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The Healthy Community Neighborhood Initiative: Rationale and Design.
- Brown, Arleen F;
- Morris, D'Ann M;
- Kahn, Katherine L;
- Sankaré, Ibrahima C;
- King, Keyonna M;
- Vargas, Roberto;
- Lucas-Wright, Aziza;
- Jones, Loretta F;
- Flowers, Astrea;
- Jones, Felica U;
- Bross, Rachelle;
- Banner, Dennishia;
- Del Pino, Homero E;
- Pitts, Orwilda L;
- Zhang, Lujia;
- Porter, Courtney;
- Madrigal, Sigrid K;
- Vassar, Stefanie D;
- Vangala, Sitaram;
- Liang, Li-Jung;
- Martinez, Arturo B;
- Norris, Keith C
- et al.
Abstract
Objective
To describe the design and rationale of the Healthy Community Neighborhood Initiative (HCNI), a multi-component study to understand and document health risk and resources in a low-income and minority community.Design
A community-partnered participatory research project.Setting
A low-income, biethnic African American and Latino neighborhood in South Los Angeles.Participants
Adult community residents aged >18 years.Main outcome measures
Household survey and clinical data collection; neighborhood characteristics; neighborhood observations; and community resources asset mapping.Results
We enrolled 206 participants (90% of those eligible), of whom 205 completed the household interview and examination, and 199 provided laboratory samples. Among enrollees, 82 (40%) were aged >50 years and participated in functional status measurement. We completed neighborhood observations on 93 street segments; an average of 2.2 (SD=1.6) study participants resided on each street segment observed. The community asset map identified 290 resources summarized in a Community Resource Guide given to all participants.Conclusions
The HCNI community-academic partnership has built a framework to assess and document the individual, social, and community factors that may influence clinical and social outcomes in a community at high-risk for preventable chronic disease. Our project suggests that a community collaborative can use culturally and scientifically sound strategies to identify community-centered health and social needs. Additional work is needed to understand strategies for developing and implementing interventions to mitigate these disparities.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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