Skip to content

✪ Community/patient group champion team retrospective look at engage for equity PLUS: Results from a post-intervention champion team focus group

Authors:

Michael Muhammad, Paige Castro-Reyes, Marty Chakoian, Ysabel Duron, Starla Gay, Howard Grant, Bridgette Hempstead, LaShawn Hoffman & Diane Mapes

University of Washington affiliated authors are displayed in bold.

✪ Open Access

Published: July 2025

Read the full text in the open access journal Journal of Clinical and Translational Science

Abstract:

Community/patient voice has long been stifled in favor of the priorities of powerful health organizations that set the agenda for institutional practices and policies shaping health equity research. Academic Health Centers (AHC) and Clinical Translational Science Centers (CTSC) promote missions that are often unaligned with the realities of community and patient experiences when interacting with researchers and representatives from these institutions. Implementation science has increasingly adopted collaborative and participatory approaches to the design and implementation of health interventions co-created with community/patient group members as equal participants within community-academic partnerships. Community-based participatory research/community-engaged research are widely recognized as approaches to health intervention research that offers the potential for community-patient voice to be heard when the principles of authentic participatory research are adhered to throughout all aspects of the project. For AHC’s and CTSC’s to be fully engaged, the populations they serve must have access to institutional leadership and influence over decision-making about the organizational resources allocated to community/patient groups beyond efforts to cultivate a positive public image. The E2 community/patient champion team focus groups provide unique perspectives on how equitable institutional transformation can be accomplished in a retrospective assessment of the E2 PLUS Intervention.

**This abstract is posted with permission under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License**