Showing posts with label Community Collaboration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Community Collaboration. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Vote on Rural Lens photo contest


Voting for this year's Rural Lens photo contest continues this week for NRHA Facebook fans by clicking “like” on your favorite photos from the contest’s landscape category.
 
The community category winner is: <http://NRHA.informz.net/z/cjUucD9taT0zNzU0Mjk1JnA9MSZ1PTEwMDk5OTk0MjUmbGk9MjA4NzU4MzU/index.html> “Little town of Blue Grass, Virginia” by Doug Puffenbarger

The photo will move on to the grand prize round and be published in Rural Roads magazine.
 
Voting for a new category will begin each week ending with the grand prize iPad winner decided after NRHA’s Rural Health Policy Institute.

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

National Rural Health Day

We hope that you enjoyed a nice, relaxing long weekend!  With National Rural Health Day now just 37 days away, we used the time to recharge our engines and set our sights on making this year’s celebration the best ever!

For example, we continue to put the final logistical touches on this year’s slate of National Rural Health Day webinars, including our popular “Rural Health 101” featuring a panel of five current/past NOSORH board members.  Another webinar will address population-based health and health promotion in rural communities, while another being considered will explore the impact of the Affordable Care Act in rural America.  We will also be hosting at least two webinars featuring several of our National Rural Health Day webinars, as well as live and recorded feeds of our National Rural Health Day Press Conference/Celebration at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. – at which several U.S. Cabinet and senior administration officials tentatively slated to appear (we’ll share their names closer to the date).

We’ve also added a few more Community Success Stories to the National Rural Health Day website!  We’d love to share your stories as well – our goal is to have at least one story from every state – so please send your stories along if you haven’t already done so!  Need some suggestions?  Then check out the Community Success Story “Tip Sheet” we’ve posted in the Resources section of the website for some ideas. And speaking of resources, we’ve added two more “letter to legislator” templates to our Resources section – one designed specifically for EMS providers and another designed for Rural Health Clinics.  Please Contact Us if there are additional resources we might be able to provide to help you spread the word and “Celebrate the Power of Rural.”


Thanks for everything you do to address the healthcare needs of America’s 59.5 million citizens – we are proud to partner with you in this effort!  As always, please feel free to Contact Us or email me directly if you have any questions and/or if we can be of further assistance.

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Health Insurance Marketplace: Open Enrollment Begins October 1

Starting October 1, 2013, you can enroll in health coverage through the 
Health Insurance Marketplace. 

The Marketplace allows you to compare your options and find the one that best fits your 
needs and budget. Coverage goes into effect as early as January 1, 2014.

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Choose Virginia




Don't Miss Out on Virginia's Family Medicine Day!



When: October 12, 2013

Where: Crowne Plaza Hotel - Richmond Downtown, Richmond, Virginia

Who: You are cordially invited to participate in CHOOSE VIRGINIA on Saturday, October 12, 2013. Join medical students, NP students and PA students for the opportunity to participate in a series of comprehensive clinical and procedural hands-on workshops provided by Virginia Family Medicine Residency Program Faculty. This is a valuable opportunity to network with other students along with family medicine residents and faculty from Virginia's Family Medicine Residency Programs.

Additional meeting information, an agenda and on-line registration information will be sent to you via e-mail in late summer. Please also note that complimentary sleeping rooms will be available on a limited first come first serve basis for out of town students.

Don't Miss Out on this Outstanding Opportunity! For more information, please call 1-800-THE-VAFP.

Dr. Wendy Welch Finalist for 2014 APHA’s Fellowship in Government →

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Federal Office of Minority Health Resource Center seeks volunteers to provide technical and capacity-building assistance

Please see below for an opportunity with the federal Office of Minority Health Resource Center (also posted at http://1.usa.gov/WVbO5h ). Note they are currently looking to increase the number of people in their database who have expertise in cultural competency and research and data analysis. As currently described, these are volunteer positions, but we have inquired about the possibility of receiving compensation for one's time and expertise.

The Resource Persons Network is a group of professionals who volunteer their services in support of the OMHRC's mission to improve the health status of racial and ethnic minority groups in the United States. The primary goal of the RPN is to provide technical and capacity-building assistance to community-based organizations and institutions on behalf of the OMHRC for the purpose of assisting local efforts to improve minority health.
Ask for Technical or Capacity-Building Assistance
Members of the RPN are a critical component of the OMHRC outreach effort to provide technical and capacity-building assistance to community-based organizations and institutions serving minority populations.
  
