keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661829/promoting-covid-19-vaccine-confidence-and-access-among-youth-experiencing-homelessness-community-engaged-public-health-practice
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ingie Osman, Renee Sieving, Lauren Vasilakos, Katie Pierson, Asha Elgonda, Trenton Bartlett, Janna R Gewirtz O'Brien
BACKGROUND: Youth experiencing homelessness (YEH) face a wide range of complex barriers to COVID-19 vaccine confidence and access. OBJECTIVES: Describe our process for engaging a cross-sector team centering equity and youth voice; outline our intervention strategies to enhance COVID-19 vaccine confidence and access among YEH; and discuss lessons learned through this community-engaged process. METHODS: We engaged partners from across sectors, including youth-serving agencies, healthcare organizations, public health organizations, and YEH...
2024: Progress in Community Health Partnerships: Research, Education, and Action
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661828/implementing-a-community-engagement-model-to-develop-a-community-driven-oral-health-intervention
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Cynthia Chew, Daniel Rosen, Katherine Watson, Alene D'Alesio, Daren Ellerbee, Jerome Gloster, Shannah Tharp-Gilliam, Toni Beasley, Jacqueline M Burgette
BACKGROUND: Using community-engaged research may result in interventions that reduce infant oral health disparities in underserved populations. OBJECTIVE: Develop community partnerships to create a sustainable infant oral health program that meets specific community-identified needs and provides an interprofessional education experience. METHODS: Partnering with the Homewood Community Engagement Center, researchers engaged and surveyed key community partners to assess the need for an infant oral health invention...
2024: Progress in Community Health Partnerships: Research, Education, and Action
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661827/strategies-for-recruiting-older-black-men-into-aging-and-alzheimer-s-research
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Darlingtina K Esiaka, Glenn B Wilson, Mark A Gluck
BACKGROUND: Despite their high risks for Alzheimer's disease, older Black men are minimally represented in Alzheimer's research and clinical trials. The absence of older Black men in Alzheimer's research limits our ability to characterize the changes associated with cognitive impairments in older Black men-a key health disparity concern. METHODS: Drawing on lessons we learned from years of community-based participatory research in Newark, NJ, we highlight recruitment strategies developed alongside community partners to guide our enrollment and retention efforts for Black men...
2024: Progress in Community Health Partnerships: Research, Education, and Action
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661826/engaging-with-rural-communities-for-colorectal-cancer-screening-outreach-using-modified-boot-camp-translation
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jennifer Coury, Gloria D Coronado, Emily Myers, Mary Patzel, Jamie Thompson, Courtney Whidden-Rivera, Melinda M Davis
BACKGROUND: Colorectal cancer (CRC) incidence and mortality are disproportionately high among rural residents and Medicaid enrollees. OBJECTIVES: To address disparities, we used a modified community engagement approach, Boot Camp Translation (BCT). Research partners, an advisory board, and the rural community informed messaging about CRC outreach and a mailed fecal immunochemical test program. METHODS: Eligible rural patients (English-speaking and ages 50-74) and clinic staff involved in patient outreach participated in a BCT conducted virtually over two months...
2024: Progress in Community Health Partnerships: Research, Education, and Action
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661825/challenges-and-lessons-from-conducting-a-community-engaged-evaluation-of-a-community-advisory-board-a-case-study-from-flint
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stephanie Solomon Cargill, Bryan Spencer, Briah Spencer
Community-engaged research often poses challenges due to exactly those qualities that make it desirable: it provides a new model of research that differs in many ways from top-down, university-led, prospectively designed approaches. While many have discussed the challenges to conducting community-engaged research, few have provided precise and generalizable lessons for how to surmount these challenges. Here we discuss the challenges experienced in a project that was community-engaged at three levels: 1) a research team consisting of an academic and a community partner as well as a community and academic research assistant, 2) the research team engaged with a Community Advisory Board called the CBOP-CERB (Community Based Organization Partners-Community Ethics Research Board) throughout the project, and 3) the research involved recruiting community participants from an area with a historical distrust of researchers and research: Flint Michigan...
2024: Progress in Community Health Partnerships: Research, Education, and Action
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661824/evaluating-the-impact-and-effectiveness-of-flint-s-community-ethics-review-board-cbop-cerb-a-pilot-study
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stephanie Solomon Cargill, Bryan Spencer, Briah Spencer
In recognition of the importance of evaluation for funding, research, and quality improvement, a longstanding Community Advisory Board in Flint Michigan embarked on a process to evaluate their impact. The Community-Based Organization Partners (CBOP)-Community Ethics Review Board (CERB) engaged a research team composed of an academic researcher (Solomon Cargill) and a community partner (Spencer) to obtain funding, design and implement an evaluation of the CBOP-CERB. This evaluation study yielded two evaluations of the CBOP-CERB, one with researchers who had engaged with the CBOP-CERB and the other with Flint area community residents...
