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1.
Am J Community Psychol ; 73(1-2): 191-205, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37042808

ABSTRACT

To challenge and interrogate the assemblages of violence produced by racial capitalism, and exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, community psychologists must engage in a transdisciplinary critical ethically reflexive practice. In this reflexive essay, or first-person account, I offer a decolonial feminist response to COVID-19 that draws strength from the writings of three women of Color decolonial and postcolonial feminist thinkers: Gloria E. Anzaldúa, Sylvia Wynter, and Arundhati Roy. Through their writings I share my reflections on the sociopolitical moment associated with COVID-19. Of importance, I argue in support of engaging a decolonial feminist standpoint to understand the inequitable and dehumanizing conditions under COVID-19, and the possibilities for transformative justice. I offer this reflexive essay with the intention of summoning community psychology and community psychologists to look toward transdisciplinarity, such as that which characterizes a decolonial standpoint and feminist epistemologies. Writings oriented toward imagination, relationality, and borderland ways of thinking that are outside, in-between or within, the self and the collective "we" can offer valuable guidance. The invitation toward a transdisciplinary critical ethically reflexive practice calls us to bear witness to movements for social justice; to leverage our personal, professional and institutional resources to support communities in struggle. A decolonial feminist standpoint guided by the words of Anzaldúa, Wynter, and Roy can cultivate liberatory conditions that can materialize as racial freedom, community wellbeing, and societal thriving.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Humans , Female , Pandemics , Violence/prevention & control , Feminism , Knowledge
2.
Am J Community Psychol ; 72(3-4): 328-340, 2023 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37983659

ABSTRACT

Latinx have contributed to the foundation and formation of the United States, and as this demographic increases, overlooking their unique experiences and lived conditions can limit community psychology's potential to better support them in their wellbeing. Thus, in alignment with the call for a virtual special issue highlighting critical themes in the American Journal of Community Psychology (AJCP), we take an exemplar approach to reviewing 15 articles published between 1979 and 2023. We highlight these articles for their unique contributions in laying the foundation or shifting the discourses of Latinx in the United States. We organize each article under one of the following themes: (1) Challenging notions of Latinx as passive victims or deficient; (2) Documenting the misrepresentation and invisibility of Latinx in community psychology; (3) Affirming Latinx as knowledge producers, protagonists, and agents of change; and (4) Centering Latin American epistemologies that foster liberatory praxis for and with Latinx. Via these themes, we illustrate where the discipline has been, and offer reflection for where it can move toward as it relates to Latinx. In doing so, we highlight perspectives grounded in Latinx communities. Our review is not exhaustive; however, it offers our subjective interpretation or curation of the articles we acknowledge as fundamental to the discipline's formation, and our learning and ongoing growth as critical community psychologists of Latin American heritage with affinities to Latinx communities in the United States. We offer this brief review as a semilla (seed) to the possibilities ahead as we remain open to reflection, dialog and learning.


Subject(s)
Hispanic or Latino , Periodicals as Topic , Humans , United States
4.
Am J Community Psychol ; 71(1-2): 8-21, 2023 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36378577

ABSTRACT

A first-person narrative essay is presented through a critically reflexive auto-ethnography of a community psychologist's experiences as a member of the Society for Community Research and Action (SCRA) and (as of this writing) co-chair of the Cultural, Ethnic and Racial Affairs council. Through this methodological orientation, an analysis of some of the discourses that circulated within the SCRA listserv in relation to the murder of Mr. George Floyd, and amidst an ensuing pandemic are analyzed and discussed in relation to Anzaldúa's seven stages of conocimiento. The intentions that guide and ground this first-person account are to animate deeper reflection, accountability, and solidarity-in-action, as well as an organizational shift in the culture of the SCRA. Guided by a set of questions-What accounts for the organizational silences within the SCRA? How did the SCRA respond or engage with the murder of Mr. Floyd, anti-Blackness, Black Lives Matter, and related racial justice efforts?-the purpose is to turn a critical social analysis gaze to the SCRA in order to align its purpose, values, and mission with liberation and a decolonial feminist praxis. Anzaldúa's seven-stage framework of conocimiento is utilized to describe the possibilities for an organizational cultural shift in the SCRA that aligns with racial justice and liberatory decolonial feminist praxes.