Typical activities include:
  • Reviewing grant proposals 
  • Speaking at conferences and workshops 
  • Serving as advisor to committees and workgroups 
  • Assisting with program/organizational development 
  • Offering guidance on preparing reports and speeches 

RPN members assist OMH with a variety of minority health issues. For example, RPN members with expertise in HIV/AIDS are helping OMH with the HHS Minority HIV/AIDS Initiative, aimed at reducing the impact of HIV/AIDS on racial and ethnic minorities. We are currently looking to increase the number of RPN members that have expertise in cultural competency and research and data analysis.
If you are seeking technical assistance and would like to be linked with one of our RPN members, call the OMHRC at (800) 444-6472 or email at rpninfo@minorityhealth.hhs.gov . Ask our Information Specialists to conduct an RPN database search for a health professional with expertise in the area(s) of need.

Become a Member
The OMHRC welcomes applications from multidisciplinary health professionals who are interested in joining the Resource Persons Network. RPN members have expertise in a variety of fields, including cancer, research, funding, adolescent health and aging issues.

Applicants should have proven experience in minority health, working with community-based organizations and public health institutions on program development, organizational development, grant management, or specific health issues. Expertise should be related to one or multiple minority groups. All applicants must have a minimum of 5 years of experience working with minority health issues.
Interested professionals should call our toll-free number at 1-800-444-6472 to obtain an RPN application; or Click http://1.usa.gov/Wqozpa  to complete the application online.

If you choose to print and mail your application, completed applications should be returned to:
OMHRC
RPN Program Manager
P.O. Box 37337
Washington, D.C. 20013

You can email your completed application to RPN Program Manager at rpn@minorityhealth.hhs.gov

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Health Equity Events


  • Community-Campus Partnerships for Health: Forum. 2nd National Community Partner Forum on Community-Engaged Health Disparities Research. December 5-7, 2012 in Washington, DC. Learn More
  • Community-Campus Partnerships for Health: Knowledge for Equity Conference, National Conference on Using Data to Promote Health Equity and Address Disparities. November 13, 2012 8:00 am - November 14, 2012 5:00 pm in Silver Spring, MD. Learn More 
  • The Maryland Institute for Applied Environmental Health/Community Engagement, Environmental Justice and Health (CEEJH): First Annual Symposium. Environmental Justice And Environmental Health Disparities In Maryland And DC. December 1, 2012, 9:00 am - 4:00 pm at the University of Maryland, College Park, MD. Learn More 
Community Oriented Correctional Health Services (COCHS): Webcast. Addressing Health Disparities for Minority Populations in Jails. 8:30 am EST on Thursday, December 6, 2012. Learn More

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Epilepsy Awareness Day


Educational Opportunity for persons and families living with epilepsy. 
        
Continental breakfast and lunch provided. 
Help with transportation and childcare available.

Sponsor:   Epilepsy Foundation of Virginia-Central Virginia Chapter
Date: 11/10/2012
Venue: Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden
Location: 1800 Lakeside Avenue, Richmond, VA
Event time: 9 a.m.-3p.m.
Phone:  (804)751-1505

Directions/Parking: Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden is off Interstate 95 and is convenient to Interstates 64 and 295. The garden sits at the corner of Lakeside and Hilliard Road. If you need help with directions, please call (804) 262-9887 ext. 300 Parking is free.

Contact:          Kiki Larkin (804) 827-1817

Friday, September 21, 2012

HOWARD UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF MEDICINE IS HOSTING A JOB FAI


Howard University College of Medicine is Hosting a Job Fair with National Health Service Corps Sites on October 11, 2012

In support of Corps Community Day, Howard University College of Medicine will be hosting a job fair with NHSC sites on October 11, 2012, from 4:00 pm - 7:00 pm on the main campus at the Numa P. Adams Building in Washington, DC.

We are inviting you to participate in this special event, where NHSC-approved sites throughout the District of Columbia, Maryland and Virginia will be able to engage and recruit Howard University College of Medicine residents and students for job opportunities within their organizations.  It will also give Howard University College of Medicine residents and students the opportunity to learn about NHSC programs available to them.
A large number of Howard University College of Medicine residents focus their training in primary care disciplines.

  • Site Name
  • City, County and State
  • Phone Number
  • Email Address
Confirmation of your interest to participate will be sent to you within 3 business days on receipt of your reservation.  A follow-up e-mail with logistical information will be sent within two weeks prior to the event. 
We look forward to your participation in the Howard University College of Medicine Job Fair!




