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BACKGROUND: The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine's Ending Unequal Treatment report emphasizes immediate actions to eliminate health inequities (i.e., solutions-oriented health inequity research), versus incrementally advancing health equity. Nurse scientists are uniquely positioned to lead national efforts to eliminate health inequities. PURPOSE: To outline nursing science's contributions to solutions-oriented health inequity research, highlight opportunities and challenges for nursing leadership, and key competencies for which workforce support infrastructure is needed. METHODS: We draw on the landmark 2024 Ending Unequal Treatment report, supplemented by a review of the literature on scientific nursing-specific workforce challenges. DISCUSSION: We identify strategies for sustaining and advancing nursing science's leadership in solutions-oriented health inequity research, including objectives, competencies, and programmatic elements needed to support current and future nurse investigators. CONCLUSION: Bolstering the nursing scientific workforce in solutions-oriented health inequity will elevate the critical role of nursing science in eliminating health inequities and improving population health.
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Policy Points In a recently commissioned report on solutions for eliminating racial and ethnic health care inequities entitled Ending Unequal Treatment, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine found a health workforce that is representative of the communities it serves is essential for health care equity. The Supreme Court decision to ban race-conscious admission constraints pathways toward health workforce representativeness and equity. This paper draws on the National Academies report's findings that health care workforce representativeness improves care quality, population health, and equity to discuss policy and programmatic options for various participants to promote health workforce representativeness in the context of race-conscious admissions bans.
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BACKGROUND: Medicaid payment reforms and delivery model innovations are needed to fully transform U.S. healthcare structuring and provision. PURPOSE: To synthesize nurse-led models of care and their implications for improving health care access, quality, and reducing costs for Medicaid recipients. METHODS: A critical review of the literature regarding nurse-led models and implications for addressing social determinants of health (SDOH), adopting population health approaches, managing complex care, and integrating behavioral and physical health care within Medicaid. DISCUSSION: Three interrelated findings emerged (a) investing in dynamic nurse-led models is important for mitigating SDOH and adopting value-based care, (b) regulations preventing nurses from practicing at the fullest extent of their training and licensure limit clinical impact and value, and (c) directed payments can establish value-based expectations for Medicaid managed care. CONCLUSION: Adoption of a nurse-led model of care has the potential to advance the goals of reducing inequity and promoting whole-person health within Medicaid and nationally.
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Equidade em Saúde , Medicaid , Estados Unidos , Humanos , Modelos de Enfermagem , Determinantes Sociais da Saúde , Padrões de Prática em Enfermagem , Papel do Profissional de EnfermagemRESUMO
There is consensus about the importance of developing a strong cadre of effective multilevel interventions to eliminate the impacts of unjust social processes, such as structural racism and other harmful social determinants of health (SDOH), on health inequities in the USA. However, the available cadre of rigorously evaluated evidence-based interventions for SDOH mitigation remains underdeveloped relative to the magnitude of historic and current health inequities. The proposed manuscript addresses this gap in two ways: first, by introducing a heuristic framework to inform decisions in multilevel intervention development, study design, and selection of analytic methods and, second, by providing a roadmap for future applications of the framework in multilevel intervention research through an exemplar application using the ongoing NIH-funded evaluation study of the Nurse-Community-Family Partnership (NCFP) intervention. NCFP leverages individual, family, institutional, and system factors to shape COVID-19 mitigation outcomes at the individual and household levels. NCFP takes an approach informed by the heuristic framework to addressing and mitigating unjust social processes and other harmful SDOH. We discuss the application of a two-arm parallel explanatory group randomized trial to evaluate the efficacy of NCFP in improving the primary (COVID-19 testing uptake) and secondary (adoption of COVID-19 control measures, COVID-19 vaccine uptake, mutual aid capacity, etc.) outcomes at the individual and household levels. The analysis approach relies on random-intercept models, and we calculate the variance partitioning coefficient to estimate the extent to which household- and individual-level variables contribute to the outcome, allowing examination of NCFP effects at multiple levels.