Subject(s)
Psychology, Social , Social Justice , Humans , Feminism , Anthropology, Cultural , Population Groups
5.
Index enferm ; 32(4): [e14659], 20230000.
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-231549

ABSTRACT

Objetivo principal: Conocer las percepciones y actitudes hacia la conducta suicida por parte de las enfermeras, así como su influencia en la evaluación y abordaje de esta. Metodología: Revisión sistemática de estudios cualitativos que sigue el modelo de metasíntesis para el análisis de los resultados. Resultados: El total de artículos incluidos en el trabajo han sido trece, a través de los cuales, se han obtenido cuatro categorías temáticas que sintetizan los resultados de los estudios evaluados. Conclusiones: El trabajo aporta una visión del camino que se está recorriendo, desde una postura moralista hacia la conducta suicida, a la comprensión de la patología que se ha de evaluar, tratar y prevenir.(AU)


Main objective: To know the perceptions and attitudes towards suicidal behaviour by nurses, as well as their influence on its evaluation and approach to it. Methodology: Systematic review of qualitative studies that follows the metasynthesis model for the analysis of results. Results: The total number of articles included in this paper has been thirteen, through which, four thematic categories that summarise the results of the evaluated studies have been obtained. Conclusions: The paper provides a vision of the path that is being followed, from a moralistic stance towards suicidal behaviour, to the understanding of the pathology that has to be assessed, treated and prevented.(AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Suicidal Ideation , Perception , Attitude , Suicide , Nurses/psychology , Mental Health , Nursing , Nursing Care
6.
Am J Community Psychol ; 69(3-4): 391-402, 2022 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34816446

ABSTRACT

Braiding our words, "dissi-dance," and desires, this article engages how various social actors, and communities-which we are a part of and belong to-challenge structural violence, oppression, inequity, and social, racial, and epistemic injustice. We thread these reflections through our written words, in subversive letters which we offer in the form of a written relational conversation among us: a plurilogue that emerges in response to our specific locations, commitments, and refusals, as well as dissents. Our stories and process of dissent within the various locations, relationships, and contexts that we occupy served as the yarn and needle to thread our stories, posed questions and reflections. Braiding, threading and weaving together, we animate deep decolonial inquiries within ourselves, and our different cultural contexts and countries. Refusing individualism-the illusions of objectivity as distance, the academic as expert, and the exile of affect and emotion on academic pages-we choose to occupy academic writing and ask: What if academic writing were stitched with blood and laughter, relationships and insights, rage and incites? What if, at the nexus of critical psychology and decolonizing feminism, we grew an "embodied praxis?" Unlike academic writing, traditionally designed to camouflage affect, connection, relationality and subjectivity, these letters are unapologetically saturated in care and wisdom toward a narrative-based embodied practice: decolonial plurilogues of relational solidarities for epistemic justice. Our plurilogue of dissent offers a view to advance community research and action with goals of liberation, decoloniality, and community wellness.


Subject(s)
Colonialism , Social Justice , Female , Feminism , Humans , Writing
7.
Rev. am. med. respir ; 21(2): 187-194, jun. 2021. graf
Article in Spanish | LILACS-Express | LILACS | ID: biblio-1514905

ABSTRACT

Resumen Si bien aún no hay una definición precisa de inflamación sistémica en EPOC, su reconocimiento se ha basado en estudios que han demostrado un aumento de concentración plasmática de diversos marcadores inflamatorios entre ellos proteína C reactiva (PCR) y, en los últimos años se ha postulado también la microalbuminuria. Los objetivos de este trabajo fueron determinar la microalbuminuria y la PCR como potenciales biomarcadores de inflamación sistémica. Para ello se reclutaron pacientes EPOC estable y tabaquistas no EPOC diagnosticados mediante espirometria, mayores a 40 años sin HTA ni diabetes tipo I ó II, en el periodo comprendido entre octubre de 2017 a marzo de 2019. A ambos grupos se le extrajo una muestra de sangre venosa para determinar PCR ultrasensible y 3 muestras de orina para determinar microalbuminuria, tomando una media de las mismas. Se consideró albuminuria significativa cuando en al menos dos de tres determinaciones hubiese valores entre 30 y 300 mg/g de creatinina urinaria. La PCR ultrasensible se consideró positiva con un valor igual o superior a 5 mg/L. De los 47 pacientes analizados se obtuvo una albuminuria media de 13.91 ± 5.04 en el grupo EPOC en comparación con 2.50 ± 0.36 del grupo control. De la misma forma se compararon las medias de PCR ultrasensible, arrojando un valor de 5.06 ± 2.24 en los pacientes EPOC en relación a 2.46 ± 0.51 de los controles. Ambas variables mostraron diferencias estadísticamente no significativas entre los grupos de estudio (p = 0,058 para albuminuria media y p = 0.330 para PCR ultrasensible).

