TY - JOUR
T1 - Engaging Community Networks to Improve Depression Services
T2 - A Cluster-Randomized Trial of a Community Engagement and Planning Intervention
AU - Mendel, Peter
AU - O’Hora, Jennifer
AU - Zhang, Lily
AU - Stockdale, Susan
AU - Dixon, Elizabeth L.
AU - Gilmore, Jim
AU - Jones, Felica
AU - Jones, Andrea
AU - Williams, Pluscedia
AU - Sharif, Mienah Zulfacar
AU - Masongsong, Zoe
AU - Kadkhoda, Farbod
AU - Pulido, Esmeralda
AU - Chung, Bowen
AU - Wells, Kenneth B.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2021/4
Y1 - 2021/4
N2 - This paper explores the effects of a group-randomized controlled trial, Community Partners in Care (CPIC), on the development of interagency networks for collaborative depression care improvement between a community engagement and planning (CEP) intervention and a resources for services (RS) intervention that provided the same content solely via technical assistance to individual programs. Both interventions consisted of a diverse set of service agencies, including health, mental health, substance abuse treatment, social services, and community-trusted organizations such as churches and parks and recreation centers. Participants in the community councils for the CEP intervention reflected a range of agency leaders, staff, and other stakeholders. Network analysis of partnerships among agencies in the CEP versus RS condition, and qualitative analysis of perspectives on interagency network changes from multiple sources, suggested that agencies in the CEP intervention exhibited greater growth in partnership capacity among themselves than did RS agencies. CEP participants also viewed the coalition development intervention both as promoting collaboration in depression services and as a meaningful community capacity building activity. These descriptive results help to identify plausible mechanisms of action for the CPIC interventions and can be used to guide development of future community engagement interventions and evaluations in under-resourced communities.
AB - This paper explores the effects of a group-randomized controlled trial, Community Partners in Care (CPIC), on the development of interagency networks for collaborative depression care improvement between a community engagement and planning (CEP) intervention and a resources for services (RS) intervention that provided the same content solely via technical assistance to individual programs. Both interventions consisted of a diverse set of service agencies, including health, mental health, substance abuse treatment, social services, and community-trusted organizations such as churches and parks and recreation centers. Participants in the community councils for the CEP intervention reflected a range of agency leaders, staff, and other stakeholders. Network analysis of partnerships among agencies in the CEP versus RS condition, and qualitative analysis of perspectives on interagency network changes from multiple sources, suggested that agencies in the CEP intervention exhibited greater growth in partnership capacity among themselves than did RS agencies. CEP participants also viewed the coalition development intervention both as promoting collaboration in depression services and as a meaningful community capacity building activity. These descriptive results help to identify plausible mechanisms of action for the CPIC interventions and can be used to guide development of future community engagement interventions and evaluations in under-resourced communities.
KW - Community engagement
KW - Community of practice
KW - Community-based participatory research
KW - Depression care
KW - Partnership networks
KW - Quality improvement
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85085342001&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s10597-020-00632-5
DO - 10.1007/s10597-020-00632-5
M3 - Article
SN - 0010-3853
VL - 57
SP - 457
EP - 469
JO - Community Mental Health Journal
JF - Community Mental Health Journal
IS - 3
ER -