| Literature DB >> 27328950 |
Yamile Molina1,2, Marnyce S McKell3, Norma Mendoza4, Lynda Barbour5, Nerida M Berrios6, Kate Murray7,8, Carol Estwing Ferrans6.
Abstract
Health volunteerism has been associated with positive health outcomes for volunteers and the communities they serve. This work suggests that there may be an added value to providing underserved populations with information and skills to be agents of change. The current study is a first step toward testing this hypothesis. The purpose is to identify how volunteerism may result in improved cancer health among Latina and African American women volunteers. A purposive sample of 40 Latina and African American female adults who had participated in cancer volunteerism in the past 5 years was recruited by community advocates and flyers distributed throughout community venues in San Diego, CA. This qualitative study included semi-structured focus groups. Participants indicated that volunteerism not only improved their health but also the health of their family and friends. Such perceptions aligned with the high rates of self-report lifetime cancer screening rates among age-eligible patients (e.g., 83-93 % breast; 90-93 % cervical; 79-92 % colorectal). Identified mechanisms included exposure to evidence-based information, health-protective social norms and support, and pressure to be a healthy role model. Our findings suggest that train-the-trainer and volunteer-driven interventions may have unintended health-protective effects for participating staff, especially Latina and African American women.Entities:
Keywords: African American; Cancer disparities; Latina; Volunteerism
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 27328950 PMCID: PMC5179314 DOI: 10.1007/s13187-016-1061-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cancer Educ ISSN: 0885-8195 Impact factor: 2.037