Development and implementation of a training program to facilitate community partnerships in the Indigenous Cultural Understandings of Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementias – Research and Engagement (ICARE) project Journal Articles uri icon

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abstract

  • AbstractBackgroundIndigenous Cultural‐understandings of Alzheimer’s – Research and Engagement (ICARE) is a program of research investigating the lived experiences of family and professional care providers for Indigenous people with dementia involving three diverse sites in Canada and the United States. We employ a community‐based participatory research (CBPR) approach that includes hiring Indigenous community‐based researchers to assist with community engagement, subject recruitment, data collection, analysis, and dissemination. This poster describes the development and deployment of a training program designed to build capacity and support community participation in the ICARE project.MethodThe goal was to design culturally safe training that would support community participation in the study, build research capacity in local community members, and improve standardization of protocols across the sites. The training objectives were to teach the basics of CBPR, administrative tasks, basics of qualitative research, protocols of the study, including research ethics and compliance. To accomplish this, we used a Two‐Eyed seeing approach and cultural safety lens. The training encompasses four modules, with online active and reflective learning, mandatory readings, and videotaped interviews. Five community researchers completed the training. Post‐training debriefing interviews and written review of lessons learned were conducted four months after the training was completed.ResultAt completion of the training, community researchers could define the key tenets and methodological procedures used in CBPR, including the unique ethical considerations for completing research related to dementia within Indigenous communities, the administrative duties required to produce reliable data, and demonstrate key qualitative research. Trainees reported the videotaped interviews conducted with a senior community were the most important to their learning, as the videos gave concrete examples of what to expect in conducting research within their own communities. They wished we had more content and videos on accessing and using the technology associated with the administrative tasks.ConclusionHiring and training community‐based researchers is considered best practice in Indigenous Health research, yet there are few guidelines on how to develop local capacity to fill these roles. The ICARE training provided community‐based researchers with critical skills to facilitate community involvement in the research process and grounding in academic protocols and methods.

authors

  • Blind, Melissa J
  • Pitawanakwat, Karen
  • Koski, Jessica
  • Lambrou, Nickolas H
  • Lemieux, Andrine
  • Jacklin, Kristen
  • Warry, Wayne

publication date

  • December 2020