Literature DB >> 2516062

Community organization and development for health promotion within an urban black community: a conceptual model.

R L Braithwaite, F Murphy, N Lythcott, D S Blumenthal.   

Abstract

The community organization and development process is not new and has its roots in social action ideology from the 1960s. The difference between the 1960s and the 1990s is in bringing together of target community consumers with representatives of private and public sector resources (with consumers in the majority), to form a community coalition board. This community coalition board must make policy decisions. Combining these community organizers and development techniques with the mission of health promotion is a viable methodology for addressing the needs of medically underserved and unserved communities. The approach is a multifactorial one, as illustrated in Figure 1. The Health Promotion Resource Center at Morehouse School of Medicine seeks to combine the ideology of community organization and development with culturally sensitive and linguistically appropriate health promotion curriculum materials and intervention strategies. Within the HPRC lies the Statewide Coordinating Center for Georgia which has been funded by the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Its mandate is to assist minority and poor communities in Georgia in developing community-based health promotion initiatives which address the areas of cancer, cardiovascular disease, adolescent pregnancy, substance abuse, and violence and unintentional injury. Our strategy in carrying out this mandate is the community organization and development model described in this article.

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Year:  1989        PMID: 2516062

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Educ        ISSN: 0097-0050


  9 in total

1.  Community organizing goes to college: a practice-based model to implement environmental strategies to reduce high-risk drinking on college campuses.

Authors:  Kimberly G Wagoner; Scott D Rhodes; Ashley W Lentz; Mark Wolfson
Journal:  Health Promot Pract       Date:  2010-06-08

2.  The Southeastern U.S. Collaborative Center of Excellence in the Elimination of Disparities (SUCCEED): reducing breast and cervical cancer disparities for African American women.

Authors:  Le'Roy E Reese; Daniel S Blumenthal; Venice E Haynes
Journal:  J Health Care Poor Underserved       Date:  2012-05

3.  A comparison of breast and cervical cancer legislation and screening in Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina.

Authors:  Stephanie Miles-Richardson; Daniel Blumenthal; Ernest Alema-Mensah
Journal:  J Health Care Poor Underserved       Date:  2012-05

4.  Impact of a two-city community cancer prevention intervention on African Americans.

Authors:  Daniel S Blumenthal; Jane G Fort; Nasar U Ahmed; Kofi A Semenya; George B Schreiber; Shelley Perry; Joyce Guillory
Journal:  J Natl Med Assoc       Date:  2005-11       Impact factor: 1.798

5.  Community health promotion: The church as partner.

Authors:  M Sutherland; C D Hale; G J Harris
Journal:  J Prim Prev       Date:  1995-12

6.  Minority status and the risk of serious childhood injury and death.

Authors:  John R Hayes; Jonathan I Groner
Journal:  J Natl Med Assoc       Date:  2005-03       Impact factor: 1.798

7.  An injury prevention program in an urban African-American community.

Authors:  D F Schwarz; J A Grisso; C Miles; J H Holmes; R L Sutton
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  1993-05       Impact factor: 9.308

8.  Clinical community health: revisiting "the community as patient".

Authors:  D S Blumenthal
Journal:  Educ Health (Abingdon)       Date:  2009-07-29

9.  Consolidated Framework for Collaboration Research derived from a systematic review of theories, models, frameworks and principles for cross-sector collaboration.

Authors:  Larissa Calancie; Leah Frerichs; Melinda M Davis; Eliana Sullivan; Ann Marie White; Dorothy Cilenti; Giselle Corbie-Smith; Kristen Hassmiller Lich
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-01-04       Impact factor: 3.752

  9 in total

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