(Press-News.org) (Boston)— A community-support model for providing health resources and education is a way to continuously engage unhoused people and other underserved groups who are particularly vulnerable during health emergencies like the COVID-19 pandemic.
“Having a stable system for bringing health information to unhoused people and connecting them to providers at Boston Health Care for the Homeless Program (BHCHP), is a pathway for addressing a number of health issues they experience,” said Kareem King, Jr., research program manager at Boston University’s Clinical & Translational Science Institute. “Many of the people we interacted with lacked insurance or a primary care team, meaning their only option was to visit shelter clinics or the Boston Medical Center emergency room.” King is the corresponding author of the report, “Building Power on Mass&Cass: A Community-Centered Approach to Addressing Health Resource Gaps for Persons Experiencing Homelessness in Boston, MA, 2021” published online in the American Journal of Public Health.
The report outlines the joint work of two organizations, Housing Equals Health, a health justice initiative, and We Got Us, a student-led nonprofit focused on health equity, supported by the Rapid Acceleration of Diagnostics – Underserved Populations Initiative (RADx-UP) with Duke and the National Institute of Health. BHCHP was a consultant.
This initiative started in November 2021. It was created from work that Housing=Health and other advocacy organizations had done earlier on in the pandemic to bring attention to the unique health issues unhoused people experienced. From April 1, 2022 – March 31, 2023, RADx-UP supported them to conduct outreach events on a bi-weekly basis at four rotating Boston locations chosen with guidance from community members and insight from BHCHP.
At the outreach events, persons experiencing homelessness (PEH) received COVID information, testing, and a resource kit which included a number of items provided by nonprofit and industry partners (masks, sanitizer, wipes, water, snacks, etc). In addition to this, they were asked to participate in surveys to share their experience utilizing the programs, and what they would like to see at future events. Longer interviews to discuss healthcare experiences and needs were conducted on a select group. The information was shared with BHCHP, the Boston Public Health Commission and other partners in this initiative.
“We conducted 28 outreach events, passed out 2,558 resource kits, and had over 3,000 interactions,” said King. “The events showed that community support and multi-sectoral partnerships are needed to build sustainable health programs. In times of crisis, survival and basic needs come first. Our goal was to meet those needs, through the support of our institutional partners, while engaging people with stable access to vaccinations and health education to promote ongoing public health efforts.”
King felt the initiative served as a model for the infrastructure and communication needed for future health emergencies.
“We were able to provide consistent public health resources to unhoused people, break accessibility barriers to COVID-19-related information, and establish a bidirectional pipeline of trusted public health messaging,” the report concluded. King felt it also showed that Boston-area students could be an important resource in building and maintaining health programs.
“This program demonstrates the value and impact that community-centered approaches have in driving sustainable public health efforts,” said King. Their work with unhoused populations continues.
Co-authors of the report included: Eilien Milien and Melissa Jones of We Got Us, Boston; and Terrance Mensah, MD, MPhil, and Lady Lawrence E.J. Carty, of Housing=Health.
Funding for this report was supported by the National Institutes of Health under Award Number C0437.
END
New report on community-centered approach to providing vaccine education and resources to persons experiencing homelessness during COVID-19
May be pathway to getting information to vulnerable populations during a health emergency
2024-06-20
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Government updates race and ethnicity data collection standards: implications and insights
2024-06-20
New Rochelle, NY, June 20, 2024–The latest issue of the peer-reviewed journal Health Equity features a pivotal roundtable discussion titled “Implications and Insights on Federal Revisions to Race and Ethnicity Collection.” This roundtable assembles leading experts to explore newly revised race and ethnicity data collection standards from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), highlighting the significant impact these changes have on policy and practice. The expanded standards now capture historically marginalized communities, ...
Dr. Vivek S. Kavadi named CEO of the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO)
2024-06-20
ARLINGTON, Va., June 20, 2024 — The American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) announced today that following a nationwide search, Vivek S. Kavadi, MD, MBA, FASTRO will become CEO of the Society effective November 1, 2024. Dr. Kavadi will succeed Laura Thevenot, who previously announced her intent to retire after leading the organization since 2002.
Dr. Kavadi, a radiation oncologist and ASTRO member since 1994, ascends to the role from his current position as Chief Radiation Oncology Officer for The ...
Dietary sucrose determines activity of lithium on gene expression and lifespan in drosophila melanogaster
2024-06-20
“[...] we found that, in female D. melanogaster, the life-prolonging effect of dietary lithium is dependent on the actual sucrose content of the medium.”
BUFFALO, NY- June 19, 2024 – A new research paper was published in Aging (listed by MEDLINE/PubMed as "Aging (Albany NY)" and "Aging-US" by Web of Science) Volume 16, Issue 11, entitled, “Dietary sucrose determines the regulatory activity of lithium on gene expression and lifespan in Drosophila melanogaster.”
The amount of dietary sugars and the administration of lithium both impact the lifespan of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster. It is noteworthy that lithium ...
Assessment of CEA, CA-125, and CA19-9 as adjuncts in non-small cell lung cancer management
2024-06-20
“[...] these inexpensive, widely available tests with rapid turnaround times and relatively short half-lives (CEA, CA-125, and CA19-9) are perfectly situated to serve as adjunctive clinical tools in the management of NSCLC.”
