TY - JOUR T1 - Mobilising cross-sector collaborations to improve population health in US rural communities: a qualitative study JF - BMJ Open JO - BMJ Open DO - 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-030983 VL - 9 IS - 11 SP - e030983 AU - Xi Zhu AU - Paula Weigel AU - Jure Baloh AU - Mochamad Nataliansyah AU - Nichole Gunn AU - Keith Mueller Y1 - 2019/11/01 UR - http://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/9/11/e030983.abstract N2 - Objectives This study examines types and forms of cross-sector collaborations employed by rural communities to address community health issues and identifies factors facilitating or inhibiting such collaborations.Setting We conducted case studies of four rural communities in the US state of Iowa that have demonstrated progress in creating healthier communities.Participants Key informants from local public health departments, hospitals and other health-promoting organisations and groups participated in this study. Twenty-two key-informant interviews were conducted. Participants were selected based on their organisation’s involvement in community health initiatives.Results Rural communities used different forms of collaborations, including cross-sector partnership, cross-sector interaction and cross-sector exploration, to address community health issues. Stakeholders from public health, healthcare, social services, education and business sectors were involved. Factors facilitating cross-sector collaborations include health-promoting local contexts, seed initiatives that mobilise communities, hospital visions that embrace broad views of health and shared collaboration leadership and governance. Challenges to developing and sustaining cross-sector collaborations include different institutional logics, financial and human resources constraints and geographic dispersion.Conclusions Rural communities use cross-sector collaborations to address community health issues in the forms of interaction and exploration, but real and lasting partnerships are rare. The development, operation and sustainment of cross-sector collaborations are influenced by a set of contextual and practical factors. Practical strategies and policy interventions may be used to enhance cross-sector collaborations in rural communities. ER -