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1.
Prog Community Health Partnersh ; 17(3): 465-476, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37934444

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Racial and Ethnic Approaches to Community Health Initiative, Live Well Allegheny: Lifting Wellness for African Americans (LWA) in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, aims to enhance health equity by addressing chronic disease in six African American communities via three key strategies: nutrition, physical activity, and community-clinical linkages. OBJECTIVES: This manuscript describes the coalition's partnership dynamics and evaluation methods with a focus on nutrition strategies. METHODS: We have a network of committed partners implementing the strategies and we are evaluating our efforts using community asset mapping, county population-based survey data, qualitative process interviews, focus groups, and program performance measures. RESULTS: The LWA coalition is the culmination of years of partnership building, which allows for more targeted activities related to health equity in the region. Thus far, the LWA coalition is thriving. The network of committed and talented partners in the nutrition strategy (healthy nutrition standards, food systems, and breastfeeding) reached 22 sites and more than 46,000 people during the first 2 years of the project. Process interviews conducted as part of the evaluation identified challenges and successes of implementation, and development of the coalition. CONCLUSIONS: This comprehensive evaluation approach supports formative processes, evaluation metrics, and prolonged sustainability plans of this community-based coalition.


Subject(s)
Community-Based Participatory Research , Health Equity , Healthcare Disparities , Racial Groups , Humans , Black or African American , Chronic Disease , Pennsylvania , United States , Healthcare Disparities/ethnology
2.
J Abnorm Psychol ; 123(1): 35-48, 2014 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24661157

ABSTRACT

Rumination in depression is a risk factor for longer, more intense, and harder-to-treat depressions. But there appear to be multiple types of depressive rumination-whether they all share these vulnerability mechanisms, and thus would benefit from the same types of clinical attention is unclear. In the current study, we examined neural correlates of empirically derived dimensions of trait rumination in 35 depressed participants. These individuals and 29 never-depressed controls completed 17 self-report measures of rumination and an alternating emotion-processing/executive-control task during functional MRI (fMRI) assessment. We examined associations of regions of interest--the amygdala and other cortical regions subserving a potential role in deficient cognitive control and elaborative emotion-processing--with trait rumination. Rumination of all types was generally associated with increased sustained amygdala reactivity. When controlling for amygdala reactivity, distinct activity patterns in hippocampus were also associated with specific dimensions of rumination. We discuss the possibly utility of targeting more basic biological substrates of emotional reactivity in depressed patients who frequently ruminate.


Subject(s)
Amygdala/physiopathology , Depression/physiopathology , Depressive Disorder/physiopathology , Emotions/physiology , Thinking/physiology , Adult , Attention/physiology , Depression/psychology , Depressive Disorder/psychology , Executive Function/physiology , Female , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Neuropsychological Tests
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