We are offering this opportunity to you as a NHSC-approved site.  While we are unable to pay for travel expenses, we hope you are able to join us for this exciting event. This invitation is limited to NHSC sites located in the District of Columbia, Maryland and Virginia.  Space is limited and reservation closes on September 21, 2012.  Please register to participate via e-mail at CCDJobFairs@hrsa.gov.  Also, include the following contact information:

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies Coalition Launches Text4Baby Contest

In honor of Infant Mortality Awareness Month in September, Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies Coalition is announcing the text4baby 2012 Fall Sign-up Contest Text4baby  is a FREE, nationwide texting service delivering critical health and safety tips and resources to pregnant women and moms with babies under age one. During the contest period of Sept. 1 through 30, anyone who enrolls in text4baby will be entered to win a year's supply of baby products, courtesy of Johnson & Johnson, text4baby's founding sponsor. Moms can register online , via Facebook  or by texting BABY (or BEBE in Spanish) to 511-411. The Office of Minority Health is a partner of the text4baby campaign.

Hispanic Heritage Month: A Time to Celebrate and Raise Awareness

National Hispanic Heritage Month is commemorated each year between Sept. 15 and Oct. 15. It is a time for celebrating the many ways that Hispanic people and culture have enriched America. It is also a time to remember that our work to close the access to health gap and to improve the health status of Latinos is not done. Throughout the month, the Office of Minority Health will share information and resources designed to empower, educate and inform. Check out the website and follow OMH onTwitter in English and now in Spanish to get the latest information.

Resources:
White House releases new report to highlight the impact of the President's agenda on the Hispanic community, An America Built to Last: President Obama's Agenda and the Hispanic Community [PDF | 2.9MB].Available now in Spanish [PDF | 2.6MB].

  • Learn more about the White House report in this blog post from Director Cecilia Muñoz.
  • Monday, September 10, 2012

    Toolkit aims to reduce health disparities for racial, ethnic minorities.



    American Medical News (9/10) editorializes, "Despite the best efforts of health professionals, patient advocates and policymakers, the US still struggles to eliminate pervasive health disparities, especially for racial and ethnic minorities." Recognizing physicians' clinical and ethical responsibilities to their patients, the AMA has produced a Communication Climate Assessment Toolkit, "an online resource designed to help large group practices and hospitals evaluate their own efforts to treat diverse patient populations." The "toolkit, which has been assisting users since 2008, utilizes surveys of patients and staff to determine how well a clinic or office handles impediments to care that might be driven by patients' language, culture, literacy, illness or fear.”


    Thursday, September 6, 2012

    Public Health Law News


    The Network for Public Health Law is hosting the
    2012 Public Health Law Conference
    Practical Approaches to Critical Challenges

    October 10–12, 2012
    Loews Hotel in Atlanta, Georgia


    Early registration at a discounted rate is open through September 12, 2012.
    The conference will include several concurrent sessions focusing on different public health law topics, such as prevention and promotion at the community level, changes and challenges to public health legal infrastructure, challenges to public health authority, and others.
     More Information

    Tuesday, August 21, 2012

    The Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander Health Disparity & Health Equity Conference

    Register now: The Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander Health Disparity & Health Equity Conference

    From September 25 - 26, Los Angeles will host this year's Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander Health Disparity & Health Equity Conference, an opportunity for community leaders, health care professionals, researchers, educators, advocates and policymakers to come together to focus on innovative concepts, methods and research findings on health disparities that impact the Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander community. Attendees will have the chance to discuss the significance and impact of robust health and health care data for evaluating the status of understudied and underserved populations. A summary of key findings from the Pacific Islander Health Study, a representative survey on the health and health care utilization of Pacific Islander adults and adolescents, will also be available.

    Key speakers will include Dr. Howard K. Koh, Assistant Secretary for Health for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Dr. J. Nadine Gracia, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Minority Health (Acting), and Dr. David R. Williams, the Florence Sprague Norman & Laura Smart Norman Professor of Public Health and Professor of African and African American Studies of Sociology at Harvard University.
    Registration is available online . Book by Friday, August 31 to receive the discounted rate at the conference hotel . Deadline to submit poster abstracts is August 20.

