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Strategies for high-quality community-based participatory research partnerships in public health research

Publication ,  Journal Article
D'Agostino, EM; Piepenbrink, R; Bateman, LB; Mast, DK; Windsor, L; Oto-Kent, D; Wells, A; Goldman, J; Schuster, J; Kaufmann, R; Gurarie, R; Nuño, M
Published in: Public Health in Practice
June 1, 2026

Objectives Community-Based Participatory Research (CBPR) is grounded in trusting, reciprocal, and authentic relationships. We aimed to identify key strategies and actionable next steps to establish and sustain high-quality community-academic partnerships that foster community-based health equity. Study design Qualitative thematic analysis. Methods We analyzed three recorded discussions from a roundtable session with community and academic partners from the Rapid Acceleration of Diagnostics–Underserved Populations (RADx-UP) program (2020-2025), which supported 142 community-engaged public health research projects aimed at reducing COVID-19-related health inequities. Results Key themes identified as most fundamental to support CBPR included establishing a long-term commitment, mutual co-learning among partners, flexible and sustained funding and resources, co-design of research and evaluation tools, and unwavering commitment to transparent communication and dissemination. Accurately assessing CBPR's impact requires using valid and reliable tools that assess whether community-academic partnerships are functioning well, identify opportunities to strengthen engagement, and measure both community- and system-level outcomes resulting from the partnerships. Conclusions Advancing community-based health research through high-quality CBPR partnerships requires ongoing flexibility, mutual trust, shared learning, and collaborative design core elements to achieve sustainable and equitable public health outcomes. Through these initiatives we can pave the way for high-quality community-academic partnerships that address critical priorities in population health research and processes for advancing health equity.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Public Health in Practice

DOI

EISSN

2666-5352

Publication Date

June 1, 2026

Volume

11
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
D’Agostino, E. M., Piepenbrink, R., Bateman, L. B., Mast, D. K., Windsor, L., Oto-Kent, D., … Nuño, M. (2026). Strategies for high-quality community-based participatory research partnerships in public health research (Accepted). Public Health in Practice, 11. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.puhip.2026.100787
D’Agostino, E. M., R. Piepenbrink, L. B. Bateman, D. K. Mast, L. Windsor, D. Oto-Kent, A. Wells, et al. “Strategies for high-quality community-based participatory research partnerships in public health research (Accepted).” Public Health in Practice 11 (June 1, 2026). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.puhip.2026.100787.
D’Agostino EM, Piepenbrink R, Bateman LB, Mast DK, Windsor L, Oto-Kent D, et al. Strategies for high-quality community-based participatory research partnerships in public health research (Accepted). Public Health in Practice. 2026 Jun 1;11.
D’Agostino, E. M., et al. “Strategies for high-quality community-based participatory research partnerships in public health research (Accepted).” Public Health in Practice, vol. 11, June 2026. Scopus, doi:10.1016/j.puhip.2026.100787.
D’Agostino EM, Piepenbrink R, Bateman LB, Mast DK, Windsor L, Oto-Kent D, Wells A, Goldman J, Schuster J, Kaufmann R, Gurarie R, Nuño M. Strategies for high-quality community-based participatory research partnerships in public health research (Accepted). Public Health in Practice. 2026 Jun 1;11.

Published In

Public Health in Practice

DOI

EISSN

2666-5352

Publication Date

June 1, 2026

Volume

11