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COVID-19 , Heurística , Determinantes Sociais da Saúde , Humanos , COVID-19/prevenção & controle , SARS-CoV-2 , Estados Unidos , Racismo/prevenção & controleRESUMO
PURPOSE: Although a large proportion of males in the United States become sexually active during high school, condom use is decreasing and contributing to negative sexual health outcomes. Fathers are influential in promoting adolescent male sexual health; however, factors that shape fathers' decisions about when to discuss condom use with their sons remain understudied. We examined paternal perceptions of adolescent males' readiness for sex relative to fathers providing guidance for condom use in Latino and Black families. METHODS: We recruited 191 Latino and Black males aged 15-19 years and their fathers in the South Bronx, New York City. Dyads completed surveys, and a subset of fathers participated in audio-recorded sessions with a father coach, which included conversations about adolescent male condom use. A sequential explanatory mixed methods design identified adolescent male developmental predictors for paternal guidance for condom use and explored how fathers perceive their sons' readiness for sex. RESULTS: The quantitative findings indicate that paternal perception of their sons' readiness for sex is an important predictor of providing guidance for condom use, and that fathers consider other factors (beyond age and perceived sexual activity) in understanding their sons' developmental readiness for sex. The qualitative findings provide insights into these additional factors, which should be considered when engaging fathers in primary care around issues of adolescent male condom use. CONCLUSIONS: Fathers' perception of their sons' readiness for sex is a predictor of providing condom guidance. We provide practical suggestions for engaging fathers in primary care to promote correct and consistent condom use by adolescent males.
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Preservativos , Núcleo Familiar , Adolescente , Humanos , Masculino , Negro ou Afro-Americano , Relações Pai-Filho , Pai , Hispânico ou Latino , Comportamento Sexual , Estados Unidos , Adulto Jovem , Cidade de Nova IorqueRESUMO
CONTEXT: Sexual health discussions between healthcare providers and adolescent and young adult patients are an important strategy for addressing and improving sexual health. However, healthcare providers often do not engage in comprehensive sexual health discussions with young patients during routine clinical visits. METHODS: We propose the use of a conceptual model, the Unified Theory of Behavior (UTB), as a tool that can aid healthcare providers in facilitating more comprehensive sexual health conversations with young patients. RESULTS: We present clinical scenarios on how healthcare providers can use the UTB with existing sexual health assessments during routine, clinical visits with their patients. CONCLUSIONS: Using the UTB may be one effective tool to aid healthcare providers in initiating sexual health discussions and facilitating more comprehensive sexual health conversations with adolescent and young adult patients during routine clinical visits and sexual and reproductive health-focused visits.
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Serviços de Saúde Reprodutiva , Saúde Sexual , Adolescente , Adulto Jovem , Humanos , Estados Unidos , Comportamento Sexual , Saúde Reprodutiva , ComunicaçãoRESUMO
OBJECTIVE: Religion is believed to be an important sociocultural influence in the U.S., but little is known about how religiosity shapes the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine decision in racial/ethnic minorities. The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between religiosity and HPV vaccine initiation and intention among urban, racial/ethnic minority parents of adolescents 11-14 years old. DESIGN: This study employed a descriptive, cross-sectional design using baseline data from Black and Hispanic parents (N = 175 and 285, respectively) recruited from medically underserved communities. Chi-square tests for independence and independent-samples t-tests were run to assess sociodemographic differences in vaccine initiation and vaccine intention. Binary logistic regression analyses were conducted to determine whether religious attendance and religious salience were associated with parents' HPV vaccine decisions for their children. RESULTS: Approximately 47% of Black parents had vaccinated their youth against HPV. Of those who had not initiated the vaccine for their child, 54% did not intend to do so. 54% of Hispanic parents had initiated the HPV vaccine for their youth. Of those who had not initiated the vaccine for their child, 51% did not intend to do so. Frequency of attendance at religious services and the importance of religion in one's life was not significantly correlated with HPV vaccine decision-making for Black nor Hispanic parents. CONCLUSION: This study suggests that religiosity does not influence the HPV vaccine decision for urban, Black and Hispanic parents. Future studies using measures that capture the complexity of religion as a social construct are needed to confirm the findings. In addition, studies with representative sampling will enable us to make generalizations about the influence of religion on HPV vaccine decision-making for urban, racial/ethnic minority parents.