    Wednesday, July 25, 2012

    Office of Minority Health Resource Center Pacific Awards

    Several grants are available to fund capacity building in the United States Associated Pacific Islands. These grants will allow community-based organizations, health departments and health ministries to expand their capacity to accomplish work around the topics of HIV/AIDS, STDs and Tuberculosis. The deadline to apply is July 31, 2012 at 5 p.m. (PST). Learn More



    Top 10 Translation Myths


    Clearing up the top 10 myths about translation. Translation has an impact on virtually every aspect of society, politics, and economics, but how much of what you know about translation is really true? You might be surprised to learn that translation is a highly diverse and complex market -- and one that's bigger than you might think. Here are ten of the most widely held myths about translation.


    To learn more click here.

    Strengthening our Response for Improved Refugee Mental Health




    “There is no health without mental health”
                    World Health Organization
    Monday, August 13, 2012

    Crowne Plaza Hampton Marina
    700 Settlers Landing Road
      Hampton, VA 23669
    (757) 727-9700

    9am to 4pm


    Although refugees benefit from protective factors such as spirituality and strong family support, they face enormous social and economic factors that expose them to higher levels of stress and disadvantages due to poverty, unemployment, lack of English proficiency, discrimination and the trauma associated with the immigrant experience.  As many states become more diverse, it challenges providers in the mental health system to adopt culturally and linguistically competent ways to prevent, diagnose, treat and address barriers to appropriate and timely mental health services.  DBHDS is hosting a free training for mental health providers, refugee staff, volunteers dedicated to exploring critical topics in refugee mental health.

    Who should attend this conference?

    This conference is ideal for all professionals providing service, formally or informally, to immigrants and refugees.  These professionals include health care practitioners, policymakers, settlement practitioners, volunteers, sponsorship agreement holders, educators, general practitioners, psychiatrists, multicultural liaison workers, translators, other human-related service providers, immigrants, refugees and consumers interested in the practice of Mental Health.

    Outcomes
    ·         To gain an understanding of the protective and risk factors associated with mental health issues that refugees experience while resettling in the US.
    ·         To understand the cultural nuances and their impact on stigma and mental health treatment for refugees in the US
    ·         How to build stronger working relationships culturally and linguistically to diverse individuals in mental health programs
    ·         Explore specific topics of concern for refugees in Virginia
    Understand the importance of and strategies for language services for refugee individuals

    This conference will be offered for FREE under the Office of Newcomer Services -Virginia Refugee Health Prevention Grant and hosted by the Virginia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services and Virginia Council of Churches, Refugee Resettlement Program.  Six contact hours will be provided by DBHDS.

    REGISTRATION DEADLINE IS AUGUST 6, 2012

    ·                     Welcome
    ·                     Overview of Issues in Refugee Mental Health- Saara Amri, LPC
    ·                     Break
    ·                     CAN
    ·                     Lunch
    ·                     Interviewing Clients Across Cultures - Lisa Fontes, Ph.D
    ·                     Break
    ·                     Breakout Sessions
    ·       Suicide Prevention among Refugees- Lisa Fontes, PhD.
    ·       Enhancing Language Services for Better Mental Health Outcomes- Vilma Seymour
    ·      Substance Abuse and Alcoholism among Refugees – Nhat Nguyen, MSW, QMHP
    ·      African refugees in the United States- Alimatu S Mustapha-Palmer,        NCC; LPC; SCAC; CCDVC

    About the Speakers
    Lisa Aronson Fontes, PhD, has dedicated two decades to making the mental health, social service, and criminal justice systems more responsive to culturally diverse people. She is the author of Interviewing Clients Across Cultures: A Practitioner’s Guide and Child Abuse and Culture: Working with Diverse Families. She has written numerous journal articles and chapters on cultural issues in child maltreatment and violence against women, cross-cultural research, and ethics. She teaches at the University of Massachusetts. She has worked as a family, individual, and group psychotherapist, and has conducted research in Santiago, Chile, and with Puerto Ricans, African Americans, and European Americans in the United States. Dr. Fontes is fluent in Spanish and Portuguese. She is a popular conference speaker and workshop facilitator. Dr. Fontes completed a Fulbright Foundation Grant in Buenos Aires, Argentina. As a volunteer, Dr. Fontes worked for three years with Somali refugees in Springfield, Massachusetts.  Visit her website at:  www.LisaFontes.com
    Saara Amri. LPC, A doctoral student in counseling at George Mason University, Saara Amri has been working with the refugee, immigrant, and torture survivor population for 11 years. Saara is a licensed bilingual mental health counselor and co-coordinator of the Program for Survivors of Torture and Severe Trauma, Multicultural Human Services at Northern Virginia Family Services in Falls Church, Virginia.

