Research Center for Healthy Neighborhoods (PRCHN) is to foster partnerships within urban neighborhoods in order to develop, test, and disseminate effective strategies and interventions to prevent and reduce the burden of chronic disease. Specifically, the goal of the PRCHN is to partner with neighborhood residents and leaders, and the community organizations that serve the neighborhoods, to address significant environmental and lifestyle issues that are not only strongly linked to chronic disease (e.g., asthma, obesity, heart disease, diabetes, cancer), but are influenced by the conditions and resources of the neighborhood itself. Our multidisciplinary academic-community team includes experienced community-based researchers, local boards of health and other health and community organizations, neighborhood leaders, and community residents. Together, we will accomplish the following goals: (1) With our Network of Community Advisors (NOCA), develop a set of procedures to guide the processes of decision making, conflict resolution, and setting priorities;(2) Formalize and launch the participatory process for setting a 1, 3 and 5-year research agenda for the PRCHN through neighborhood-based meetings, academic-community retreats, topic-specific working groups, and NOCA;(3) Conduct high-quality, collaborative prevention research with community partners to improve the health of local residents and inform the broader research community;(4) Foster community-based prevention research among our faculty, students and community partners through training, mentoring, workshops, and pilot project funding;(5) Build community capacity for conducting and engaging in prevention and health promotion research by providing research methods and evaluation-focused technical assistance to our community partners;(6) Establish our Center as a comprehensive resource for public access to local data on leading health indicators and as dissemination center for prevention research findings;and, (7) Conduct an ongoing, rigorous evaluation of the PRCHN, to ensure that Center's goals are achieved on time and on budget and to contribute to the national evaluation of PRCs. The Core Research Project emerged from our collaborations with neighborhoods to examine the prevalent issue of poor food access and security. ELEVANCE (See instructions): 'he PRCHN will provide an infrastructure to enhance collaboration among a multidisciplinary faculty and our community partners in a way that draws upon all of the unique perspectives and expertise to conduct prevention research, develop and test innovative interventions, approaches and methods to address the health needs of our community.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Center for Chronic Disease Prev and Health Promo (NCCDPHP)
Type
Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Research Centers (U48)
Project #
5U48DP001930-03
Application #
8142244
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZCD1-AWI (09))
Program Officer
Sims, Joyner
Project Start
2009-09-30
Project End
2014-09-29
Budget Start
2011-09-30
Budget End
2012-09-29
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2011
Total Cost
$615,000
Indirect Cost
Name
Case Western Reserve University
Department
Public Health & Prev Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
077758407
City
Cleveland
State
OH
Country
United States
Zip Code
44106
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Trapl, Erika S; Pike, Stephanie N; Borawski, Elaine et al. (2017) Food Melt in Consumer Food Environments in Low-income Urban Neighborhoods. Am J Health Behav 41:710-718
Koopman Gonzalez, Sarah J; Cofie, Leslie E; Trapl, Erika S (2017) ""I just use it for weed"": The modification of little cigars and cigarillos by young adult African American male users. J Ethn Subst Abuse 16:66-79
Sahoo, Satya S; Zhang, Guo-Qiang; Bamps, Yvan et al. (2016) Managing information well: Toward an ontology-driven informatics platform for data sharing and secondary use in epilepsy self-management research centers. Health Informatics J 22:548-61
Jewett-Tennant, Jeri; Collins, Cyleste; Matloub, Jacqueline et al. (2016) Partnership Among Peers: Lessons Learned From the Development of a Community Organization-Academic Research Training Program. Prog Community Health Partnersh 10:461-470

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