Abstract

The Problem: The community health needs assessment (CHNA) mandate of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) has the potential to make significant and sustainable change in the health of communities. However, to date many hospital-led assessments have used traditional, top-down data collection approaches that overemphasize individualized community member deficits and underutilize collaboration across sectors.

Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to present the principles of community-based participatory research (CBPR) as a framework for conducting CHNAs in a way that mitigates the potential for harm, waste, and misrepresentation of community assets and needs that characterizes many existing CHNA processes, illustrating the power of applying CBPR partnerships to this process.

Key Points: CBPR is a framework to engage community members directly in research design, the collection and analysis of data, and the creation of action plans that address research findings. Key principles include collaborative involvement, establishment of empowering processes, and long-term commitment. A case example of an innovative community partnership demonstrates the power and challenges of taking a CBPR approach to the CHNA process.

Conclusions: CBPR has incredible potential to be incorporated into ACA-mandated hospital CHNAs, leading to increased impact and shared power with community members.

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