    Alimatu S Mustapha-Palmer, NCC; LPC; SCAC; CCDVC
    Alimatu S. M. Palmer is a licensed mental health and human services visionary professional who has consulted and worked in various capacities with a number of organizations for over 20years.  She was born in Freetown Sierra Leone and immigrated to the US as a student who left her country one day after her high school graduation.  She is currently the founder and executive Director of the Heritage Multicultural Programs and Services, Inc.   The agency is licensed and offers trainings, consultation and multiple programs and services, including cultural and diversity services, counseling and therapy, crisis intervention services, substance abuse/ addictions treatment services, grief and loss counseling, case management and other support services. Alima initially gained Certification in Substance Abuse Counselor in the State of Virginia, and a Registered Addiction Counselor in the District of Columbia respectively.  Mrs. Palmer then gained licensed and certifications in multiple states as follow: Licensed Professional Counselor in DC and Virginia respectively, Clinically Certified Domestic Violence Counselor, Clinically Certified Forensic Counselor, FEMA Certified Crisis/Disaster responder, Certified Social Work Practitioner. She is currently affiliated with several boards and organizations including, but not limited to APA, ACA, National Association for Multicultural Education (NAME), and the American College of crisis and stress debriefing.  In her quest to contribute to the improvement of humanity internationally, Mrs. Palmer and her team have undertaken several projects in her native country Sierra Leone, which is recovering from a very brutal ten years (blood Diamond) civil war.  Under the Bridges Gap Project in Sierra Leone the team is currently mainly focused on the newly launched (2011) Orphanage and Youth Empowerment project center in Freetown.  They also continue to collaborate and support multiple projects including the UCC feeding program, Faith Orphanage Project, Totkeleh water well project, the Youth Literacy Project. 

    Nhat Nguyen, MSW, QMHP, QMHCM
    Along with his family in the 1975, Mr. Nhat Nguyen arrived to USA as a Vietnam War refugee.  After transplanting to Virginia, he completed his undergraduate in Clinical Psychology from George Mason University.  He obtained his Masters in Social Work from the Virginia Commonwealth University.  He is currently working for the Fairfax County Community Services Board.  He has worked various settings serving adults and youths with serious mental health, intellectual and/or substance using disorders.  Currently he is working as clinical supervisor with Adult Outpatient Services providing substance use and mental health co-occurring disorder treatment. He has a personal and professional passion and commitment to enhance cultural and linguistic competence throughout Fairfax County CSB.  He has been involved with the IDS Diversity Committee and CSB Cultural/Linguistic Competence Steering Committee.  Currently he is the vice-chair of the statewide Cultural and Linguistic Competence Steering Committee, and chair of the Policy subcommittee.  Nhat is serving on the Northern Virginia Area Health Education Center’s Interpretation in Mental Health Setting workgroup.  Currently he is responsible for the development of the Peer Recovery Support Services for Outpatient Services. He has presented various topics and training of cultural and linguistic competence including the Stigma of Mental Health among Asian-Americans, Competent Care and Cross-Cultural Communication, Interpretation in Mental Health System of Care, Disparities across Systems of Care, and debriefings on promoting and improving services to culturally and linguistically diverse individuals.

    Vilma Seymour,
    Vilma Seymour, President of Multilingual and Cultural Solutions, holds a BA in Foreign Languages/Spanish and is an experienced healthcare conference presenter because of her personal interaction with immigrants, refugees and limited English proficient populations. Her extensive research and collaboration with clinicians and community leaders led to her ability to develop and implement the first sustainable language services program within the only Level I Trauma Center in Central Virginia and its satellite clinics.  As an advocate for underserved populations, Vilma is passionate about ensuring compliance of federal mandates pertaining to providing meaningful access of oral and written interpreter/translation services to limited English proficient populations.  She is a licensed medical interpreter and cultural competency trainer for the following national programs created by Cross Cultural Healthcare Program (CCHP), Seattle, WA and The Medical Interpreter Project, (MIP) Phoenix Children’s Hospital, Phoenix, AZ.

    For questions, contact Cecily Rodriguez at cecily.rodriguez@dbhds.virginia.gov or 804-786-5872.


               

    Wednesday, June 20, 2012

    The American Birthright Public Engagement Campaign is Taking Off!


    California Newsreel LogoAmerican Birthright (scheduled for release in Spring 2013) grows out of our work with UNNATURAL CAUSES: Is Inequality Making Us Sick?.

