The Counseling Psychologist: Prevention Community-Based Collaboration: An Overarching Best Practice in
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Community-Based Collaboration:
An Overarching Best Practice in Prevention
Lynne A. Bond
The University of Vermont
With the recent turn of the century, several distinct groups of prevention
scholars and practitioners appear to have been working simultaneously to
identify and disseminate general guidelines for effective prevention and
health promotion programming. For example, our own report on this topic,
featuring 10 characteristics of effective primary prevention and promotion
programs (Bond & Carmola Hauf, 2004), was prepared for a 2001 presentation to the Congress of the World Federation for Mental Health. At
approximately the same time, Durlak (2003) identified 8 generalizations
about effective prevention and health promotion interventions. Weissberg
and Kumpfer (2003) edited a special issue of the American Psychologist
that emphasized best practice standards for child and youth prevention initiatives that included Nation et al.s (2003) review-of-reviews approach to
identify general principles of effective prevention programs that might transcend specific [prevention] content areas (p. 450).
It is strikingand reassuringthat these reviews have led to remarkably similar conclusions about characteristics and preliminary guidelines
for effective prevention and promotion. Although the precise numbers and
headings of recommendations vary from one publication to the next, the
Correspondence concerning this article should be sent to Lynne A. Bond, Psychology
Department, 338 John Dewey Hall, The University of Vermont, Burlington, VT 05405-0134;
e-mail: lynne.bond@uvm.edu.
THE COUNSELING PSYCHOLOGIST, Vol. 35, No. 4, July 2007 567-575
DOI: 10.1177/0011000006296159
2007 by the Division of Counseling Psychology
567
Downloaded from tcp.sagepub.com by florentina negrescu on September 26, 2010
core conclusions are noticeably similar. Thus, it is both fitting and timely
for Hage et al. (2007 [this issue]) to build upon this work to identify 15
best practice guidelines on prevention practice, research, training, and
social advocacy for psychology (p. 493). We are ready and in need of such
a distillation to guide future practice.
One of Hage et al.s (2007) best practice guidelines encourages psychologists to use culturally relevant prevention practices that are adapted
to the specific context in which they are delivered and that include clients
and other relevant stakeholders in all aspects of prevention planning and
programming (p. 496). In this article we argue that community-based collaboration might best be elevated from the position of useful tool to a
best practice in and of itself. We want to put community-based collaborations in bright lights, move them from background to foreground, and
feature them as fundamental to effective prevention and promotion efforts.
Increasingly, we have become convinced that community-based collaborations not only characterize effective preventive interventions but also may
be essential for achieving other characteristics of effective prevention and,
thus, constitute a core best practice guideline.
CONTRIBUTIONS OF COMMUNITY-BASED
COLLABORATIONS
We posit that community-based collaboration should be construed as an
overarching best practice guideline because it facilitates the attainment of
virtually every characteristic of effective prevention and best practice
guidelines on prevention practice, research, training, and social advocacy.
To state our case, we identify six prominent themes that are repeatedly
associated with effective primary prevention and health promotion initiatives (cf. reviews by Bond & Carmola Hauf, 2004; Durlak, 2003;
Greenberg et al., 2003; Nation et al., 2003) and Hage et al.s (2007) guidelines for best practices. Additionally, we describe the manner in which community-based collaborations contribute to each of these themes.
Effective Prevention Initiatives Are Based Upon
Sound Theory and Research
The content, structure, and implementation of successful primary prevention and promotion efforts are based upon a foundation of high quality interdisciplinary scholarship and practice that identify key elements
and strategies demonstrated to contribute to success. This fact highlights
the crucial role of researchers and other professionals in communitybased collaborations. Certain partners in a collaborative effort have
access to information that is not easily available to others. For example,
well-trained scientists may have a strong grasp of certain relevant theory
and research, but lack familiarity with applied theory and research that
others can bring to bear. Likewise, scholars lament the absence of scientific input in many community-based violence prevention efforts despite
their careful tailoring to community needs. (Compare this theme with
Hage et al.s, 2007, Principle 2, p. 503.)
Community-based collaborations enable partners to pool and hence
broaden their respective knowledge base, creating a stronger foundation for
their prevention initiative. At the same time, in the course of their information exchange, collaborators are also encouraged (if not forced) to use
creative and critical thinking regarding the implications of their own and
others disciplinary resources. Thus, the resulting initiatives may be simultaneously more rigorous and more creative.
perspectives; their content and structure (e.g., timing, dosage, and modality
of communication) must be appropriate culturally, sociopolitically, and
developmentally (e.g., Bond & Carmola Hauf, 2004; Durlak, 2003; Hage
et al., 2007; Nation et al., 2003). For instance, the content and format of an
effective program to support families undergoing divorce must be responsive to the sociocultural meaning of divorce for the family and community,
the developmental stages of the children, and the phase of the family in the
divorce process (e.g., being contemplated, following a long-time separation, or having been abruptly implemented). Interventions must be tailored
according to peoples stage of change (Riger, 2001, p. 72) and the sociocultural practices and meaning they make of related events. (Compare this
theme with Hage et al.s, 2007, Principle 3, pp. 507-508.)
