在基因组研究中涉及城市单身低收入非洲裔美国母亲:在健康差异和预防策略中如何发声。

R. Mendenhall, Loren Henderson, B. Scott, L. Butler, K. Turi, Andrew J. Greenlee, G. Robinson, B. Roberts, S. Rodriguez-Zas, James E. Brooks, Christy L. Lleras
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文描述了利用基于社区的参与性行动研究的原则,将芝加哥南部的低收入、单身、非裔美国母亲纳入基因组研究的过程,包括作为公民科学家。南芝加哥黑人母亲弹性项目采用混合方法设计,调查生活在暴力程度高的社区的压力如何影响母亲的身心健康。本文旨在为有兴趣成功地将低收入非裔美国母亲纳入基因组研究和其他具有文化敏感性和变革性的健康相关活动的医生和学者提供一个模型。黑人母亲在环环相扣的压迫制度下挣扎的生活,往往被大多数美国人所忽视,这是本文的中心。因此,我们提供了关于收集各种类型数据的程序、程序的基本原理、设置、样本中母亲的反应和方法挑战的广泛信息。这项研究还对当前的COVID-19大流行以及培养一支健康和保健方面的公民科学家队伍的必要性产生了影响,以避免未来的极端生命损失,例如截至2020年6月1日,美国有106195人丧生。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Involving Urban Single Low-Income African American Mothers in Genomic Research: Giving Voice to How Place Matters in Health Disparities and Prevention Strategies.
This article describes the process of using principles from community-based participatory action research to involve low-income, single, African American mothers on the south side of Chicago in genomic research, including as citizen scientists. The South Chicago Black Mothers' Resiliency Project used a mixed methods design to investigate how the stress of living in neighborhoods with high levels of violence affects mothers' mental and physical health. This article seeks to serve as a model for physicians and scholars interested in successfully involving low-income African American mothers in genomic research, and other health-related activities in ways that are culturally sensitive and transformative. The lives of Black mothers who struggle under interlocking systems of oppression that are often hidden from view of most Americans are at the center of this article. Therefore, we provide extensive information about the procedures used to collect the various types of data, the rationale for our procedures, the setting, the responses of mothers in our sample and methodological challenges. This study also has implications for the current COVID-19 pandemic and the need to train a corps of citizen scientists in health and wellness to avoid future extreme loss of life such as the 106,195 lives lost in the United States as of June 1, 2020.
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