Cover: How Do Communities Use a Participatory Public Health Approach to Build Resilience?

How Do Communities Use a Participatory Public Health Approach to Build Resilience?

The Los Angeles County Community Disaster Resilience Project

Published in: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, Volume 14, Issue 10 (October 2017), page 1267. doi: 10.3390/ijerph14101267

Posted on RAND.org on December 14, 2017

by Elizabeth Bromley, David Eisenman, Aizita Magaña, Malcolm V. Williams, Biblia Kim, Michael McCreary, Anita Chandra, Kenneth B. Wells

Community resilience is a key concept in the National Health Security Strategy that emphasizes development of multi-sector partnerships and equity through community engagement. Here, we describe the advancement of CR principles through community participatory methods in the Los Angeles County Community Disaster Resilience (LACCDR) initiative. LACCDR, an initiative led by the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health with academic partners, randomized 16 community coalitions to implement either an Enhanced Standard Preparedness or Community Resilience approach over 24 months. Facilitated by a public health nurse or community educator, coalitions comprised government agencies, community-focused organizations and community members. We used thematic analysis of data from focus groups (n = 5) and interviews (n = 6 coalition members; n = 16 facilitators) to compare coalitions' strategies for operationalizing community resilience levers of change (engagement, partnership, self-sufficiency, education). We find that strategies that included bidirectional learning helped coalitions understand and adopt resilience principles. Strategies that operationalized community resilience levers in mutually reinforcing ways (e.g., disseminating information while strengthening partnerships) also secured commitment to resilience principles. We review additional challenges and successes in achieving cross-sector collaboration and engaging at-risk groups in the resilience versus preparedness coalitions. The LACCDR example can inform strategies for uptake and implementation of community resilience and uptake of the resilience concept and methods.

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