Input from diverse community-based partners is essential for assuring
a prevention initiative that is responsive to the particular population.
Community partners have important insider knowledge regarding the culture(s) in which targeted participants and other stakeholders are engaged,
including their history, needs, values, belief systems, and patterns of daily/
weekly contact (e.g., Is the laundromat, fitness club, corner market, and/or
newspaper an effective vehicle for ongoing information dissemination?). This
is crucial input not only in the early stages of problem/goal definition and
intervention design but also during ongoing monitoring and evaluation of the
initiative (as we discuss next). Being sensitive to the population also requires
understanding the evolving nature of the systems in which individuals engage
(e.g., family, peer, work, educational, religious, and other community settings) and culturally sensitive points of access to these evolving systems (e.g.,
identifying when, where, and how the targeted population is most likely to be
open to considering alternative ways to approach habitual behaviors and
interactions). For instance, intergenerational networks (e.g., grandparents,
extended family members) serve as a daily influence and potentially powerful intervention tool for some cultural groups, but not for others. Through
community partners, we can assemble local knowledge that contributes to
determining appropriate dosage and follow-up points for preventive intervention (e.g., a collaboration among community health providers, police, social
service providers, businesses, and substance abusers is better able to identify
high-stress and/or high-risk times of days, weeks, and years for substance
abuse and needed support).
Community-based collaboration, in turn, promotes buy-in and engagement of these diverse community collaborators. It both motivates and provides
the partners with opportunities to become more sensitive, open, and responsive
to the needs, strengths, vulnerabilities, and complex socioculturalpolitical
contexts affecting the target population. For example, participating partners
from the police, local businesses, and health and social service agencies
develop more commitment, sensitivity, and understanding toward the population and become more likely to serve as public advocates on its behalf.
Effective Prevention Incorporates High-Quality
Monitoring and Evaluation
Ongoing program evaluation is repeatedly recognized as necessary for
successful prevention efforts in mental health (e.g., Bond & Carmola Hauf,
2004; Durlak, 2003; Dusenbury & Falco, 1995; Nation et al., 2003). It permits ongoing feedback regarding intended and unintended effects of the initiative, including the fidelity of the implementation (and its components) and
the degree to which identified goals and objectives are being addressed.
Moreover, the most useful evaluation protocols require ongoing monitoring
and feedback.
As Hage et al. (2007) point out, Families, schools, community agencies,
businesses and policy makers represent potential partners or stakeholders,
who should be involved in the process from an initial needs assessment
through program evaluation and adaptation (p. 509). Community-based collaborations support high-quality evaluation and monitoring. For example,
collaborating partners are likely to vary in their resources (e.g., staffing,
funds, networks, and time), information-gathering skills and experience
(e.g., interviewing, observational, and unobtrusive measures), and access to
contexts, opportunities, and procedures that are relevant to evaluation and
monitoring. The diverse experience and priorities of the partners are likely
to lead them to pose different questions and suggest alternative interpretations of the data. This means that community-based collaborations promote
more comprehensive and ecologically valid data gathering and interpretation, and reduce redundant evaluation efforts that fail to provide comparable data. Moreover, the shared ownership of the prevention initiative
increases the likelihood that collaborating partners will also take responsibility in both implementing and then responding to evaluation in meaningful ways.
Effective Primary Prevention Efforts Require Sustainability
As Bronfenbrenner (1974) and his colleagues (Lazar & Darlington,
1978) reminded us years ago, only sustained interventions have sustained
effects. To achieve meaningful long-term outcomes, prevention initiatives
must have a sustainable (and necessarily flexible) infrastructure that is integrated into stable ongoing systems (e.g., health, social, political, economic,
educational organization at the local, regional, national, or even international levels), decreasing vulnerability to shifting priorities and resources.
SUMMARY
Community-based collaborations, formal or informal, provide not only
the road but also the frame, body, engine, and fuel for a successful journey in
prevention. The collaboration of stakeholders from different systems and
contexts of peoples lives enhances the pathway for accessing multiple contexts and influences of peoples lives and keeping those roadways open.
Community-based collaborations assemble multiple perspectives and expertise, and require intragroup communication, increasing the likelihood of creating a stronger theoretical and research framework from which to work. The
integration of diverse perspectives reflecting different knowledge and sensitivities permits the assemblage of a more fitting and effective overall design.
By truly sharing authority, power, and resources for the initiative, participating stakeholders are invested in improving, maintaining, and sustaining the
vehicle they have jointly created.
Of course, community-based collaborations provide not only an overarching framework for achieving effective prevention in mental health but also a
vehicle for strengthening the community partners themselves. Through the
collaborative efforts, each partner is gaining knowledge, skills, access to
resources and networks, and the power to function more effectively to
achieve its goals. In other words, strong community-based collaborations not
only lead to more effective prevention but also support the development of the
individuals, organizations, and communities committed to promoting mental
health. Each part of the prevention machine becomes stronger and more
effective through the collaboration process.
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