Engaging Villages as Key Partners for Healthy Aging Outcomes Research: A Framework for Capacity Development
Natalie Pope, Emily Greenfield

TL;DR
This paper presents a framework to help Villages, community-based organizations, build capacity for conducting healthy aging outcomes research.
Contribution
A novel framework for capacity development in Villages to support outcomes research in healthy aging.
Findings
Capacity development involves technical skills, social capital, human motivation, and theory development.
Four thematic categories were identified: understanding research, cultivating partnerships, theorizing interventions, and procuring data systems.
The framework can assess readiness for outcomes research in community-based organizations like Villages.
Abstract
There is sustained enthusiasm for Villages as a community-centered model to promote the health and well-being of people as they age in their communities. Yet there are many challenges to advancing rigorous empirical evidence on the outcomes of Villages, including their small size, grassroots nature, variable implementation, and multiple components. As part of a larger engagement project, we aimed to develop a framework for capacity development toward outcomes research with Villages. We used qualitative data from virtual summits with approximately 400 Village participants across the United States and several other countries, including Village members, volunteers, staff, and partners. Data were primarily from discussion groups that asked participants to reflect on how Villages influence healthy aging, how Villages connect with broader health systems, and conditions for high-quality…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCommunity Health and Development · Health, psychology, and well-being · Health disparities and outcomes