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Infecções por Papillomavirus , Vacinas contra Papillomavirus , Religião , Vacinação , Adolescente , Criança , Humanos , Estudos Transversais , Etnicidade , Hispânico ou Latino , Intenção , Grupos Minoritários , Infecções por Papillomavirus/prevenção & controle , Vacinas contra Papillomavirus/administração & dosagem , Pais , Negro ou Afro-Americano , Vacinação/psicologiaRESUMO
This article advances ideas presented at a National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine workshop in 2022 that highlighted clinical practice and policy recommendations for delivering universal, family-focused substance use preventive interventions in pediatric primary care. Pediatric primary care is a natural setting in which to offer families universal anticipatory guidance and links to systematic prevention programming; also, several studies have shown that offering effective parenting programs in primary care is feasible. The article describes a blueprint for designing a pragmatic national agenda for universal substance use prevention in primary care that builds on prior work. Blueprint practice schematics leverage efficacious family-focused prevention programs, identify key program implementation challenges and resources, and emphasize adopting a core element approach and utilizing digital interventions. Blueprint policy schematics specify avenues for improving cross-sector policy and resource alignment and collaboration; expanding, diversifying, and strengthening the prevention workforce; and enhancing financing for family-focused prevention approaches. The article then draws from these schematics to assemble a candidate universal prevention toolkit tailored for adolescent patients that contains four interlocking components: education in positive parenting practices, parent and youth education in substance use risks, a parent-youth structured interaction task, and parent and youth linkage to in-person and web-based prevention resources.
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Pais , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Substâncias , Adolescente , Criança , Humanos , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Substâncias/prevenção & controle , Atenção à Saúde , Educação Infantil , Atenção Primária à SaúdeRESUMO
BACKGROUND: Nurses are well positioned to promote sexual health but are not adequately prepared in their nursing programs to engage families on this topic and often lack the knowledge and confidence necessary to counsel families about sexual health communication. The purpose of this study was to determine how facilitating a parent-based sexual health intervention would impact nursing students' attitudes and intentions about sexual health education and parent communication counseling. METHODS: Using an embedded mixed-methods design, which integrated a quasi-experimental framework, we examined the impact of participation in a parent-based sexual health intervention among 126 baccalaureate nursing students enrolled in a community/public health nursing clinical course. Independent t-tests, chi-squared tests, and the Mann-Whitney U test were used to compare intervention and control groups at baseline. Multiple linear regression was used to compare the groups for pre-post changes. Qualitative content analysis was used to analyze exit interview transcripts. RESULTS: We found statistically significant differences in nursing students' confidence to teach sexual health (p = < 0.001), satisfaction with skills as a sexual health educator (p = < 0.001), beliefs about the efficacy of parent-adolescent communication for reducing negative sexual outcomes among adolescents (p = < 0.001), and intentions to counsel parents on sexual health (p = < 0.001), with greater improvements in the intervention group than in the control group. Furthermore, we found statistically significant differences in nursing students' intentions to counsel parents about the HPV vaccine (p = < 0.01) and to endorse the HPV vaccine (p = < 0.05), with greater improvements in the intervention group than in the control group. Across all survey categories, qualitative findings confirmed improvements seen on the pre-post survey. CONCLUSION: Providing evidence-based adolescent sexual health training, including sexual health education content and discussion strategies, can prepare nursing students to strongly endorse sexual health communication and HPV vaccination uptake and to counsel parents on initiating and navigating these conversations with their youth. Our project exemplifies how a nursing program could organize an immersive experience, or elective within a specialty area, that aligns with the competency-based approach endorsed by the American Association of Colleges of Nursing. TRIAL REGISTRATION: This study was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02600884) on 09/01/2015; the first participant was recruited on 09/29/2015.