    It's often said a society can be measured by how well it attends to its children. So how is it that children in the U.S. have worse outcomes on most measures of health, education and well-being than other rich nations?  

    Join the American Birthright Public Engagement Campaign to reframe the debate about what we as a society can - and should - do so every infant in America can grow up in the rich and caring environments children need to thrive.

    Use the forthcoming American Birthright documentary and multimedia tools to support your organization's work and spark exploration, discussion and action because a nurturing child ecology is not only the right of every infant, it's the cornerstone for a healthier, stronger and more equitable future for our nation.

    Initial Campaign Partners:
    Visit www.americanbirthrightmedia.org to learn more and to join the Public Engagement Campaign.

    Tuesday, June 19, 2012

    Research Corner

    Ethnic Differences in Mental Illness and Mental Health Service Use among Black Fathers Doyle, O.; Joe, S.; Caldwell, C. H. American Journal of Public Health, v. 102, Supplement 2 (May), p. s222-s231, 2012.
    http://dx.doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2011.300446 Exit Disclaimer

    Gathering Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Data in Health IT: Better Information Can Help Close Disparities Gap / Baker, K. -- Washington, DC: Center for American Progress, 2012 / 4 p.
    http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2012/02/pdf/baker_lgbt_fact_sheet.html Exit Disclaimer

    Guidelines for Psychological Practice With Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Clients / American Psychological Association (APA). American Psychologist, v. 67, #1 (January), p. 10-42, 2012.
    http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/a0024659 Exit Disclaimer

    Hispanic Lesbians and Bisexual Women at Heightened Risk or Health Disparities / Kim, H. J.; Fredriksen-Goldsen, K. I. American Journal of Public Health, v. 102, #1 (January), p. e9-e15, 2012.
    http://dx.doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2011.300378 Exit Disclaimer

    The Influence of Implicit Bias on Treatment Recommendations for 4 Common Pediatric Conditions: Pain, Urinary Tract Infection, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, and Asthma / Sabin, J. A.; Greenwald, A. G. American Journal of Public Health, v. 102, #5 (May), p. 988-995, 2012.
    http://dx.doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2011.300621 Exit Disclaimer

    Medication Adherence among Latino and Non-latino White Children with Asthma / McQuaid, E. L.; Everhart, R. S.; Seifer, R.; Kopel, S. J.; Mitchell, D. K., et al. Pediatrics, v. 129, #6 (June), p. e1404-e1410, 2012.
    http://dx.doi.org/10.1542/peds.2011-1391 Exit Disclaimer

    Modeling the Impact of Social Discrimination and Financial Hardship on the Sexual Risk of HIV among Latino and Black men who Have Sex with Men / Ayala, G.; Bingham, T.; Kim, J.; Wheeler, D. P.; Millet, G. A. American Journal of Public Health, v. 102, Supplement 2 (May), p. s242-s249, 2012.
    http://dx.doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2011.300641 Exit Disclaimer

    The Relationship Between Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, Depression, and Lung Disorders in Northern Plains and Southwest American Indians / Sprague, D.; Bogart, A.; Manson, S.; Buchwald, D.; Goldberg, J. / American Indian Services Utilization, Psychiatric, Epidemiology, Risk and Protective Factors Project (AI-SUPERPFP). Ethnicity & Health, v. 15, #6 (December) p. 569-579, 2011.
    http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13557858.2010.500017 Exit Disclaimer

    Religious Climate and Health Risk Behaviors in Sexual Minority Youths: A Population-based Study / Hatzenbueler, M. L.; Pachankis, J. E.; Wolff, J. American Journal of Public Health, v. 102, #4 (April), p. 657-663, 2012.
    http://dx.doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2011.300517 Exit Disclaimer

    Taking It Like a Man: Masculine Role Norms as Moderators of the Racial Discrimination-Depressive Symptoms Association among African American Men / Hammond, W. P. American Journal of Public Health, v. 102, Supplement 2 (May), p. s232-s241, 2012.
    http://dx.doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2011.300485 Exit Disclaimer

    Trying to Breathe Easy / Moscou, S. Minority Nurse, (Spring), p. 14-16, 2012.
    http://www.minoritynurse.com/trying-breathe-easy Exit Disclaimer

    Young Native American Men and their Intention to use Family Planning Services / Rink, E.; Fourstar, K.; Elk, J. M.; Dick, R., et al. American Journal of Men's Health, v. 6, #4 (July), p. 324-330, 2012.
    http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1557988312439226 Exit Disclaimer