| Literature DB >> 33180688 |
Elizabeth Rink1, Kelly Knight2, Colter Ellis2, Alma McCormick3, Paula FireMoon4, Suzanne Held5, Eliza Webber6, Alexandra Adams6.
Abstract
PURPOSE ANDEntities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33180688 PMCID: PMC7665515 DOI: 10.5888/pcd17.200099
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prev Chronic Dis ISSN: 1545-1151 Impact factor: 2.830
Project Overview, Epistemology, Methodology, and Analytics Related to Research Design for Randomized Controlled Trials, Case Studies Conducted in 3 US Tribal Nations
| Category | Project 1: Nen ŨnkUmbi/EdaHiYedo (“We Are Here Now”) | Project 2: Báa nnilah | Project 3: Healthy Children, Strong Families 2 |
|---|---|---|---|
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| • All 15- to 18-year-old tribal member youths living on the Fort Peck Reservation receive intervention using a stepped-wedge design. | • Members of the Absáalooke (Crow) Tribe aged 25 or older who have chronic illnesses are eligible to participate in the intervention. | • Intervention included caregivers with 2- to 5-year-old children at 4 reservations and 1 urban Indian health center. |
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| • Strengthening of Assiniboine and Sioux traditional beliefs and practices related to SRH, families, and culture | • Intervention methods co-developed by partners include Crow-specific goal setting, use of traditional stories in intervention, and Crow-based resilience exercise | • Family-based intervention based on the Native concept of elders teaching younger generations |
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| • Randomized controlled trial with stepped-wedge design | • All participants receive intervention via wait-list control design | • Randomized controlled trial with modified crossover design |
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| • Mixed-methods approach | • Mixed-methods design to gather contextual data | • Primary comparison will be supplemented by analysis of covariance for BMI/zBMI at Year 1 with randomization and BMI/zBMI at baseline as model terms. |
Abbreviations: AI, American Indian; BMI, body mass index; CDC, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; MSU, Montana State University; SRH, sexual and reproductive health; zBMI, BMI z-score.
Participant Demographics, Case Studies of Implementing Randomized Controlled Trials in 3 US Tribal Nations
| Demographic Characteristic | Nen ŨnkUmbi/EdaHiYedo (“We Are Here Now”) (N = 456) | Báa nnilah (N = 211) | Healthy Children Strong Families 2 (N = 450 Families) |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 14–18 years | 24–82 years | Children aged 2–5 years and their adult caregiver |
|
| |||
| Male | 227 (50) | 59 (28) | Caregiver: 24 (5.3)/child: 224 (49.8) |
| Female | 222 (49) | 152 (72) | Caregiver: 426 (94.7)/child: 226 (50.2) |
| Neither male nor female | 5 (1) | NA | NA |
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| Fort Peck Reservation | Crow Reservation | 4 tribal reservations (1 in the Northeast, 2 in upper Midwest, and 1 in the Northern Mountain region) and 1 urban clinic serving a primarily American Indian population in the Southwest |
Abbreviation: NA, not applicable.
Using Community-Based Participatory Research in Randomized Controlled Trials, Common Themes in Case Studies Conducted in 3 US Tribal Nations
| Theme | Elements |
|---|---|
| Long-standing partnerships | • 5- to 20-year partnerships |
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| |
| Diverse concepts of success | • Substantial community engagement before the design and implementation of an RCT can increase its success |
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| Respect for diverse knowledge systems | • Understanding and integrating traditional Indigenous knowledge systems and ways Indigenous people view the world with knowledge based on a colonial worldview |
Abbreviations: CBPR, community-based participatory research; RCT, randomized controlled trial.