8.
Rev. am. med. respir ; 21(2): 195-202, jun. 2021. graf
Article in English | LILACS-Express | LILACS | ID: biblio-1514906

ABSTRACT

Abstract There isn't yet a clear definition for systemic inflammation in COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease), but its recognition has been based on studies that show an increase in the plasma concentration of various inflammatory markers, such as the c-reactive protein (CRP), and in recent years, also the microalbuminuria has been suggested. The purposes of this work were to determine the microalbuminuria and CRP as potential biomarkers of systemic inflammation. We enrolled patients with stable COPD and non-COPD smokers diagnosed through spirometry; older than 40 years without AHT (arterial hypertension) or diabetes type I or II, between October 2017 and March 2019. In both groups, a venous blood sample was collected to determine high-sensitivity CRP and 3 urine samples were taken to determine microalbuminuria, calculating the mean value. At least two out of three determinations between 30 and 300 mg/g of urine creatinine were considered to be significant albuminuria. The high-sensitivity CRP was considered positive with a value ≥ 5 mg/L. Of the 47 analyzed patients, a mean albuminuria of 13.91 ± 5.04 was obtained in the COPD group, in comparison with 2.50 ± 0.36 in the control group. Also, the high-sensitivity CRP mean values were compared, showing 5.06 ± 2.24 in COPD patients and 2.46 ± 0.51 in the control group. Both variables showed non-statistically significant differences between the study groups (p = 0.058 for mean albuminuria and p = 0.330 for high-sensitivity CRP).

10.
J Community Psychol ; 49(8): 3033-3053, 2021 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33016347

ABSTRACT

The literature on contemporary youth organizing has documented psychological benefits associated with participation and some evidence of local political impact. But how do local organizing campaigns transform into regional or national movements? This is a practical question facing youth organizers and one that calls for attention from researchers. In this article, we draw on 3 years of ethnographic fieldwork with South Africa's Equal Education (EE) to analyze collective action frames that enabled EE youth to assert legitimacy and construct shared aims across locales. Our findings focus on how youth constructed historical continuity frames that lent them legitimacy as upholders of the South African freedom struggle and flexible problem frames that linked young people's local struggles, such as inadequate sanitation or broken windows at their schools, to a national policy agenda. We discuss connections to other youth movements and implications for the interdisciplinary youth organizing field.


Subject(s)
Black People , Schools , Adolescent , Humans
11.
Am J Community Psychol ; 66(3-4): 314-324, 2020 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32619299

ABSTRACT

Community psychology, despite its commitment to social justice, is prone to engage in deficit-based perspectives that do not appropriately capture the strengths of Latinx communities. Given these limitations, we use a Community Cultural Wealth (CCW) (Yosso, 2005) framework to describe how muxeres, Latina women who identify as promotoras, madres, and mamás, leveraged their political power and culturally informed leadership to improve the health and well-being of their communities. We highlight instances from our fieldwork, witnessing the agency of muxeres en acción for health equity. We offer three case studies to describe how we approached our collaborations with three groups of muxeres situated in different geographic locations in the state of California. The first case study discusses how immigrant muxeres who identify as promotoras (e.g., health workers) in the Central Valley developed their research skills through a promotora model that allowed them to build the capacity to advocate for the well-being of their communities. The second example offers reflections from a Community-Based Participatory Action Research (CBPAR) project with a group of Mexican immigrant madres in a gentrified community in San José. Lastly, the third case study describes how a group of mamás in the East Side of Los Angeles addressed issues of educational inequities. Together, these case studies illustrate muxeres' advocacy for their health and well-being. Because women in general, and muxeres in particular, are considered gatekeepers of culture and tradition within their families, it is crucial that community psychologists ground their work in ethically and culturally appropriate frameworks that highlight the power of muxeres.


