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1.
Prog Community Health Partnersh ; 16(2S): 45-58, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35912657

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic and activism against structural racism heightened awareness of racial-ethnic disparities and disproportionate burden among the underserved. The opioid crisis further compounds these phenomena, increasing vulnerability for substance use disorders (SUD). Community-based participatory research can facilitate multidisciplinary collaboration, yet literature on these approaches to prevent and reduce SUD and associated stigma remains limited. OBJECTIVE: Discrimination, stigma, and multiple crises with health care and systemic barriers increasingly marginalize the underserved, specifically around SUD. The Detroit Area Mental Health Leadership Team (DAMHLT, since 2015), aims to optimize SUD prevention, enhance resiliency and advocacy to advance knowledge on SUD research and influence community-level research and practice. LESSONS LEARNED: DAMHLT's approach on bidirectionality, community level access to real-time epidemiological data, advocacy (i.e., institutional responsiveness) and dissemination may be translational to other partnerships. CONCLUSIONS: As we move through an ever-changing pandemic, DAMHLT's lessons learned can inform partnership dynamics and public health strategies such as hesitancy on public health response.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Substance-Related Disorders , COVID-19/prevention & control , Community-Based Participatory Research , Humans , Public Health , Racial Groups , Substance-Related Disorders/prevention & control
2.
Br J Health Psychol ; 21(2): 249-67, 2016 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26333060

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: This preliminary study examined the effect of gain versus loss-framed messaging as well as culturally targeted personal prevention messaging on African Americans' receptivity to colorectal cancer (CRC) screening. This research also examined mechanistic functions of perceived racism in response to message framing. DESIGN AND METHODS: Community samples of African Americans (N = 132) and White Americans (N = 50) who were non-compliant with recommended CRC screening completed an online education module about CRC, and were either exposed to a gain-framed or loss-framed message about CRC screening. Half of African Americans were exposed to an additional and culturally targeted self-control message about personal prevention of CRC. Theory of planned behavior measures of attitudes, normative beliefs, perceived behavioural control, and intentions to obtain a CRC screen served as primary outcomes. The effect of messaging on perceived racism was also measured as an outcome. RESULTS: Consistent with prior research, White Americans were more receptive to CRC screening when exposed to a loss-framed message. However, African Americans were more receptive when exposed to a gain-framed message. The contrary effect of loss-framed messaging on receptivity to screening among African Americans was mediated by an increase in perceived racism. However, including an additional and culturally targeted prevention message mitigated the adverse effect of a loss-framed message. CONCLUSION: This study identifies an important potential cultural difference in the effect of message framing on illness screening among African Americans, while also suggesting a culturally relevant linking mechanism. This study also suggests the potential for simultaneously presented and culturally targeted messaging to alter the effects of gain and loss-framed messaging on African Americans. STATEMENT OF CONTRIBUTION: What is already known on this subject? African Americans are at an increased risk of both developing and dying from colorectal cancer (CRC). These disparities can be attributed in large part to deficits in the use of CRC screening among African Americans. Guided by prospect theory, available literature suggests that selectively pairing gain and loss-framed messaging with illness prevention and detection can better promote adaptive health behaviour. Specifically, loss-framed messages that emphasize the potential costs of failing to act may promote better use of illness detection behaviours, such as CRC screening. Emerging literature highlights the potential for cultural differences in the effects of gain and loss messaging on health behaviour, especially among collectivist or interdependent cultures. What does this study add? This study is the first to identify a potential and important cultural difference in the effect of message framing on cancer screening among African Americans, whereby gain-framed messaging better compelled receptivity to CRC screening. This study is also the first to show that the use of loss-framed messaging may reduce receptivity to CRC screening among African Americans by increasing perceived racism. This study demonstrates that simultaneously including a culturally targeted personal prevention message may attenuate the negative effects of loss-framed messaging on CRC screening among African Americans.


Subject(s)
Black or African American/psychology , Colorectal Neoplasms/diagnosis , Early Detection of Cancer/psychology , Health Communication/methods , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Health Promotion/methods , Racism/psychology , Black or African American/statistics & numerical data , Aged , Colorectal Neoplasms/psychology , Early Detection of Cancer/statistics & numerical data , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Racism/statistics & numerical data , United States , White People/psychology , White People/statistics & numerical data
3.
Int J Drug Policy ; 26(5): 453-60, 2015 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25736572

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In this paper, we explore social spaces related to street sex work and illicit drug use in Detroit. We consider these spaces as assemblages (Duff, 2011, 2013; Latour, 2005) that reflect the larger moral geography (Hubbard, 2012) of the city and fulfill specific functions in the daily lives of drug using sex workers. METHODS: We draw on thirty-one in-depth qualitative interviews with former street sex workers who were recruited through a court-based treatment and recovery program, as well as ethnographic field notes from drug treatment and law enforcement settings. RESULTS: Our interview findings reveal highly organized and routine activities that exist in a relatively stable, symbiotic relationship with law enforcement practices, employment and commuter patterns, and built environments. While the daily life of street sex work involves a good deal of individual agency in terms of moving between spaces and negotiating terms of exchange, daily trajectories were also circumscribed by economics, illicit substance use, and the objective risks of the street and the police. CONCLUSION: We consider the implications of these results for future policy directed at harm reduction in the street setting.


Subject(s)
Sex Work/statistics & numerical data , Substance-Related Disorders/epidemiology , Adult , Cities , Female , Humans , Male , Michigan , Middle Aged , Residence Characteristics/statistics & numerical data , Sex Work/psychology , Social Environment , Substance-Related Disorders/psychology
4.
Qual Health Res ; 25(2): 228-40, 2015 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25246332

ABSTRACT

In this article we consider the process of adjustment from active street sex work to life in structured substance abuse treatment among Detroit-area women who participated in a semicoercive program administered through a drug court. We examine this transition in terms of changes in daily routines and social networks, drawing on extensive qualitative data to illuminate the ways in which women defined their own situations. Using concepts from Bourdieu and Latour as analytical aids, we analyze the role of daily routines, environments, and networks in producing the shifts in identity that those who embraced the goals of recovery demonstrated. We conclude with a discussion of how the restrictive environments and redundant situations experienced by women in treatment could be paradoxically embraced as a means to achieve expanded opportunity and enhanced individual responsibility because women effectively reassembled their social networks and identities to align with the goals of recovery.


Subject(s)
Environment , Sex Work/psychology , Substance Abuse Treatment Centers/organization & administration , Substance-Related Disorders/psychology , Substance-Related Disorders/therapy , Adult , Female , Humans , Michigan , Social Support , Substance Abuse Treatment Centers/legislation & jurisprudence
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