Advancing Equity through Effective Youth Engagement in Public Health to Operationalize Racism as a Public Health Crisis: The Flint Public Health Youth Academy Model

Youth Pub Date : 2024-03-20 DOI:10.3390/youth4010028
Kent D. Key, Kayla Shannon, Everett Graham, Cruz Duhart, Tomás Tello, Cole Mays, Christian Mays, Tyshae Brady, Jasmine Hall, Kahlil Calvin, Courtney Blanchard, Vanessa de Danzine, Sarah Bailey
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Abstract

Background: The underrepresentation of BIPOC youth in the fields of public health, medicine, and research may be a factor contributing to the disproportionate rates of health disparities in BIPOC communities. In 2004, the Sullivan Commission on Diversity in the Healthcare Workforce, commissioned by the White House and led by the United States Health and Human Services, recommended efforts to increase the number of minority professionals in the aforementioned fields as necessary for addressing racial and ethnic health disparities. More recently, over 240 municipalities in the United States have declared “racism a public health crisis”. This national declaration links racism directly to public health disparities, thus calling for a public health response. The Flint Public Health Youth Academy (FPHYA) provides an effective model of youth engagement steeped in Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (EDI). FPHYA was created based on a dissertation study designed to explore the motivators for engagement of African American and other minority students into careers in public health and its six recommendations. Methods: The FPHYA Model described in this article uses a case study of the Flint Water Crisis to assess and explore effective youth engagement models for public health. This model is rooted in the Continuum of Community Engagement and Youth Empowerment Theory and explores FPHYA’s contribution of youth voice in operationalizing racism as a public health crisis.
通过有效的青年参与公共卫生工作来促进公平,将种族主义作为公共卫生危机来操作:弗林特公共卫生青年学院模式
背景:BIPOC 青年在公共卫生、医学和研究领域的代表性不足,可能是导致 BIPOC 社区健康差异率过高的一个因素。2004 年,受白宫委托、由美国卫生与公众服务部领导的沙利文医疗保健劳动力多样性委员会建议,为解决种族和民族健康差异问题,有必要努力增加上述领域的少数民族专业人员数量。最近,美国有 240 多个城市宣布 "种族主义是公共卫生危机"。这一全国性宣言将种族主义与公共卫生差距直接联系起来,从而呼吁采取公共卫生对策。弗林特公共卫生青年学院(FPHYA)提供了一种有效的青年参与模式,该模式深受平等、多样性和包容性(EDI)的影响。弗林特公共卫生青年学院是在一项论文研究的基础上创建的,该研究旨在探索非裔美国人和其他少数民族学生从事公共卫生职业的动机及其六项建议。方法:本文介绍的 FPHYA 模式利用弗林特水危机的案例研究来评估和探索有效的青年参与公共卫生事业的模式。该模式植根于社区参与连续性和青年赋权理论,并探讨了 FPHYA 在将种族主义作为公共卫生危机进行操作的过程中,青年的声音所做出的贡献。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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