About the Academy
The figure above was created by the collaborators and experts on the C3 Project. The full project description and report can be found here:
Community Health Workers in Clinical Settings
While historically based in communities, Community health workers (CHWs) are an emerging and vibrant health care workforce who can be integral components of clinical care teams, facilitating a more dynamic patient-centered perspective. They have played an increasingly important role in health care programs, often bridging the gap between clinic and community by facilitating care coordination, health promotion and communication between clinicians and patients in a manner that is generally assumed to be acceptable to care recipients and ultimately improving health outcomes.
CHW interventions have been identified as an essential strategy to address health disparities for patient-centered medical homes by the National Institutes of Health Care and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and applauded for their contributions to the Institute for Health Care Improvement’s Triple Aim objectives. On March 19, 2020, the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency issued a memorandum which included CHWs in the list of “essential critical infrastructure workers who are imperative during the response to the COVID-19 emergency for both public health and safety as well as community well-being.”
Purpose of the Academy
The º£½ÇÉçÇø Community Health Worker Academy is dedicated to the development of Community Health Workers (CHWs) as a health care force through:
- development and implementation of standards-based curricula that is responsive to the needs of clinical settings that serve multicultural, under resourced populations in partnership with health care organizations;
- conducting research to address gaps in the knowledge of strategies to train and integrate CHWs into health care settings;
- engagement in educating health systems and health professionals about CHWs, in advocacy and in the development of policies to support this emerging workforce.
History
At the establishment of the Academy, ten national and regional experts participated in National Experts Advisory Meetings, as well as a retreat hosted by the Academy at º£½ÇÉçÇø in September of 2019. The objective of this retreat was to answer a key question to guide this initial step of the project: What is the best way that the Academy can develop the CHW training curricula with a focus on the clinical context? In addition to the Academy administrators, participants included CHWs, academics allies with expertise in CHW research and advocacy, health care administrators, and º£½ÇÉçÇø students.
The objective of this retreat was to answer a key question to guide this initial step of the project: What is the best way that the Academy can develop the CHW training curricula with a focus on the clinical context? In addition to the Academy administrators, participants included CHWs, academic allies with expertise in CHW research and advocacy, health care administrators, and º£½ÇÉçÇø students.
Our curriculum was planned in the context of a partnership between the º£½ÇÉçÇø CHW Academy and a regional healthcare organization, Providence, with the intention of training CHWs to be placed in regional clinics and hospitals. Providence has utilized Community Health Workers (CHWs) for more than a decade to enrich their health care programs. However, most Providence CHWs had not benefitted from standard-based training in a clinical setting and have worked together to develop standards-based curricula for clinical CHWs.
Curricula Development and Trainings for Clinic-based CHWs
Historically, CHW trainings have often been developed to support community-based CHWs and not clinic- based CHWs. When CHWs have been trained to engage with patients, typically such trainings have been for short term grant funded projects, focusing on a specific health intervention and not geared towards a long term, ongoing engagement of CHWs employed in clinical settings. While CHW roles and competencies have been proposed, there are no consistent, formalized frameworks or curricula reported in the literature for training clinic-based CHWs in the United States.
The º£½ÇÉçÇø Community Health Worker Academy is dedicated to training and cultivating diverse Community Health Workers (CHWs) to serve in clinical settings, who are committed to social justice and health equity, through community engagement, clinical service, and patient centered practices. The º£½ÇÉçÇø CHW Academy is committed to addressing this gap in the training and placement of CHWs from diverse backgrounds into clinical settings using an innovative approach, further described on the Curricula and Trainings page. Furthermore, we are committed to educating clinical stakeholders in health care organizations into which CHWs are being placed to prepare them to more effectively integrate the CHW workforce.
- Office of Research
- Research Administration
- Research Centers
- Clinical Research Education and Career Development (CRECD)
- Clinical and Translational Science Institute (CTSI)
- Research Centers in Minority Institutions Research Network (RTRN)
- Center for Biomedical Informatics
- º£½ÇÉçÇø/UCLA Cancer Center Partnership to Eliminate Cancer Health Disparities
- HIV/AIDS Research – Drew CARES
- Urban Health Institute
- Black Maternal Health Center of Excellence
- UCLA-º£½ÇÉçÇø CFAR
- º£½ÇÉçÇø Patents
- Research PartnersÂ
- Student Research