1 / 22

Supported by NIMHD Grant R24MD004902

Capacity Building Across the Lifespan: Community-Based Participatory Research with Two Generations of Cambodian American Women. Supported by NIMHD Grant R24MD004902

lamont
Télécharger la présentation

Supported by NIMHD Grant R24MD004902

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Capacity Building Across the Lifespan: Community-Based Participatory Research with Two Generations of Cambodian American Women • Supported by NIMHD Grant R24MD004902 • The following personal financial relationships with commercial interests relevant to this presentation existed during the past 12 months: No relationships to disclose.

  2. Co-Authors Juliet P. Lee (1), Talaya Sin (1,2), Sean Kirkpatrick (3), Sotheavy Tan (3), Ann Rojas-Cheatham (3), Shadia Godoy (3), Roland Moore (1), Angelo Ercia(3), Mona Afary(4) • Prevention Research Center, Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, 1995 University Ave #450, Berkeley, CA • Cambodian Community Development, Inc., 624 Douglas Ave, Oakland, CA • Community Health for Asian Americans, 268 Grand Ave, Oakland, CA • Center for Empowering Refugees and Immigrants, 544 International Blvd, Suite #9, Oakland, CA

  3. Cambodian Women’s Group ThaveryHov SarouenIm PhannaraKhun Kong Lap Choun Norn Maria San Poly YatTep Monica Then

  4. Project Aims • Identify a priority health issue with leadership of Cambodian American women • Pilot test a community intervention with leadership of Cambodian American women • Build capacities of communities to engage in research for health improvement, and scientists to partner with communities

  5. Approach • Grassroots: Cambodian Women’s Group • Two generations • Identify and address root causes • Develop awareness of health in social context

  6. Cambodian Women’s Group

  7. Analyzed Issues • Trauma - the overarching issue • Problem Alcohol Use • Prescription Drug Misuse • Housing • Education • Employment • Domestic Violence • Social Isolation • Gambling • Sense of Unity • (Community Violence)

  8. Analyzed Need: Cambodian Community Center

  9. Pilot Intervention Components • Community Garden • Healthy, restful place to meet • Exercise • Reconnect with rural origins • Cambodian New Year Celebrations • Bridge factions within community • Intergenerational, alcohol-free gathering • Cambodian Cultural Exhibit • Bridge knowledge gap about trauma for youth • Bridge Cambodian and American contexts • Celebrate Cambodian identity

  10. Cambodian Community Gardens

  11. Two gardens established to date, third in process • 129 Oakland Cambodians participated during project period

  12. Cambodian New Year Celebrations

  13. Celebrations held in 2011, 2012 • Attended by approx. 500 people each year

  14. Surveyresults • many older adults are socially isolated

  15. Survey results • seeing other Cambodians was the best thing about the event

  16. Cultural exhibit: Rhythm of the Refugee: A Cambodian Journey of Healing

  17. Life stories of Oakland Cambodians, contextualized • Traumas of Khmer Rouge period • Legacies and new cultural forms in Oakland

  18. Survey results: Best thing about the exhibit: Pride in our culture

  19. Two generations: challenges • Language needs • Simultaneous translation and interpretation • Mixed educational experiences • Team facilitation • Non-verbal means of conducting analyses • Traumatized population • Aim to reduce conflict and tension in group • Additional support may be needed • Safe space • Confidentiality reminders

  20. Two generations: Benefits • Analyses grounded in lived experiences • Holistic view across generation divide • New insights about health • Individual and family wellbeing closely connected to community wellbeing • New ideas about how to improve health • Community center and component features • Engage youth with adults to bridge gaps • Innovations in research and program design • Complex interventions may synergistically address complex and interrelated health issues

  21. Acknowledgements • Funder: National Institutes on Minority Health and Health Disparities • Collaborative partners: Community Health for Asian Americans (CHAA), Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation (PIRE), Cambodian Community Development, Inc. (CCDI), Center for Empowering Refugees and Immigrants (CERI) • Community gardens hosts: Harbor House of Oakland and City of Oakland Parks and Recreation • New Year’s Celebrations co-organizers: CWG,CCDI, CERI, CHAA, PIRE, with Asian Community Mental Health Services (ACMHS), East Bay Asian Youth Center (EBAYC), UC Berkeley Cambodian Student Association, Peralta Hacienda Historical Park, & SFSU Asian American Studies Program • Exhibit co-curators: CWG, CCDI, CHAA, & Peralta Hacienda Historical Park • Photo credits: Roland S. Moore, Sean Kirkpatrick, KampheakVa, S. Nadia Hussain • Thanks to the Community Advisory Board members and the many volunteers and community members who contributed their creative ideas and energy to the project

  22. For more information: • Juliet P. Lee Prevention Research Center, Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, 1995 University Ave. #450,Berkeley CA 94704 jlee@prev.org; 510-883-5772 • Sean Kirkpatrick Community Health for Asian Americans, 268 Grand Avenue, Oakland, CA 94610 sean.kirkpatrick@chaaweb.org; 510-282-7550

More Related