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Volume 26, Issue 4: August, 1999

Abstract

ENHANCING COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION IN INTERVENTION RESEARCH: FARMWORKERS AND AGRICULTURAL CHEMICALS IN NORTH CAROLINA

Thomas A. Arcury, PhD, Colin K. Austin, JD, MRP, Sara A. Quandt, PhD, and Rose Saavedra, AA

Address reprint requests to:
Thomas A. Arcury, PhD, Center for Urban and Regional Studies, College Box No. 3410, Hickerson House, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599; phone: (919) 962-3512; fax: (919) 962-2518; e-mail: tom_arcury@unc.edu.

The participation of affected communities in the development of public health intervention research improves project sustainability and effectiveness by making projects more relevant and acceptable to the communities. This article presents a multimode, multidomain model approach for community participation in different project components, which ensures the benefits of participation without requiring the same level of participation in every activity or by every community sector. A case study is used to illustrate the model, describing procedures for establishing and maintaining farmworker participation in developing an intervention to reduce exposure to chemicals. Farmworkers are a poor and underserved population for which the empowering and culturally appropriate benefits of community participation are especially needed. However, this population presents challenges for participatory health projects: geographic dispersion, ethnic diversity, lack of organization, sense of powerlessness, and communication and transportation difficulties. The lessons learned in this case extend the method and theory of community participation.

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