| Literature DB >> 35651357 |
Terence S Dermody1,2,3, Anna Ettinger4, Felicia Savage Friedman5, Val Chavis4, Elizabeth Miller1,6,7.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted structural inequities that are barriers to thriving for children in neighborhoods with concentrated disadvantage. Health systems are increasingly addressing health-related social needs. The "Pittsburgh Study" is a longitudinal, community-partnered study focused on child and adolescent thriving and racial equity. This initiative will elucidate critical influences on childhood health and thriving, evaluate developmentally appropriate interventions to improve outcomes from birth to high school, and establish a child health data hub. Integration of community members into scientific inquiry, rapid data-to-action cycles, and workforce development are strategies health systems may consider to enhance child health equity. © Terence S. Dermody et al., 2022; Published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.Entities:
Keywords: adolescence; child health; community-partnered participatory research; pediatrics; racial equity; thriving
Year: 2022 PMID: 35651357 PMCID: PMC9148643 DOI: 10.1089/heq.2021.0084
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Equity ISSN: 2473-1242
The Pittsburgh Study shared principles
| 1. Connect with communities with honesty, empathy, and transparency. |
| 2. Prioritize community input and recognize that neighborhoods matter. |
| 3. Continue to build trust and show that we care, are fair, and are consistent. |
| 4. Develop research |
| 5. Maintain open, inclusive communication—share everything to a fault, including date. |
| 6. Keep learning, listening, and expanding the table. |
| 7. Build collaborations, break down silos. |
| 8. Have patience for the long-term measurable, sustainable impact. |
| 9. Approach decisions with intentional action for impact. |
| 10. Leave your ego at the door. |
The Pittsburgh Study multicohort study objectives, design, participants, intervention, and outcomes
| Cohort study objectives | Study design | Anticipated participants | Intervention | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stage 1: CPPR development and mixed method study of healthy pregnancy intervention strategies from quantitative and qualitative survey, with a focus on Black and African American pregnant and birthing people | 160 Black and African birthing people across Allegheny County and concentrating in the highest risk pre-term birth neighborhoods (defined by rates of births less than 36 weeks gestation) participating in survey | (1) MyHealthy Pregnancy, a mobile health application designed to prevent adverse pregnancy events | (1) Reduced maternal and infant mortality rates for Black and African birthing people and children | |
| Quasi-experimental implementation trial assessing tiered interventions based on families' strengths and challenges: | 8000 caregivers (e.g., mother, father, grandparent) and children younger than 4 years of age recruited over 2 years; up to two participating caregivers for each child will be included in the study when possible | (1) Parent education and support mobile apps | (1) Improved child self-regulation, social development, language/cognitive development | |
| Stage 1: Iterative implementation study of newly developed measures and literacy support strategies in homes, communities, schools, and with educational leaders | 275 students in Kindergarten through third grade, their teachers, administrators, parents/guardians, and local literacy support agency members | 3Rs: Reading, Racial Equity, and Relationships designed to enhance children's whole literacy ecosystems, including sustained and engaged educator learning in professional learning communities | (1) Increased third grade literacy outcomes | |
| Two-arm cluster randomized school-based control trial in elementary schools with grades 4–6 | 1700 students in grades 4–6 in urban public schools serving predominantly low-income students of color | Just Discipline, a relational school climate primary prevention model | (1) Reduced antisocial behavior, referrals, and out-of-school suspensions | |
| Two-arm cluster randomized controlled trial in 36 middle schools from local school districts and charter school networks (18 intervention and 18 comparison schools receiving Expect Respect or individual enhanced care assessments) | 1080 students in seventh to eighth grade in 36 schools in Allegheny County, Westmoreland County; tailored for youth with prior exposure to trauma and violence | Expect Respect is a 24-session research-informed violence prevention program centered around developing communication skills, choosing equality and respect, recognizing abuse, learning skills for positive relationship building, and becoming active proponents for safe and healthy relationships. | (1) Reduced violence perpetration likely to result in serious injury or death | |
| Two-arm cluster randomized controlled trial in 24 neighborhoods (12 intervention and 12 comparison neighborhoods receiving job readiness training) | 1800 youth ages 14–18 living in 24 urban neighborhoods with high levels of community violence. Programming will take place in 24 historically disadvantaged neighborhoods across the Pittsburgh area | Creating Peace uses an intersectional, anti-racist and strength-based approach to address the impact of racism and discrimination on young people. This curriculum has been drafted, reviewed, and refined by members of the Adolescent Collaborative. | (1) Reduced recent violence perpetration |
CPPR, community-partnered participatory research; ECC, Early Childhood Collaborative; HPC, Healthy Pregnancy Collaborative.
FIG. 1.Age-specific positive health interventions.
FIG. 2.Pittsburgh Study theory of change.