
@article{ref1,
title="The development of a measure of Alaska Native community resilience factors through knowledge co-production",
journal="Progress in community health partnerships: research, education, and action",
year="2020",
author="Allen, James and Johnson, Rhonda and Murphrey, Carol and McEachern, Diane and Wexler, Lisa and Black, Jessica and Amarok, Barbara QasuGlana and Apok, Charlene and Flaherty, Aneliese Apala and Ullrich, Jessica and Rasmus, Stacy",
volume="14",
number="4",
pages="443-459",
abstract="BACKGROUND: The Alaska Native Community Resilience Study (ANCRS) is the central research project of the Alaska Native Collaborative Hub for Research on Resilience  (ANCHRR), one of three American Indian and Alaska Native (AIAN) suicide prevention  hubs funded by the National Institute of Mental Health. <br><br>OBJECTIVE: This paper  describes the development of a structured interview to identify and measure  community-level protective factors that may reduce suicide risk among youth in rural  Alaska Native communities. <br><br>METHODS: Multilevel, iterative collaborative processes  resulted in: a) expanded and refined constructs of community-level protection, b)  clearer and broadly relevant item wording, c) respectful data collection procedures,  and d) Alaska Native people from rural Alaska as primary knowledge-gathering  interviewers. LESSONS LEARNED: Moving beyond engagement to knowledge co-production  in Alaska Native research requires flexibility, shared decision-making and  commitment to diverse knowledge systems; this can result in culturally attuned  methods, greater tool validity, new ways to understand complex issues and  innovations that support community health.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="1557-055X",
doi="10.1353/cpr.2020.0050",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/cpr.2020.0050"
}