BUFFALO, NY- June 20, 2024 – A new research paper was published in Oncotarget's Volume 15 on June 13, 2024, entitled, “Assessment of serum tumor markers CEA, CA-125, and CA19-9 as adjuncts in non-small cell lung cancer management.”
Conventional tumor markers may serve as adjuncts in non-small cell lung cancer ...
Iron meteorites hint that our infant solar system was more doughnut than dartboard
2024-06-20
Key takeaways
Iron meteorites are remnants of the metallic cores of the earliest asteroids in our solar system. Iron meteorites contain refractory metals, such as iridium and platinum, that formed near the sun but were transported to the outer solar system.
New research shows that for this to have happened, the protoplanetary disk of our solar system had to have been doughnut-shaped because the refractory metals could not have crossed the large gaps in a target-shaped disk of concentric rings.
The paper suggests that the refractory metals moved outward ...
Anti-trust regulators should consider their options carefully when start-ups are acquired, new study suggests
2024-06-20
June 20, 2024
Anti-Trust Regulators Should Consider Their Options Carefully When Start-Ups are Acquired, New Study Suggests
Less Blunt Options than Banning Acquisitions May Help Preserve Innovation and Competition
Toronto - Promoting a competitive marketplace has been the main focus for regulators concerned with “killer acquisitions” -- when big companies swallow small startups to eliminate a potential rival.
But researchers and other observers point out that blocking these purchases puts something else important at risk – innovation. Startups are sometimes driven to come up with a new process or product precisely because ...
Family conditions may have more of an impact on upward social mobility than gender inequality
2024-06-20
Family conditions—specifically, how similar one’s social status and background is to one’s parents’ status—may play a bigger role in determining how easily an individual can shift into a wealthier socioeconomic class than gender inequality, according to a study of 153 countries published June 20, 2024 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Khanh Duong from Maynooth University, Ireland.
As global inequality increases, researchers have found that countries with higher levels of income inequality tend to experience lower rates of class mobility (in other words, individuals in a lower socioeconomic ...
People with higher weight, and those who have high-quality experiences with higher-weight people, report less weight bias, per social psychology study of US adults
2024-06-20
People with higher weight, and those who have high-quality experiences with higher-weight people, report less weight bias, per social psychology study of US adults
###
Article URL: https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0305080
Article Title: The role of social norms, intergroup contact, and ingroup favoritism in weight stigma
Author Countries: USA
Funding: The authors received no specific funding for this work. END ...
In two separate clinical studies, combined immunotherapy approach enhances cancer patient response
2024-06-20
Because not all cancer patients respond to a leading type of cancer immunotherapy drug, known as an immune checkpoint inhibitor, scientists explored whether adding janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors – drugs that treat chronic inflammation – could help. In two separate clinical studies, researchers found that adding JAK inhibitors did improve patients’ responses to cancer checkpoint inhibitor immunotherapies. “Aside from the exciting findings of the early phase trials reported by [both groups], they provide a great deal of data with complex analyses of immune ...
Airborne mapping reveals roles for biogenic sources and temperature in air pollution emissions in Los Angeles
2024-06-20
Airborne observations over California have revealed that biogenic sources of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) – blooming trees and growing plants – dominate summertime air pollutant formation in Los Angeles, in a way that increases with temperature. Future air pollution regulations thus need to consider that only 40% of urban VOC emissions (those not tied to biogenic sources) can be mitigated through regulations, say the authors. Ambient air pollution – the fourth-leading global ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Shared gene signatures and key mechanisms in the progression from liver cirrhosis to acute-on-chronic liver failure
Rural Health Care Outcomes Accelerator extended to 2028
Feeling good about yourself
People with schizophrenia have higher risk of COPD
Sibling-specific aggression in women and girls
Study raises red flags about BPA replacements
The irresistibility of extrapolating from past performance
Predicting nationality from beliefs and values
Mindset shift about catastrophes linked to decreased depression, inflammation
Astronomers make unexpected discovery of planet in formation around a young star
EBMT partners in a new consortium to decentralise CAR-T cell therapy and improve hospital workflow
Primate thumbs and brains evolved hand-in-hand
Sneaky swirls: scientists confirm ‘hidden’ vortices could influence how soil and snow move
Tropical volcanic eruptions push rainfall across the equator
UCLA scientists map primate ovarian reserve development, offering key insights into women’s health
BU study finds type 2 diabetes blood factors drive breast cancer aggression
AI chatbots inconsistent in answering questions about suicide
More efficient and reliable SiC devices for a greener future
Two thirds of reproductive-aged women have at least one modifiable risk factor for birth defects, study reveals
Boosting the neuroglia as a therapeutic strategy for brain disorders
Computational neurogenomics revolution unlocks personalized treatments for brain disorders worldwide
Psychedelics researcher reveals how MDMA and LSD transform human connectedness
Making low-fertility rats fertile by changing the treatment interval
Common painkillers linked to antibiotic resistance
Teachers' depression, anxiety and stress at three times the national norm: new study
Common cold may protect against COVID-19 according to National Jewish Health researchers
New project to improve information retrieval for lifelong learning
New method probes cancer cell messengers that weaken immune system
VCs backed Black founders after BLM – but it didn’t last
A new tool to track infant development, starting at just 16 days old
[Press-News.org] New report on community-centered approach to providing vaccine education and resources to persons experiencing homelessness during COVID-19May be pathway to getting information to vulnerable populations during a health emergency