The Community Compass Project: A Community Engagement Model Targeting African-Americans in the Low Country of South Carolina.

Debbie Chatman Bryant, L Monique Hill, Cathy Melvin, Yolanda M Powell-Young, Marvella E Ford
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Abstract

Despite cutting edge progress in early detection, risk reduction, and prevention, unique contextual and sociocultural factors contribute to higher mortality rates for selected cancers in African-American men and women. Collaborative community engagement and outreach programming strategies that focus on sustainability and grass-roots organizing can inform health risk disparities, build trust, and allow communities to take ownership of their own health needs. This paper describes a successful evidence-based community engagement intervention woven into the social and interpersonal fabric of the African-American community in Charleston, South Carolina. Through the creation of a coalition of community partners that included the state's only National Cancer Institute designated cancer center, collaboratively developed platforms devoted to population-specific preventive interventions for cancer and obesity education, awareness, and research initiatives were implemented within the identified community.

社区指南针项目:针对南卡罗来纳低地非洲裔美国人的社区参与模式。
尽管在早期发现、减少风险和预防方面取得了前沿进展,但独特的环境和社会文化因素导致非裔美国男性和女性某些癌症的死亡率较高。注重可持续性和基层组织的协作性社区参与和外联规划战略可以告知健康风险差异,建立信任,并使社区能够掌握自己的健康需求。本文描述了一个成功的基于证据的社区参与干预,该干预融入了南卡罗来纳州查尔斯顿非裔美国人社区的社会和人际关系结构。通过建立社区合作伙伴联盟(包括该州唯一的国家癌症研究所指定的癌症中心),合作开发了专门针对特定人群的癌症和肥胖预防干预措施的平台,并在确定的社区内实施了教育、意识和研究倡议。
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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