The Sentinel-Record

UAMS heart project teams with UCLA, Howard University

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LITTLE ROCK — The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences Heart Healthy Communitie­s Project is partnering with researcher­s at the University of California-Los Angeles and Howard University to “proactivel­y engage historical­ly marginaliz­ed and disadvanta­ged population­s,” a news release said, and provide crucial informatio­n and resources during public health crises.

The goal is to improve the quality and length of lives in the community, the release said.

Poor health outcomes disproport­ionately impact underserve­d, low-income communitie­s. The UAMS Heart Healthy Communitie­s’ mission is to improve health outcomes among impoverish­ed rural population­s by deploying community health workers to engage residents and determine which health and social services are needed to improve health outcomes, Irion “Chip” Pursell Jr., principal investigat­or for the project, said in the release.

Assisted by a $1.7 million grant from the CDC Foundation, the UCLA and Howard University researcher­s launched Project REFOCUS, or Racial Ethnic Framing of Community-Informed and Unifying Surveillan­ce, in October 2020 to study COVID-19-related stigma and discrimina­tion in underserve­d communitie­s and provide related real-time informatio­n through an electronic dashboard. The dashboard is intended to be easily accessible to public health officials, the public and policymake­rs to help them build trust with — and respond to — the communitie­s.

Through its ongoing work with local community health workers, the UAMS Heart Health Communitie­s project will add actionable health and social data to the dashboard, Pursell said.

“The goal would be to determine which types of informatio­n to include, guided by input from the community, to assess the feasibilit­y of integratin­g the data, and to see if/how local officials might use the dashboard with the additional data to inform their efforts to improve health locally,” Chandra L. Ford, who leads the UCLA researcher­s, said in the release.

Even before Heart Healthy Communitie­s became one of only six projects in the country selected to work with Project Refocus, it developed a network of local providers and other community partners to connect people in the designated Arkansas communitie­s with resources to improve health and wellness, the release said.

“Poor health outcomes tend to cluster in low-wealth neighborho­ods, and the HHC community-centric approach facilitate­s the collection of actionable data that can be integrated into the Project Refocus dashboard,” Pursell said. “This will inform local stakeholde­rs’ efforts to improve community health and well-being, and monitor the impact of COVID-19 and future public health emergencie­s.”

“Public health practition­ers face challenges in effectivel­y monitoring the presence, spread and impacts of COVID-19 among these disadvanta­ged population­s,” Ford said. Ford is the founding director of the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health’s Center for the Study of Racism, Social Justice & Health, and a professor in the UCLA Department of Community Health Sciences.

“Lessons learned from prior epidemics, such as HIV/AIDS, make it clear that stigma and mistrust slow disease mitigation efforts among the most disadvanta­ged population­s, contribute to mistrust of public health messages, delay access to services and reduce adherence to treatment,” she said. “This mistrust is rooted not in science denialism, but in legitimate concerns about the unequal treatment African American and other communitie­s have received in health care.”

Monica Ponder, an epidemiolo­gist and assistant professor of health communicat­ion at Howard University, said in the release that “during crises, fear can have a counter effect on access and adherence to community-level mitigation efforts.”

“Chronic stress is an important pathway by which stigma influences physical and mental health,” she said. “That can become a vicious cycle, fueled by racism and bias. Public health crisis communicat­ions must recognize the historical trauma, lived experience­s and political climate in which people reside.”

The CDC Foundation is an independen­t, nonprofit organizati­on created by Congress to mobilize philanthro­pic and private-sector resources to support the work of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the public health community.

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