2024: Progress in Community Health Partnerships: Research, Education, and Action
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661823/bridging-the-gap-addressing-immigrant-health-through-community-initiated-screening-events
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sally Moyce, Nathaniel Sisson, Madeline Metcalf
BACKGROUND: In areas of new-immigrant population growth, medical and social infrastructure may be lagging behind the needs of those who do not identify with the majority culture or language. Subsequently, information regarding this population's health status and access to care is limited. Montana's Hispanic population is one such group. Despite its low total population, the state has experienced unprecedented growth in the number of Spanish-speaking individuals and families over the last decade...
2024: Progress in Community Health Partnerships: Research, Education, and Action
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661822/lessons-from-two-latino-communities-working-with-academic-partners-to-increase-access-to-covid-19-testing
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kesia K Garibay, Arturo Durazo, Tatiana Vizcaíno, Yolanda Oviedo, Kara Marson, Carina Arechiga, Patric Prado, Omar Carrera, Manuel J Alvarado, Diane V Havlir, Susana Rojas, Gabriel Chamie, Carina Marquez, John Sauceda, Irene H Yen, Maria-Elena De Trinidad Young
OBJECTIVE: We sought to examine the experiences of community partners in a community-academic partnership to promote COVID-19 testing in two majority Latino communities. METHODS: We conducted semistructured, in-depth interviews in English and Spanish with community-based organization leaders and community health workers/promotoras (n = 10) from June to July 2021. Interviews focused on identifying partner roles in planning and testing implementation and evaluating communication among partners...
2024: Progress in Community Health Partnerships: Research, Education, and Action
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661821/evaluating-the-impact-and-effectiveness-of-flint-s-community-ethics-review-board-cbop-cerb-a-pilot-study
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stephanie Solomon Cargill, Bryan Spencer, Briah Spencer
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2024: Progress in Community Health Partnerships: Research, Education, and Action
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661820/bridging-the-gap-addressing-immigrant-health-through-community-initiated-screening-events
#30
EDITORIAL
Sally Moyce, Nathaniel Sisson, Madeline Metcalf
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2024: Progress in Community Health Partnerships: Research, Education, and Action
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661819/lessons-from-two-latino-communities-working-with-academic-partners-to-increase-access-to-covid-19-testing
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kesia K Garibay, Arturo Durazo, Tatiana Vizcaíno, Yolanda Oviedo, Kara Marson, Carina Arechiga, Patric Prado, Omar Carrera, Manuel J Alvarado, Diane V Havlir, Susana Rojas, Gabriel Chamie, Carina Marquez, John Sauceda, Irene H Yen, Maria-Elena De Trinidad Young
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2024: Progress in Community Health Partnerships: Research, Education, and Action
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38655977/learning-difficulties-in-school-children-health-and-education-professionals-perceptions
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Pamela Camila Fernandes Rumor, Michelle Kuntz Durand, Jeane Barros de Souza, Janaina Medeiros de Souza, Adriana Bitencourt Magagnin, Ivonete Teresinha Schülter Buss Heidemann
OBJECTIVES: to understand health and education professionals' perceptions regarding children's learning difficulties in public schools. METHODS: qualitative research, of the participatory action type, linked to Paulo Freire's Research Itinerary. Forty-five professionals participated, through interviews and a Virtual Culture Circle. The analysis was developed through careful reading, reflection and interpretation of highlighted topics. RESULTS: professionals discussed the (in)visibility of learning difficulties, strategies and resources in the educational sector and the search for solutions in the health sector...
2024: Revista Brasileira de Enfermagem
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38654841/mixed-methods-community-engaged-evaluation-integrating-interventionist-and-action-research-frameworks-to-understand-a-community-building-violence-prevention-program
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Victoria L Banyard, Katie M Edwards, Andrew J Rizzo, Anna Segura-Montagut, Patricia Greenberg, Megan C Kearns
While mixed methods research can enhance studies of intervention outcomes and projects where research itself transforms communities through participatory approaches, methodologists need explicit examples. As the field of interpersonal violence prevention increasingly embraces community-level prevention strategies, it may benefit from research methods that mirror community-building prevention processes. A multiphase mixed methods study with sequential and convergent components assessed the feasibility, and impact of a prevention program to change social norms and increase collective efficacy in towns...
