Literature DB >> 16520502

People Improving the Community's Health: community health workers as agents of change.

Melany Mack1, Ron Uken, Jane Powers.   

Abstract

People Improving the Community's Health (PITCH) uses teams of community health workers to provide targeted outreach, to enroll those eligible in health coverage plans, to provide information and linkages to health and social support services, and to engage community members in community improvement activities. The initiative is based on the assumption that communities must work on the determinants of health and effectively mobilize all their assets to improve not only individual health, but also community health. Developed with support from the Kellogg Foundation's Community Voices Initiative, PITCH addresses intertwined public health concerns about access to health care and community health improvement. Outcomes of PITCH include increased enrollment in health coverage plans as well as increased participation in community improvement activities. The PITCH initiative helps community members work together to unleash the enormous power for change that emerges when people connect to one another, thereby tapping the knowledge, skills, and resources of community members and institutions alike.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2006        PMID: 16520502     DOI: 10.1353/hpu.2006.0009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Health Care Poor Underserved        ISSN: 1049-2089


  9 in total

1.  Community health workers' support for cancer clinical trials: description and explanation.

Authors:  Russell K Schutt; Lidia Schapira; Jennifer Maniates; Jessica Santiccioli; Silas Henlon; Judyann Bigby
Journal:  J Community Health       Date:  2010-08

2.  Community Health Workers and community advocacy: addressing health disparities.

Authors:  Maia Ingram; Samantha Sabo; Janet Rothers; Ashley Wennerstrom; Jill Guernsey de Zapien
Journal:  J Community Health       Date:  2008-12

3.  Moving the dial to advance population health equity in New York City Asian American populations.

Authors:  Chau Trinh-Shevrin; Simona C Kwon; Rebecca Park; Smiti Kapadia Nadkarni; Nadia S Islam
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2015-04-23       Impact factor: 9.308

4.  Predictors and a framework for fostering community advocacy as a community health worker core function to eliminate health disparities.

Authors:  Samantha Sabo; Maia Ingram; Kerstin M Reinschmidt; Kenneth Schachter; Laurel Jacobs; Jill Guernsey de Zapien; Laurie Robinson; Scott Carvajal
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2013-05-16       Impact factor: 9.308

5.  Tribal Veterans Representative (TVR) training program: the effect of community outreach workers on American Indian and Alaska Native Veterans access to and utilization of the Veterans Health Administration.

Authors:  L Jeanne Kaufmann; W J Buck Richardson; James Floyd; Jay Shore
Journal:  J Community Health       Date:  2014-10

6.  Addressing Hispanic Obesity Disparities Using a Community Health Worker Model Grounded in Motivational Interviewing.

Authors:  Louis D Brown; Denise Vasquez; Diane I Lopez; Erin M Portillo
Journal:  Am J Health Promot       Date:  2021-11-18

7.  No te entiendo y tú no me entiendes: language barriers among immigrant Latino adolescents seeking health care.

Authors:  Carolyn M Garcia; Laura J Duckett
Journal:  J Cult Divers       Date:  2009

8.  Reexamining medication adherence in black patients with hypertension through the lens of the social determinants of health.

Authors:  Antoinette M Schoenthaler
Journal:  J Clin Hypertens (Greenwich)       Date:  2017-09-24       Impact factor: 3.738

9.  Realities and experiences of community health volunteers as agents for behaviour change: evidence from an informal urban settlement in Kisumu, Kenya.

Authors:  Rose Evalyne Aseyo; Jane Mumma; Kerry Scott; Damaris Nelima; Emily Davis; Kelly K Baker; Oliver Cumming; Robert Dreibelbis
Journal:  Hum Resour Health       Date:  2018-10-04
  9 in total

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