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1.
Prog Community Health Partnersh ; 18(2): 287-293, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38946573

ABSTRACT

Drawing from collective experiences in our capacity building project: Health Equity Activation Research Team for Inclusion Health, we argue that while community-engaged partnerships tend to focus on understanding health inequities and developing solutions, they can be healing spaces for health professionals and researchers. Data were obtained from a 15-month participatory ethnography, including focus groups and interviews. Ethnographic notes and transcripts were coded and analyzed using both deductive and inductive coding. Practices of radical welcome, vulnerability, valuing the whole person, acknowledging how partnerships can cause harm, and centering lived experience expertise in knowledge creation processes were identified as key characteristics of healing spaces. Ultimately, health professionals and researchers work within the same social, political and economic contexts of populations with the worst health outcomes. Their own healing is critical for tackling larger systemic changes aimed at improving the well-being of communities harmed by legacies of exclusion.


Subject(s)
Community-Based Participatory Research , Humans , Community-Based Participatory Research/organization & administration , Research Personnel/organization & administration , Research Personnel/psychology , Focus Groups , Health Personnel/psychology , Health Personnel/organization & administration , Anthropology, Cultural , Capacity Building/organization & administration , Health Equity/organization & administration
2.
Health Promot Pract ; : 15248399231223744, 2024 Jan 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38293773

ABSTRACT

People experiencing addiction, houselessness, or who have a history of incarceration have worse health outcomes compared with the general population. This is due, in part, to practices and policies of historically White institutions that exclude the voices, perspectives, and contributions of communities of color in leadership, socio-economic development, and decision-making that matters for their wellbeing. Community-based participatory research (CBPR) approaches hold promise for addressing health inequities. However, full engagement of people harmed by systemic injustices in CBPR partnerships is challenging due to inequities in power and access to resources. We describe how an Allentown-based CBPR partnership-the Health Equity Activation Research Team of clinicians, researchers, and persons with histories of incarceration, addiction, and houselessness-uses the Radical Welcome Engagement Restoration Model (RWERM) to facilitate full engagement by all partners. Data were collected through participatory ethnography, focus groups, and individual interviews. Analyses were performed using deductive coding in a series of iterative meaning-making processes that involved all partners. Findings highlighted six defining phases of the radical welcome framework: (a) passionate invitation, (b) radical welcome, (c) authentic sense of belonging, (d) co-creation of roles, (e) prioritization of issues, and (f) individual and collective action. A guide to assessing progression across these phases, as well as a 32-item radical welcome instrument to help CBPR partners anticipate and overcome challenges to engagement are introduced and discussed.

3.
Vet Clin North Am Equine Pract ; 22(3): 683-92, 2006 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17129796

ABSTRACT

Conventional light microscopic evaluation of a seminal ejaculate does not fully avail potential indicators of functional impairment in spermatozoal organelles. The technique of critical quantitative evaluation of morphologic features of individual structural components of spermatozoa at a light microscopic level in conjunction with critical qualitative evaluation of spermatozoal organelles at an ultrastructural level, as described in this article, is a valuable clinical tool. Compared with a battery of sperm function assays used in human andrology clinics, this relatively less expensive and simple technique is an efficient functional and diagnostic tool.


Subject(s)
Fertility , Horse Diseases/pathology , Horses/anatomy & histology , Infertility, Male/veterinary , Spermatozoa/ultrastructure , Animals , Chromatin/ultrastructure , Horses/physiology , Infertility, Male/pathology , Male , Microscopy, Electron, Transmission/veterinary , Mitochondria/ultrastructure , Semen/cytology , Seminiferous Epithelium/ultrastructure , Sertoli Cells/ultrastructure , Sperm Agglutination/physiology , Spermatozoa/abnormalities , Tissue Fixation/methods , Tissue Fixation/veterinary
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