CEnR Community Toolkit
Section 3: What’s in it for YOU? – CEnR for Community Partners
On This Page
In This Section
CEnR Community Toolkit
- Section 1: Introduction
- Section 2: What is Community-Engaged Research (CEnR)?
Section 3: What’s in it for YOU? – CEnR for Community Partners
- Section 4: Guiding Principles of CEnR
- Section 5: Questions I Should Ask Before Participating in CEnR
- Section 6: How Do I Get Started?
- Section 7: Overcoming Challenges
- Section 8: Appendix
Your willingness to become involved in a CEnR project is an important decision, and one that can have long-term effects on the overall health and wellness of the people you serve. In order to do the best research that is the most helpful, researchers conducting CEnR must listen to members of the community. Community partners provide insight on unique aspects of the community.20 Ultimately, this ‘insider’ knowledge can improve health treatments and approaches, change the ways that services are provided, and identify issues that need further looking into.9 You may be wondering, however, how participation in CEnR is valuable to you, as a community partner.
Your participation in community-engaged research can offer you the opportunity to:
Impact The Community You Love Through Research
Many community members are interested in solving problems in the communities they love but wonder how their involvement in a research project will ultimately impact the lives of the people they serve.
Participating in CEnR allows you to create an impact by:
Performing research that improves public health for members of your community.
Developing research questions that address issues of concern to the community.
Sharing the unique needs and desires of communities with varying backgrounds and bringing these insights into the research project.
Mobilizing and redistributing resources for programs and practices.
Building meaningful partnerships between communities and research institutions.
Developing ways to help the community that respect values and honor traditions.
Offering under-resourced communities with healthcare prevention and treatment options.
Increasing engagement with respect for medical and academic research.
Creating strong and efficient recruitment methods that increase research engagement.15
Promote Your Organization & Services
Community-based organizations (CBOs) partnering in research can gain local, state, and/or national attention through a variety of ways including news publications, social media announcements, presentations and displays at community and professional events, academic journals, networking groups, word of mouth, and/or more. This promotion is a huge benefit to CBO’s name recognition that can lead to increased donors, funding sources, and resources for serving communities, organizational growth, and partnership opportunities. This is a win-win for everyone involved.
Build Partnerships & Share Ideas
CEnR is conducted IN PARTNERSHIP with community members who contribute invaluable expertise and experiences to inform the development, progress, and results of a research project.20 Ultimately, these partnerships can result in connections among research team members and other organizations, all working toward the same goal. The networks created will allow you to share information about specific community concerns with opportunities to work towards solutions, encourage creativity, and maximize supportive efforts.21
Highlight Key Aspects of the Community You Service
As a community partner, your role is incredibly important because of your understanding of the community. In particular, research teams conducting CEnR will want to build on your expertise to consider a population’s opportunities to be healthy. A community’s opportunity to be healthy is measured by addressing a combination of factors, known as the social determinants of health (SDOH):23, 24
Environment and safety
Hunger
Access to care
Housing
Mental health
Transportation
Education
Income and jobs
Isolation
As a community partner, your knowledge about the social determinants of health of the community will allow the research team to approach the project in a holistic manner. This can help potential treatments, interventions, and the ways services are provided to patients.
“I most enjoy the opportunity to work collaboratively with healthcare providers and organizations to drive the mission of improving access to high-quality care and identifying and addressing social determinants of health.”
– George Garrow, MD, Chief Medical Officer at The Primary Health Network and Community Representative/Member of the Executive Committee of Penn State CTSI
Achieve Professional or Personal Growth
Participation in a CEnR study has potential impacts for you, as a professional who serves the community. The experience can offer valuable opportunities for advancement, both for you individually and for your organization overall.
If you are a patient or caregiver partnering on a research study, you will have opportunities to expand your understanding of a particular health condition by working in a research environment. This may improve your own health practices or enhance how you support those around you.
Funding Opportunities
Collaborating with Penn State researchers can help you to identify topics of interest within the community you serve and develop potential ways to address the problem(s). These partnerships can assist you in evaluating how well current programs are working and offer evidence-based data to obtain grant funding to continue or change existing programs. Your work with Penn State’s well-known researchers through CEnR can improve grant applications by drawing on many fields of expertise.
Individual Acknowledgements
Researchers and academic partners have an obligation to meet certain professional goals related to review, promotion, and tenure that often include publishing information about research they have conducted.25 This is motivation not only to conduct the required research, but to do so in a way that is cutting edge, allows for the greatest application to improving health, and results in continued partnerships. CEnR is a logical fit, as it allows researchers to fulfill professional requirements in a manner that keeps the community at the forefront.
As a partner in a CEnR project, you have the opportunity to have your contributions highlighted in the form of publications generated by the research project (e.g. study newsletters, final study reports, publications in journals, internal agency communications). Professional documentation of your contributions and involvement in a research study may be highly desirable for professional development and/or career advancement. Discussions about your recognition in professional publications should occur with the study team throughout the course of the research project.
Agency Recognition & Community Connections
There is power in numbers! Partnering with a variety of community engagement team members can shed light on the work multiple individuals and organizations are performing within their communities. Connections with others who share similar goals can result in local and national attention – not only for the topic and population under study, but for professionals like you dedicated to enhancing the lives of the particular population impacted by that topic. Establishing this type of network can increase connections with community organizations, researchers, and local and national policies that guide the research process.22
Public recognition and confidence in the work of community agencies has been showcased in a variety of projects conducted by Penn State researchers in partnership with the community. Community-engaged research at Penn State has resulted in critical changes to approaches in emotional wellbeing, cancer screenings, and healthy eating – among others – and wouldn’t be possible without community engagement.