Silent Spring Institute, 320 Nevada Street, Suite 302, Newton, MA, 02460, USA.
California Breast Cancer Research Program, University of California, Office of the President, Oakland, CA, USA.
Environ Health. 2023 Aug 30;22(1):60. doi: 10.1186/s12940-023-01005-7.
We report on community-based participatory research (CBPR) initiated by women firefighters in order to share successful elements that can be instructive for other community-engaged research. This CBPR initiative, known as the Women Worker Biomonitoring Collaborative (WWBC) is the first we are aware of to investigate links between occupational exposures and health outcomes, including breast cancer, for a cohort of exclusively women firefighters.
In order to be reflective of the experiences and knowledge of those most intimately involved, this article is co-authored by leaders of the research initiative. We collected leaders' input via recorded meeting sessions, emails, and a shared online document. We also conducted interviews (N = 10) with key research participants and community leaders to include additional perspectives.
Factors contributing to the initiative's success in enacting broadscale social change and advancing scientific knowledge include (1) forming a diverse coalition of impacted community leaders, labor unions, scientists, and advocacy organizations, (2) focusing on impacts at multiple scales of action and nurturing different, yet mutually supportive, goals among partners, (3) adopting innovative communication strategies for study participants, research partners, and the broader community, (4) cultivating a prevention-based ethos in the scientific research, including taking early action to reduce community exposures based on existing evidence of harm, and (5) emphasizing co-learning through all the study stages. Furthermore, we discuss external factors that contribute to success, including funding programs that elevate scientist-community-advocacy partnerships and allow flexibility to respond to emerging science-policy opportunities, as well as institutional structures responsive to worker concerns.
While WWBC shares characteristics with other successful CBPR partnerships, it also advances approaches that increase the ability for CBPR to translate into change at multiple levels. This includes incorporating partners with particular skills and resources beyond the traditional researcher-community partnerships that are the focus of much CBPR practice and scholarly attention, and designing studies so they support community action in the initial stages of research. Moreover, we emphasize external structural factors that can be critical for CBPR success. This demonstrates the importance of critically examining and advocating for institutional factors that better support this research.
我们报告了一项由女消防员发起的基于社区的参与式研究(CBPR),以分享可为本领域其他社区参与研究提供借鉴的成功要素。我们称之为女消防员生物监测协作研究(WWBC)的 CBPR 倡议,是我们首次了解到的专门针对女性消防员队列,旨在调查职业暴露与健康结果(包括乳腺癌)之间联系的研究。
为了反映那些最密切相关人员的经验和知识,本文由研究倡议的领导者共同撰写。我们通过记录会议、电子邮件和共享的在线文档收集领导者的意见。我们还对关键研究参与者和社区领袖进行了访谈(N=10),以纳入更多观点。
促成该倡议在实施大规模社会变革和推进科学知识方面取得成功的因素包括:(1)形成一个由受影响的社区领袖、工会、科学家和倡导组织组成的多元化联盟;(2)关注行动的多个尺度的影响,并在合作伙伴之间培养不同但相互支持的目标;(3)为研究参与者、研究伙伴和更广泛的社区采用创新的沟通策略;(4)在科学研究中培养一种基于预防的精神,包括根据现有的伤害证据,采取早期行动来减少社区暴露;(5)通过所有研究阶段强调共同学习。此外,我们还讨论了促成成功的外部因素,包括提升科学家-社区-倡导伙伴关系并允许灵活应对新兴科学政策机会的资助计划,以及对工人关注做出响应的机构结构。
虽然 WWBC 与其他成功的 CBPR 伙伴关系具有共同特点,但它也提出了一些方法,这些方法增加了 CBPR 在多个层面转化为变革的能力。这包括纳入具有特定技能和资源的合作伙伴,这些合作伙伴超越了传统的研究人员-社区伙伴关系,这是许多 CBPR 实践和学术关注的焦点,以及设计研究,以便在研究的初始阶段支持社区行动。此外,我们强调了对外在结构性因素的重视,这些因素对 CBPR 的成功至关重要。这表明了批判性地审视和倡导更好地支持这种研究的体制因素的重要性。