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Despite progress in reducing new HIV infections in the USA, publicly available data suggest that new HIV infections continue to occur at an alarming rate. In this Viewpoint, we highlight the regularity with which the existing systems for HIV prevention and treatment delivery in the USA fail and the clearly inequitable effect of the systems' failure among several priority populations of the Ending the HIV Epidemic (EHE) initiative. Existing data cast doubt on whether the current EHE efforts will suffice to achieve its 2030 goal of reducing annual new HIV infections to fewer than 3000. We outline future directions in four priority areas to regain lost ground in pursuit of the 2030 EHE goals: reducing the stigma affecting people living with and most at risk of HIV; broadening the HIV workforce; mitigating harmful social determinants of health; and recommitting and reinvesting in health in the USA more broadly.
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Síndrome da Imunodeficiência Adquirida , Epidemias , Infecções por HIV , Humanos , Infecções por HIV/tratamento farmacológico , Infecções por HIV/epidemiologia , Infecções por HIV/prevenção & controle , Síndrome da Imunodeficiência Adquirida/epidemiologia , Epidemias/prevenção & controle , PrevisõesAssuntos
Mpox , Vacina Antivariólica , Estados Unidos , Vacinação , Mpox/prevenção & controle , HumanosRESUMO
BACKGROUND: The U.S. health care system is burdened by inefficiencies, longstanding health inequities, and unstainable costs. Within the nursing profession and the broader health care sector, there is growing recognition of the need for a paradigm shift that addresses persistent structural problems and advances health equity. PURPOSE: Despite evidence of the importance of the social determinants of health (SDOH) in shaping inequitable health outcomes, practical tools for applying SDOH theory in the development of effective nurse-led programs to mitigate harmful SDOH remain scarce. METHODS: We synthesize extant SDOH literature into a heuristic framework for conceptualizing core SDOH mechanisms, constructs, and principles. FINDINGS: To illustrate how nurse scientists can use the framework to guide the development of programs for SDOH mitigation, we outline a three-step exemplar application to the U.S. Latino HIV epidemic. DISCUSSION: Our framework can inform a paradigm shift toward nurse-led, multi-level SDOH mitigation across practice, education, and research.
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Equidade em Saúde , Determinantes Sociais da Saúde , Humanos , Papel do Profissional de Enfermagem , Disparidades nos Níveis de Saúde , EscolaridadeRESUMO
PURPOSE: Latino and Black adolescent males experience sexual health inequities, and their engagement in sexual health services remains low. Parents shape adolescent sexual health behavior and other youth outcomes. However, the role of Latino and Black fathers in promoting male adolescent sexual health is understudied, in part because about one in four fathers resides apart from their children and nonresident fathers are presumed to be less influential. We examined associations of paternal communication with sexual health service use and perceived paternal role modeling among Latino and Black adolescent males with resident and nonresident fathers. METHODS: We recruited 191 Latino and Black adolescent males aged 15-19 years and their fathers in the South Bronx, New York City, using area sampling methods; dyads completed surveys. We estimated bivariate and adjusted associations of paternal communication with adolescent male sexual health service use and perceived paternal role modeling using logistic and linear regressions. Effect measure modification by paternal residence was assessed. RESULTS: A unit increase on a five-point paternal communication scale was associated with approximately twice and 1.7 times the likelihood of clinical sexual health service use during adolescent males' lifetime and in the past 3 months, respectively; there was no significant effect measure modification by paternal residence. Paternal communication was associated with increased levels of perceived paternal role modeling and usefulness of paternal advice, with stronger associations for nonresident fathers. DISCUSSION: Both resident and nonresident Latino and Black fathers warrant greater consideration as partners in promoting male adolescent sexual health service use.
