Abstract

BackgroundParticipatory research offers a promising approach to addressing health inequities and improving the social determinants of health for diverse populations of adolescents. However, little research has systematically explored factors influencing the implementation of participatory health interventions targeting health disparities.ObjectiveThis study examined the utility of the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) in identifying and comparing barriers and facilitators influencing implementation of participatory research trials by employing an adaptation of the CFIR to assess the implementation of a multi-component, urban public school-based participatory health intervention.MethodsWe collected qualitative data over a one-year period through weekly team meeting observational field notes and regular semi-structured interviews with five community-based participatory researchers, one school-based partner, and four school principals involved in implementing a participatory intervention in five schools. Adapted CFIR constructs guided our largely deductive approach to thematic data analysis. We ranked each of the three intervention components as high or low implementation to create an overall implementation effectiveness score for all five schools. Cross-case comparison of constructs across high and low implementation schools identified constructs that most strongly influenced implementation.ResultsTen of 30 assessed constructs consistently distinguished between high and low implementation schools in this participatory intervention, with five strongly distinguishing. Three additional constructs played influential, though non-distinguishing, roles within this participatory intervention implementation. Influential constructs spanned all five domains and fit within three broad themes: 1) leadership engagement, 2) alignment between the intervention and institutional goals, priorities, demographics, and existing systems, and 3) tensions between adaptability and complexity within participatory interventions. However, the dynamic and collaborative nature of participatory intervention implementation underscores the artificial distinction between inner and outer settings in participatory research and the individual behavior change focus does not consider how relationships between stakeholders at multiple levels of participatory interventions shape the implementation process.ConclusionsThe CFIR is a useful framework for the assessment of participatory research trial implementation. Our findings underscore how the framework can be readily adapted to further strengthen its fit as a tool to examine project implementation in this context.

Highlights

  • Participatory research offers a promising approach to addressing health inequities and improving the social determinants of health for diverse populations of adolescents

  • The Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) is a useful framework for the assessment of participatory research trial implementation

  • These constructs fell into three overarching themes – leadership engagement, alignment between the intervention and institutional priorities and systems, and tensions between adaptability and complexity within participatory interventions – and span five CFIR domains

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Summary

Introduction

Participatory research offers a promising approach to addressing health inequities and improving the social determinants of health for diverse populations of adolescents. Little research has systematically explored factors influencing the implementation of participatory health interventions targeting health disparities. Participatory approaches to research such as community-based participatory research (CBPR) and participatory action research (PAR) have proven effective in guiding public health intervention design in various contexts, for interventions addressing health inequities [1, 2]. The utilization of theoretical frameworks to guide the development [3] or the systematic project implementation assessments of participatory interventions [4,5,6,7] is in its infancy. In the CFIR, Damschroder et al [11] melded theories from a range of disciplines to enable the systematic assessment of potential facilitators and barriers to intervention implementation effectiveness. While initially applied within behavior change interventions in healthcare settings [12,13,14], the CFIR has been adapted for use in public health [7, 15] and school settings [16, 17] and has undergone multiple methodologic adaptations [14, 18]

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