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Benefit or Burden?: Evaluating a Collaborative Process of Creating a Nutrition Education Program. Carrie Stehman, University of Wisconsin- Milwaukee, Center for Urban Population Health
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Benefit or Burden?: Evaluating a Collaborative Process of Creating a Nutrition Education Program Carrie Stehman, University of Wisconsin- Milwaukee, Center for Urban Population Health Anne Hahn, MPH, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Center for Urban Population Health Courtenay Kessler, MS, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Center for Urban Population Health David Frazer, MPH, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Center for Urban Population Health Paul Hunter, MD, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Center for Urban Population Health, City of Milwaukee Health Department
Overview • Nutrition education at Mobile Markets • Evaluation of development of collaborations • Methods • Results • Limitations • Conclusions • Next steps
Introduction: Mobile Markets • SHARE – Self Help and Resource Exchange • Milwaukee options: MM vs. grocery store • MMs: # and location • Current status of SHARE and MM
Intro: Nutrition Education Project • Problems: Obesity, Food Insecurity • Goal: Increase consumption of healthy foods • Objectives: Community to guide evidence-based interventions • Intervention: Develop nutrition programming specific to needs of each of 4 sites • Structure: TAB, CAB, UW-Ex, Students
Structure of Collaboration Community Advisory Board (CAB) Technical Advisory Board (TAB) UW-Extension Educators • Evaluation (by students): • Consumer Surveys • Sales Data • Benefit and Burden of Collaborative Process
Evaluation • Objective: Evaluate how the project developed meaningful collaborations • Quality of partnerships • Impact of partnerships from project partners’ perspectives
Methods • 17 face-to-face interviews • out of 19, 89.5% response rate • April-June 2012
Interviewees • 2 TAB members • 6 CAB members • 9 Other partners • Nutrition educators • Implementation team members from the 4 sites
Methods • Interviews conducted by one interviewer • Transcription and analysis performed by interviewer and one independent reviewer • Results coded, compared, and revised • Consensus set of codes developed • Emergent themes identified
Interviews Questions asked: • Value of the project • Project leadership • CAB/TAB structure • Communication • Project partnerships • Collaboration challenges
Results 1/6: Value of the Project • Community- Academic Partnership • Networking with other partners • Benefit to Mobile Market consumers TAB CAB
Results 1/6: Value of the Project • Community- Academic Partnership • Networking with other partners • Benefit to Mobile Market consumers TAB CAB
Results 1/6: Value of the Project • Community- Academic Partnership • Networking with other partners • Benefit to Mobile Market consumers TAB CAB
Results 1/6: Value of the Project • Community- Academic Partnership • Networking with other partners • Benefit to Mobile Market consumers TAB CAB
Results 2/6: Project Leadership • 11 (64.7%) believed leadership was shared between 2 or more people/entities • Project Coordinators (10, 90.9%) • Principal Investigator (5, 45.5%) • Nutrition Educators (4, 36.4%) • Site Champions (4, 36.4%)
Results 3/6: CAB and TAB • 12/17 (70.6%) commented on the CAB and TAB structure • Strengths of Structure • Complementary areas of expertise • CAB and TAB included key players in Milwaukee • TAB: health and nutrition education and research • CAB: service sites relevant to community “I really liked that [the boards] were separate and they were brought together…Separate, equal, and parallel.”
Results 3/6: CAB and TAB • Improvements suggested • Joint meeting with both boards toward the beginning of project • More frequent joint meetings or representative from one board at other board’s meetings • CAB should include more members of communities served
Results 4/6: Communication • Communication with Consumers • Inclusivity: • Bi-lingual English/Spanish education sessions • American Sign Language (ASL) Interpreters • Large-print documents “Without any interpreters we would have been lost. It would not have been successful.”
Results 5/6: Project Partnerships • Frequency and Openness of communication • Project coordinator facilitation • Expectations for implementation teams “I think that communication was very good and everyone did what they said they were going to do… I felt like my opinions were valued, or considered, or listened to.”
Results 6/6: Collaboration Challenges • Low attendance at some sites • Site partners have limited resources • Time • Budget • Staff • Not all staff familiar with logistics of program implementation
Limitations • Interviewer affiliation with CUPH • Did not interview all partners • 2/19, Both were community representatives • Findings not meant to be generalizable
Conclusions • Burden… Challenges and Lessons Learned • Benefits to Partners: • Networking with each other • Sharing resources and expertise • Sharing leadership • Working with new partners/communities • Community-Academic partnership
Lessons Learned • CAB should include clients of community organizations as well as staff • Find ways to compensate more partners for their time • Ensure site partners have access to the resources they need • Staff training • Meeting room, childcare, interpreters …
Next Steps • Current status of MM • Baldwin grant report • Partnership grant applications • Partners in place • need the glue to put the pieces together
Venue • WREN • Wisconsin Health Improvement & Research Partnerships Forum • Monona Terrace Community and Convention Center, Madison, WI • 9/21/12
Speakers Carrie Stehman • Center for Urban Population Health • UW- Milwaukee • cstehman@uwm.edu Paul Hunter, MD • Center for Urban Population Health • UW School of Medicine and Public Health • City of Milwaukee Health Department • PHUNTE@milwaukee.gov