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Relações Pais-Filho , Saúde Sexual , Adolescente , Humanos , Masculino , Assistência Ambulatorial , Comunicação , Pai , Hispânico ou Latino , Inquéritos e Questionários , Negro ou Afro-AmericanoRESUMO
Policy Points A large body of scientific work examines the mechanisms through which social determinants of health (SDOH) shape health inequities. However, the nuances described in the literature are infrequently reflected in the applied frameworks that inform health policy and programming. We synthesize extant SDOH research into a heuristic framework that provides policymakers, practitioners, and researchers with a customizable template for conceptualizing and operationalizing key mechanisms that represent intervention opportunities for mitigating the impact of harmful SDOH. In light of scarce existing SDOH mitigation strategies, the framework addresses an important research-to-practice translation gap and missed opportunity for advancing health equity. CONTEXT: The reduction of health inequities is a broad and interdisciplinary endeavor with implications for policy, research, and practice. Health inequities are most often understood as associated with the social determinants of health (SDOH). However, policy and programmatic frameworks for mitigation often rely on broad SDOH domains, without sufficient attention to the operating mechanisms, and effective SDOH mitigation strategies remain scarce. To expand the cadre of effective SDOH mitigation strategies, a practical, heuristic framework for policymakers, practitioners, and researchers is needed that serves as a roadmap for conceptualizing and targeting the key mechanisms of SDOH influence. METHODS: We conduct a critical review of the extant conceptual and empirical SDOH literature to identify unifying principles of SDOH mechanisms and to synthesize an integrated framework for conceptualizing such mechanisms. FINDINGS: We highlight eight unifying principles of SDOH mechanisms that emerge from landmark SDOH research. Building on these principles, we introduce and apply a conceptual model that synthesizes key SDOH mechanisms into one organizing, heuristic framework that provides policymakers, practitioners, and researchers with a customizable template for conceptualizing and operationalizing the key SDOH mechanisms that represent intervention opportunities to maximize potential impact for mitigating a given health inequity. CONCLUSIONS: Our synthesis of the extant SDOH research into a heuristic framework addresses a scarcity of peer-reviewed organizing frameworks of SDOH mechanisms designed to inform practice. The framework represents a practical tool to facilitate the translation of scholarly SDOH work into evidence-based and targeted policy and programming. Such tools designed to close the research-to-practice translation gap for effective SDOH mitigation are sorely needed, given that health inequities in the United States and in many other parts of the world have widened over the past two decades.
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Equidade em Saúde , Determinantes Sociais da Saúde , Humanos , Estados Unidos , Heurística , Política de Saúde , Disparidades nos Níveis de SaúdeRESUMO
BACKGROUND: Adolescents in the U.S. experience significant negative sexual health outcomes, representing a public health priority in the U.S. Research shows that while parents play an influential role in shaping adolescent sexual behavior, surprisingly few programs engage parents in existing programming. Moreover, most efficacious parent-based programs focus on young adolescents, and few utilize delivery mechanisms that facilitate broad reach and scale-up. To address these gaps, we propose to test the efficacy of an online-delivered, parent-based intervention adapted to address both younger and older adolescent sexual risk behavior. METHODS: In this parallel, two-arm, superiority randomized controlled trial (RCT), we propose to evaluate Families Talking Together Plus (FTT+), an adaptation of an existing and efficacious FTT parent-based intervention, in shaping sexual risk behavior among adolescents aged 12-17 and delivered via a teleconferencing application (e.g., Zoom). The study population will include n=750 parent-adolescent dyads recruited from public housing developments in the Bronx, New York. Adolescents will be eligible if they are between the ages of 12 and 17 years of age, self-report as Latino and/or Black, have a parent or primary caregiver, and are South Bronx residents. Parent-adolescent dyads will complete a baseline survey, after which they will be assigned to either the FTT+ intervention condition (n=375) or the passive control condition (n=375) in a 1:1 allocation ratio. Parents and adolescents in each condition will complete follow-up assessments 3 and 9 months post-baseline. The primary outcomes will include sexual debut and ever sex, and the secondary outcomes will include the frequency of sex acts, number of lifetime sexual partners, number of unprotected sex acts, and linkage to health and educational/vocational services in the community. We will utilize intent-to-treat analyses of 9-month outcomes and single degree of freedom contrasts comparing the intervention to the control group for primary and secondary outcomes. DISCUSSION: The proposed evaluation and analysis of the FTT+ intervention will address gaps in the current cadre of parent-based programs. If efficacious, FTT+ would represent a model for scale-up and adoption of parent-based approaches designed to address adolescent sexual health in the U.S. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04731649. Registered on February 1, 2021.