October 2023: Journal of Mixed Methods Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38653866/community-perspectives-on-covid-19-outbreak-and-public-health-inuit-positive-protective-pathways-and-lessons-for-indigenous-public-health-theory
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gwen K Healey Akearok, Zoha Rana
OBJECTIVES: Indigenous public health theory and the voices of Canadian Indigenous communities remain under-represented in the literature despite the Canadian Truth and Reconciliation Calls to Action, and the perspectives of Inuit are further under-represented in this literature. The goal of this paper is to explore the perspectives of Iqalungmiut (people of Iqaluit), frontline staff, and decision-makers on the management of the COVID-19 outbreak in Iqaluit in April to June 2021 and to identify lessons learned and contributions to public health policy and practice specific to Inuit populations in Canada...
April 23, 2024: Canadian Journal of Public Health. Revue Canadienne de Santé Publique
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38648084/group-level-assessment-methodology-as-a-liberating-structure-within-qualitative-and-participatory-research
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lisa M Vaughn
Group level assessment (GLA) is a qualitative and participatory research-to-action methodology designed to engage a large group of relevant participants throughout the research process. As originally conceived, a single GLA session is led by a trained facilitator who guides the participants through seven structured steps: climate setting, generating, appreciating, reflecting, understanding, selecting, and action. The purpose of this manuscript is to describe the 25-year trajectory and uses, contributions as a liberating structure, and adaptations of GLA...
April 22, 2024: Qualitative Health Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647630/-the-children-are-not-controllable-because-they-follow-western-values-narratives-of-the-parenting-experiences-of-african-immigrants-in-alberta-canada
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Neelam Saleem Punjani, Philomina E Okeke-Ihejirika, Bukola Oladunni Salami, Sophie Yohani, Mary Olukotun
African immigrants are moving to high-income nations such as Canada in greater numbers in search of a better life. These immigrants frequently struggle with several issues, including limited social support, shifts in gender roles/status, cultural conflicts with their children, and language barriers. We used participatory action research (PAR) to gather data about Sub-Saharan African immigrants residing in Alberta, Canada, with a focus on their viewpoints, difficulties, and experiences of parenting children in Canada...
April 22, 2024: Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38641869/walking-together-in-friendship-learning-about-cultural-safety-in-mainstream-mental-health-services-through-aboriginal-participatory-action-research
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Helen Milroy, Shraddha Kashyap, Jemma Collova, Michael Mitchell, Angela Ryder, Zacharia Cox, Mat Coleman, Michael Taran, Beatriz Cuesta Briand, Graham Gee
OBJECTIVE: Culturally safe service provision is essential to improving social and emotional wellbeing among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities, and to eliminating health inequities. Cultural safety is about ensuring that all people have a safe and healing journey through services, regardless of their cultural background. In this project, we aim to (1) understand how Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples conceptualise cultural safety, and (2) co-design a qualitative interview for the next phase of this project, where we plan to learn about experiences of cultural safety within mental health services...
April 19, 2024: Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38638483/we-care-well-exploring-the-personal-recovery-of-mental-health-caregivers-through-participatory-action-research
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tyler Redublo, Sayani Paul, Anahita Joshi, Simone Arbour, Ross Murray, Mary Chiu
Family caregivers play a critical role in supporting the recovery journeys of their loved ones, yet the recovery journeys of family caregivers have not been well-explored. Using a Participatory Action Research approach, we explore the personal recovery journeys of family caregivers for individuals with mental illness. This case study involved piloting and exploring the impact of a novel online workshop series offered to mental health caregivers at Ontario Shores Center for Mental Health Sciences. Recovery courses and workshops conventionally engage patients living with mental health conditions...
2024: Frontiers in Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38633686/barriers-faced-by-healthcare-providers-during-home-visits-of-palliative-care-patients-a-qualitative-study
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Priyanga Datchanamourtty, M Rajalakshmi, Kalaiselvan Ganapathy
OBJECTIVES: We, the Department of Community Medicine, have been training healthcare providers for palliative care in the hospital and community setting. There were many difficulties in providing proper palliative care. The objective is to explore the various difficulties faced by Junior Residents, auxiliary nurse and midwife (ANM) and medical social workers (MSWs) during the home visits of palliative care patients and to address those difficulties in future visits. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The study was conducted in our peripheral institutions such as the Rural Health Training Centre and the Urban Health Training Centre among Junior Residents, ANMs and MSWs who had provided palliative care for the patients...
2024: Indian Journal of Palliative Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38632919/fostering-planetary-health-in-polluted-environments-lessons-from-the-xonacatl%C3%A3-n-indigenous-council-in-mexico
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Carlos E Sanchez-Pimienta
BACKGROUND: The communities of El Salto and Juanacatlán face negative impacts on human and ecosystem health due to their proximity to the second-largest industrial area in Mexico. Despite living in a region negatively impacted by high levels of pollution, these communities have organised to foster planetary health by reforesting with native plants, campaigning to stop further industrial development, and founding the Xonacatlán Indigenous Council (XIC) to reclaim traditional ways of living...
April 2024: Lancet. Planetary Health
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