A City “Collabatory”: Researchers, Commissioners and Community Members Planning Interventions Together
Neil Small, Rachael H. Moss, Josie Dickerson, Shahid Islam

TL;DR
Researchers and community members in Bradford are working together to improve children's health through integrated planning and long-term funding.
Contribution
The paper introduces a collaborative approach called a 'collabatory' that integrates research, community engagement, and service delivery for children's health interventions.
Findings
Integration of research, commissioning, and service delivery is essential for addressing complex child health issues.
The Community Readiness Model highlights the importance of trust-building and clear communication for successful interventions.
Long-term funding and community involvement are critical for sustaining and adapting health interventions.
Abstract
Improving children's health and development in their early years is important, urgent and, cost‐effective. But it's difficult to do. Using an example from Bradford in the UK we argue that integration, innovation and community engagement are key. Long‐term funding also helps. Problems with multiple causes need “whole system” responses. This includes integration of research, commissioning and service delivery. We test innovations, learn about how they are received, modify them and test again. A dynamic research programme starts with innovations that are “science‐based”—things the literature suggests might work—and then evaluates them. Science‐based approaches may translate into being “evidence‐based”. If a community is not ready for an intervention what needs to be put in place to enhance that readiness? We use two examples of using the Community Readiness Model. For obesity interventions…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild and Adolescent Health · Obesity and Health Practices · Chronic Disease Management Strategies
