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Published in: Maternal and Child Health Journal 1/2012

01-01-2012

A Community Engagement Process for Families with Children with Disabilities: Lessons in Leadership and Policy

Authors: Claudia María Vargas, Consuelo Arauza, Kim Folsom, María del Rosario Luna, Lucy Gutiérrez, Patricia Ohliger Frerking, Kathleen Shelton, Carl Foreman, David Waffle, Richard Reynolds, Phillip J. Cooper

Published in: Maternal and Child Health Journal | Issue 1/2012

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Abstract

This article examines a community engagement process developed as part of leadership training for clinical trainees in the Oregon Leadership Education for Neurodevelopmental and Related Disabilities (LEND) Program in a complex community with diverse families who have children with disabilities. The goal is to examine the process and lessons learned for clinical trainees and their mentors from such a process. This is a case study conducted as community-engaged action research by participant-observers involved in the Cornelius community for the past 4 years. The authors include faculty members and clinical trainees of the Oregon LEND Program at the Oregon Health & Science University, families with children with disabilities in the community, and city officials. It is a critical case study in that it studied a community engagement process in one of the poorest communities in the region, with an unusually high population of children with disabilities, and in a community that is over half Latino residents. Lessons learned here can be helpful in a variety of settings. Community engagement forum, community engagement processes, a debriefing using a seven-element feasibility framework, and trainee evaluations are key elements. A community engagement forum is a meeting to which community members and stakeholders from pertinent agencies are invited. Community engagement processes used include a steering committee made up of, and guided by community members which meets on a regular basis to prioritize and carry out responses to problems. Trainee evaluations are based on a set of questions to trigger open-ended responses. Lessons learned are based on assessments of initial and long-term outcomes of the community engagement processes in which families, community members, local officials and LEND trainees and faculty participate as well as by trainee participant-observations, end of year evaluations and trainee debriefings at the time of the initial community assessment forum. The thesis that emerges is that community engagement processes can afford significant opportunities for clinicians in training to develop their leadership skills toward improving maternal and child health for minority families with children with disabilities while building capacity in families for advocacy and facilitating change in the community.
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Metadata
Title
A Community Engagement Process for Families with Children with Disabilities: Lessons in Leadership and Policy
Authors
Claudia María Vargas
Consuelo Arauza
Kim Folsom
María del Rosario Luna
Lucy Gutiérrez
Patricia Ohliger Frerking
Kathleen Shelton
Carl Foreman
David Waffle
Richard Reynolds
Phillip J. Cooper
Publication date
01-01-2012
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Maternal and Child Health Journal / Issue 1/2012
Print ISSN: 1092-7875
Electronic ISSN: 1573-6628
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10995-010-0666-8

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