Subject(s)
Health Equity , Health Promotion , Hispanic or Latino , California , Community-Based Participatory Research , Emigrants and Immigrants , Female , Humans
12.
Rev. am. med. respir ; 20(1): 38-44, mar. 2020. tab
Article in Spanish | LILACS, BINACIS | ID: biblio-1178753

ABSTRACT

Introducción: En la actualidad, la tuberculosis es la novena causa de muerte y la primera por enfermedades infecciosas. Según estimaciones hay 10 millones de nuevos casos de enfermos por año en todo el mundo con más de un millón de muertes anuales. El objetivo del presente trabajo es caracterizar los pacientes diagnosticados de tuberculosis y tratados en el Hospital Transito Cáceres de Allende de la Ciudad de Córdoba. Material y métodos: Se realizó un estudio retrospectivo, observacional, descriptivo, de corte transversal. Resultados: Se incluyeron 69 pacientes, 57,9% fueron hombres. El grupo etario más afectado fue entre los 26 y 65 años. El 35% no tenía trabajo, y de los que si tenían, una gran parte no tenía estabilidad laboral. Ocho pacientes tenían algún grado de inmunocompromiso, presentando solo 1 infección por HIV. No hubo casos de pacientes con resistencia a drogas antituberculosas. Conclusiones: Las características epidemiológicas de nuestros pacientes son similares a otras publicaciones de la región. Conocerlas nos permite tomar decisiones de manejo diario, tanto en diagnóstico y tratamiento, como en la prevención y control de foco para limitar la propagación de la misma.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Tuberculosis , Public Health , Epidemiology
13.
Rev. am. med. respir ; 20(1): 45-51, mar. 2020. tab
Article in English | LILACS, BINACIS | ID: biblio-1178756

ABSTRACT

Introduction: At present, tuberculosis is the ninth cause of death, the first from infectious diseases. According to some estimates, there are 10 million new cases of ill people with tuberculosis per year throughout the world, with more than one million annual deaths. The objective of this study was to characterize patients diagnosed with tuberculosis who were treated in the Hospital Transito Cáceres de Allende of the city of Córdoba. Materials and Methods: We conducted a retrospective, observational, descriptive, cross-sectional study. Results: 57.9% of the 69 patients included in the study were male. The most affected age group was between 26 and 65 years. 35% did not have a job, and a large part of those who were employed did not have job stability. Eight patients were partially immunocompromised and there was only 1 case of HIV infection. There were no cases of antituberculous drug-resistant patients. Conclusions: The epidemiological characteristics of our patients are similar to other publications of the area. Knowing about them allows us to make decisions regarding daily management, both in terms of diagnosis and treatment, and also prevention and outbreakcontrol, in order to limit disease propagation.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Tuberculosis , Public Health , Epidemiology
14.
Am J Community Psychol ; 62(3-4): 294-305, 2018 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30466194

ABSTRACT

A decolonizing standpoint in community psychology is discussed in relation to the Family Portrait Assignment-a pedagogical tool developed and implemented to facilitate white students' decolonial thinking. The Family Portrait Assignment contributes to the limited of decolonial pedagogical tools in community psychology. Through a critical discourse analysis of student's essays, I discuss how decolonial thinking, including a critical sociohistorical examination of colonialism, racism and whiteness, was facilitated. Decoloniality as the disruption of white innocence, an ideological construct embedded within systems of power that sustain structures of whiteness, guides the analysis of student's essays. The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate how the Family Portrait Assignment facilitated white student's decolonial thinking, specifically their process of engaging with and disrupting white innocence. A discussion of decoloniality in community psychology pedagogy, theory, research and action concludes this paper.


Subject(s)
Colonialism , Family , Psychology, Social , White People/psychology , Humans , Racism/prevention & control , Teaching
15.
Am J Community Psychol ; 62(1-2): 221-232, 2018 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30216460

ABSTRACT

The focus of this paper is to demonstrate how embodied subjectivities shape research experiences. Through an autoethnography of my involvement in a Youth Participatory Action Research (YPAR) after-school program with low-income and working-class youth of Color from predominantly Latinx communities I examined my embodied subjectivities, via an ethical reflective practice, as these surfaced in the research context. Autoethnography is presented as a tool to facilitate an ethical reflective practice that aligns with heart-centered work. Drawing from an epistemology of a theory in the flesh (Anzaldúa & Moraga, 1981), embodied subjectivities are defined by the lived experiences felt and expressed through the body, identities, and positionalities of the researcher. The article concludes with implications for the development of community psychology competencies that attend to the researcher's embodied subjectivities.


