Book contents
- An Ounce of Prevention
- An Ounce of Prevention
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Part One A Foundation in Prevention
- Part Two Prevention with Children and Youth
- Part Three Prevention with Emerging Adults
- Part Four Across the Lifespan: Adults and Families
- 12 Empowering Mothers and Promoting Resilience in Children Exposed to Intimate Partner Violence
- 13 Culturally Sensitive Health Promotion and Health Care to Prevent Chronic Diseases in Black Communities
- 14 PIER: A Clinical/Epidemiologic System for Prevention of Psychosis
- 15 Retirement Transition as a Preventive Intervention Target
- Part Five Closing
- Index
- References
13 - Culturally Sensitive Health Promotion and Health Care to Prevent Chronic Diseases in Black Communities
from Part Four - Across the Lifespan: Adults and Families
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 November 2024
- An Ounce of Prevention
- An Ounce of Prevention
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Part One A Foundation in Prevention
- Part Two Prevention with Children and Youth
- Part Three Prevention with Emerging Adults
- Part Four Across the Lifespan: Adults and Families
- 12 Empowering Mothers and Promoting Resilience in Children Exposed to Intimate Partner Violence
- 13 Culturally Sensitive Health Promotion and Health Care to Prevent Chronic Diseases in Black Communities
- 14 PIER: A Clinical/Epidemiologic System for Prevention of Psychosis
- 15 Retirement Transition as a Preventive Intervention Target
- Part Five Closing
- Index
- References
Summary
Black communities in the United States experience disproportionate rates of adverse health. In this chapter, we discuss the importance of culturally sensitive, empowerment-focused health promotion programs in Black communities anchored in the community-based participatory research (CBPR) approach and/or the patient-centered culturally sensitive health care (PC-CSHC) model. One program is the Health-Smart Holistic Health Program for Black Seniors, which is an ongoing, multiyear program designed to promote physical activity and health eating and reduce social isolation, food insecurity, and financial insecurity among older Black adults in low-income communities. The second program is the Health-Smart for Weight Loss Program, which is a cluster randomized controlled trial targeting Black women with obesity that tested (a) the impact of evidence-based, patient-empowerment-focused weight loss program and (b) the comparative effectiveness of a patient-centered culturally sensitive weight loss maintenance program versus a standard behavioral weight loss maintenance program. The results support use of patient-centered, culturally sensitive, and community-based participatory approaches to improve health outcomes in Black communities.
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- An Ounce of PreventionEvidence-Based Prevention for Counseling and Psychology, pp. 261 - 279Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024