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Showing papers by "Anthony H. D. Brown published in 2018"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article highlights the origins, development, and prospects of three current examples of funded P2P initiatives based in New Orleans and Los Angeles and outlines how these projects - Prisoner to Patient, the NOLA Partnership, and Resilience Among African American Men - use CPPR principles.
Abstract: The Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) supports patient-centered clinical comparative effectiveness research (CER) including health disparities and engagement portfolios In 2013, PCORI launched the Pipeline to Proposal (P2P) mechanism to support development of novel patient- and stakeholder-centered partnerships focused on designing clinical CER funding proposals By providing a tiered structure of successive small contracts and technical assistance, the P2P mechanism encourages development of new research partnerships among diverse stakeholders As a comparatively new field, patient-centered outcomes research (PCOR) has few well-delineated methods for engaging patients and other non-scientists in effective teams with academics or clinicians to develop and implement rigorous, scientific research proposals Community partnered participatory research (CPPR) provides a useful framework for structuring new partnerships In this article we highlight the origins, development, and prospects of three current examples of funded P2P initiatives based in New Orleans and Los Angeles We outline how these projects - Prisoner to Patient, the NOLA Partnership, and Resilience Among African American Men - use CPPR principles We also describe how they have collaborated with, and contributed to, a two-way learning and knowledge exchange among members of the PCORI-funded Community and Patient Partnered Research Network Lessons learned may be applicable to other groups planning to create new partnerships focused on implementing PCOR

6 citations