May Vawer, Rick Rutiz, Viliami Tukuafu, Kirsten Whatley, Kauwila Hanchett, Lipoa Kahaleuahi, Lehualani Park, Mikala Minn, Beth Blackburn, Malia Young, Ann Muneno, Deborah A Taira, Tetine Sentell, Todd B Seto
{"title":"Insights in Public Health: <i>Hana Pu No Ke Ola O Hana</i> (\"Working Together for the Health of Hana\"): Our 14-year CBPR Journey.","authors":"May Vawer, Rick Rutiz, Viliami Tukuafu, Kirsten Whatley, Kauwila Hanchett, Lipoa Kahaleuahi, Lehualani Park, Mikala Minn, Beth Blackburn, Malia Young, Ann Muneno, Deborah A Taira, Tetine Sentell, Todd B Seto","doi":"","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>There are substantial and persistent health disparities among Native Hawaiians that are best addressed through multilevel socio-ecological approaches, which are tailored to the needs of the community. Partnerships that link academic investigators with grass roots community members have the potential to profoundly reduce health disparities and improve health and wellness by increasing the capacity of community-based organizations to provide leadership in health advocacy, support community health promotion, and participate in health research. We describe a 14-year partnership to reduce Native Hawaiian health disparities between investigators from The Queen's Medical Center and University of Hawai'i John A. Burns School of Medicine (QMC-JABSOM) and community members in Hana, a geographically isolated, underserved, rural community with the second largest concentration of Native Hawaiians in the state. Our relationship started as an investigator-initiated, National Institutes of Health-sponsored study to explore familial cardiomyopathy, and transitioned to a community-based project that combined community cardiovascular health screening fairs with a qualitative research study to understand attitudes towards genetic research. Most recently, QMC-JABSOM has partnered closely with Ma Ka Hana Ka 'Ike, an award-winning construction skills training program for at-risk youth in Hana, to develop innovative, culturally based interventions to improve health and well-being among Native Hawaiians using principles of community-based participatory research.</p>","PeriodicalId":73197,"journal":{"name":"Hawai'i journal of medicine & public health : a journal of Asia Pacific Medicine & Public Health","volume":"78 3","pages":"111-114"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6401196/pdf/hjmph7803_0111.pdf","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Hawai'i journal of medicine & public health : a journal of Asia Pacific Medicine & Public Health","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
There are substantial and persistent health disparities among Native Hawaiians that are best addressed through multilevel socio-ecological approaches, which are tailored to the needs of the community. Partnerships that link academic investigators with grass roots community members have the potential to profoundly reduce health disparities and improve health and wellness by increasing the capacity of community-based organizations to provide leadership in health advocacy, support community health promotion, and participate in health research. We describe a 14-year partnership to reduce Native Hawaiian health disparities between investigators from The Queen's Medical Center and University of Hawai'i John A. Burns School of Medicine (QMC-JABSOM) and community members in Hana, a geographically isolated, underserved, rural community with the second largest concentration of Native Hawaiians in the state. Our relationship started as an investigator-initiated, National Institutes of Health-sponsored study to explore familial cardiomyopathy, and transitioned to a community-based project that combined community cardiovascular health screening fairs with a qualitative research study to understand attitudes towards genetic research. Most recently, QMC-JABSOM has partnered closely with Ma Ka Hana Ka 'Ike, an award-winning construction skills training program for at-risk youth in Hana, to develop innovative, culturally based interventions to improve health and well-being among Native Hawaiians using principles of community-based participatory research.
公共卫生洞察:Hana Pu No Ke Ola O Hana(“为Hana的健康而努力”):我们14年的CBPR之旅。
夏威夷土著居民之间存在着巨大而持久的健康差距,最好通过针对社区需要的多层次社会生态方法加以解决。将学术调查人员与基层社区成员联系起来的伙伴关系有可能通过提高社区组织在卫生宣传、支持社区卫生促进和参与卫生研究方面发挥领导作用的能力,大大减少卫生差距并改善健康和保健。我们描述了一项为期14年的合作伙伴关系,旨在减少皇后医学中心和夏威夷大学约翰·a·伯恩斯医学院(QMC-JABSOM)的研究人员与哈纳社区成员之间的夏威夷原住民健康差距,哈纳是一个地理上孤立的、服务不足的农村社区,是该州夏威夷原住民的第二大集中地。我们的关系开始于一个研究者发起的,由美国国立卫生研究院赞助的探索家族性心肌病的研究,并转变为一个基于社区的项目,该项目将社区心血管健康筛查博览会与定性研究结合起来,以了解对基因研究的态度。最近,QMC-JABSOM与Ma Ka Hana Ka 'Ike密切合作,Ma Ka Hana Ka 'Ike是一个屡获殊荣的建筑技能培训项目,旨在为Hana的高危青年开发创新的、基于文化的干预措施,利用基于社区的参与性研究原则,改善夏威夷原住民的健康和福祉。