Subject(s)
Anthropology, Cultural/ethics , Community-Based Participatory Research/ethics , Psychology, Social/ethics , Adolescent , Anthropology, Cultural/methods , Community-Based Participatory Research/methods , Humans , Psychology, Social/methods , Schools
16.
Am J Community Psychol ; 62(1-2): 75-86, 2018 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29968915

ABSTRACT

We examine the civic engagement processes and practices among Viva Live Oak! photovoice project participants residing in an unincorporated area with limited local democratic representation and institutional resources. Eight individual interviews and thirty-one group photovoice meetings were conducted, audio recorded, transcribed, and analyzed. We describe how social structures of unincorporation shaped community life, and how this unique context informed participants' civic engagement. We argue for a conceptualization of civic engagement that centers a social connection model of community responsibility, to make legible the social, relational, and civic actions of unincorporated area residents.


Subject(s)
Democracy , Social Participation/psychology , Social Responsibility , Adult , Female , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Local Government , Male , Middle Aged , Social Identification , Young Adult
17.
New Dir Stud Leadersh ; 2015(148): 87-99, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26895171

ABSTRACT

This chapter details the ways youth community organizing strategies can inform leadership educators' approaches to engaging marginalized youth in leadership development for social change.


Subject(s)
Adolescent Development , Community-Institutional Relations , Leadership , Social Change , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Humans , Young Adult
18.
Am J Community Psychol ; 53(1-2): 122-33, 2014 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24452528

ABSTRACT

To obtain a better understanding of how people living in an unincorporated region define their neighborhood, a long-term photovoice project was conducted. Thirty-one photovoice sessions and eight structured interviews were coded and analyzed to assess participants' neighborhood definitions. Participant's difficulties in identifying the geographic, physical and demographic characteristics of their neighborhood led them to use social interactions, place-mediated values, and civic engagement to define neighborhood.


Subject(s)
Cultural Diversity , Residence Characteristics , Social Participation , Adult , California , Child , Female , Geography , Humans , Income , Interpersonal Relations , Male , Middle Aged , Object Attachment , Qualitative Research , Social Values , Young Adult
19.
Ars pharm ; 54(4): 9-15[4], oct.-dic. 2013. ilus, tab
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-118688

ABSTRACT

Objetivo: evaluar la actividad antimicrobiana y la toxicidad de extractos obtenidos de la especie vegetal Mitracarpus megapotamicus. Material y Métodos: se determinó la concentración inhibitoria mínima mediante el método de dilución en agar del extracto metanólico. Se utilizó la técnica de difusión en agar para comprobar la persistencia de la actividad antimicrobiana en extracciones acetónicas y clorofórmicas. Los ensayos de toxicidad aguda y subaguda se llevaron a cabo en ratones utilizando una dosis única de 5.000 mg/kg y una dosis diaria durante 14 días de 1.250 mg/kg de extracto hidroalcohólico, respectivamente. Resultados: La concentración inhibitoria mínima del extracto metanólico fue de 0,48 mg/ml para Streptococcus equi, Proteus mirabilis, Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus epidermidis y de 0,96 mg/ml para Escherichia coli. La actividad antimicrobiana se manifestó también en las fracciones extractadas con acetona y cloroformo, frente a Staphylococcus aureus. El extracto hidroalcohólico no produjo cambios funcionales ni alteraciones histopatológicas en estudios de toxicidad aguda y subaguda en ratones. Conclusión: Los resultados obtenidos permitirán proyectar estudios de identificación de compuestos y establecer futuros protocolos para determinar la eficacia en modelos in vivo (AU)


Aim: To evaluate the antimicrobial activity and toxicity of extracts obtained from the plant species Mitracarpus megapotamicus. Material and Methods: The minimum inhibitory concentration by agar dilution method of the methanolic extract was determined. The agar diffusion method to check the persistence of antimicrobial activity in chloroform and acetone extractions were used. Acute and subacute toxicity assays in mice were carried out using a single dose of 5,000 mg / kg and a daily dose for 14 days of 1,250 mg / kg of hydroalcoholic extract, respectively. Results: The minimum inhibitory concentration of the methanol extract was 0.48 mg / ml for Streptococcus equi, Proteus mirabilis, Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus epidermidis and 0.96 mg / ml for Escherichia coli. Antimicrobial activity was also expressed in fractions excerpted with acetone and chloroform, against Staphylococcus aureus. The hydroalcoholic extract produced neither functional changes nor histopathological alterations in studies of acute and subacute toxicity in mice. Conclusion: The results obtained will allow to design compound identification studies and establish future protocols to determine effectiveness in models in vivo (AU)


Subject(s)
Animals , Rats , Anti-Infective Agents/analysis , Plant Extracts/analysis , Infections/drug therapy , Toxicity Tests , Rubiaceae , Disease Models, Animal
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