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Saúde Sexual , Humanos , Adolescente , Criança , Comportamento Sexual , Sexo sem Proteção , Saúde do Adolescente , Inquéritos e Questionários , Ensaios Clínicos Controlados Aleatórios como AssuntoRESUMO
Young men who have sex with men (YMSM) face the highest risk of HIV infection among adolescents, yet effective sexual health interventions for this population are limited. Parents and Adolescents Talking about Healthy Sexuality (PATHS) is an online intervention for parents designed to improve communication about HIV and increase behaviors supportive of YMSM sexual health. We conducted an RCT of PATHS with sixty-one parent-son dyads recruited online (sons were cisgender, gay or bisexual, ages 14-22). Assessments were completed at baseline, immediate post-intervention, and over the next 3 months. Per parent and son report, in the 3 months following the intervention, parents assigned to PATHS engaged in more HIV discussion, condom instruction, and facilitation of HIV testing. Parents also reported significant pre- to immediate-post intervention changes in attitudes, skills, and behavioral intentions relevant to engaging with their sons about sexual health. Parents are an untapped but promising resource in preventing HIV among YMSM.This trial was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (Identifier: NCT04018573).
RESUMEN: Los hombres jóvenes que tienen sexo con hombres (HJSH) estan expuestos al mayor riesgo de infección del VIH entre los adolescentes, sin embargo, las intervenciones efectivas de salud sexual para esta población son limitadas. Padres y Adolescentes Hablando sobre la Sexualidad Saludable (PATHS) es una intervención en línea para padres, diseñada para mejorar la comunicación sobre el VIH y aumentar los comportamientos que apoyan la salud sexual de los hombres jóvenes que tienen sexo con hombres. Realizamos un ensayo controlado aleatorizado de PATHS con sesenta y uno díadas de padres e hijos reclutados en línea (los hijos eran cisgénero, homosexuales o bisexuales, de la edad de 14 a 22 años). Las evaluaciones se completaron al inicio, inmediatamente después de la intervención y durante los siguientes 3 meses. De acuerdo al informe de padres e hijos, en los tres meses después de la intervención, los padres asignados a PATHS tuvieron más discusiones sobre el VIH, instrucciones sobre el uso de los condones y facilitación de pruebas del VIH. Los padres también reportaron cambios significativos antes y después de la intervención en actitudes, habilidades e intenciones de comportamiento acerca de su involucración con la salud sexual de sus hijos. Los padres son un recurso inexplorado, pero prometedor en la prevención del VIH entre HJSH.
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Infecções por HIV , Minorias Sexuais e de Gênero , Masculino , Adolescente , Humanos , Homossexualidade Masculina , Infecções por HIV/prevenção & controle , Projetos Piloto , PaisRESUMO
BACKGROUND: Health disparities and inequities among historically underrepresented populations represent a public health crisis. PURPOSE: This manuscript describes how use of an antiracism framework, an evidence-based approach to addressing systemic barriers, can assist with restoring trust in historically underrepresented communities that have experienced harm by researchers. METHODS: We also discuss the necessity of inclusive research teams and provide exemplars of how antiracism research principles and inclusive research teams can be used to mitigate harm and restore trust in historically underrepresented communities. DISCUSSION: Historical trauma and research misconduct have resulted in the mistrust of healthcare providers and health care systems among historically underrepresented individuals and communities. CONCLUSION: Nurse scientists are positioned to appreciate historical inequities and trauma and to intervene by developing culturally relevant interventions. This work, however, will only happen if communities that have suffered harm trust nurse scientists.