Archive for November, 2011

Èxito! Grad Testimonial: Marina Daldalian

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Editor’s Note: This is the testimonial of a graduate of the 2011 Summer Institute of Èxito! Latino Cancer Research Leadership Training. Read more testimonials here or apply by March 1 for the 2012 Èxito! program.

Marina Daldalian
Kansas City, Kan.

Marina Daldelian

Growing up, Marina Daldalian’s mother, the daughter of a migrant worker, and her father, a native of Lebanon, taught her the importance of education and about caring for those with few resources.

As she volunteered locally and abroad for several years, a focus on health became Daldalian’s calling.

In Kansas City, Kan., Daldalian is a master’s of public health degree student at the University of Kansas Medical Center, where she also serves as a research assistant in the JUNTOS center for Advancing Latino Health in the Department of Preventative Medicine.

Marina heard about Éxito! Latino Cancer Research Leadership Training from a mentor, who encouraged her to apply.

She decided to apply to Éxito!—which aims to increase diversity in Latino health disparities and cancer research by encouraging Latino master’s-level students and master’s trained health professionals to pursue a doctoral degree and a career in research—because she felt it was a “unique opportunity to learn more about research, career choices and higher education from the perspectives of successful Latinos.”

“I was very interested in health disparities before attending Éxito!, but the program taught me how important it is that Latinos pursue careers in the field,” Daldalian said. “Éxito! gave me a deep appreciation for the unique point of view and contributions that can only really be made by people who innately understand Latino culture, and now I feel a deep interest and responsibility to pursue a career in health disparities.”

Dentist Educates Hispanics on Preventing AIDS, Diabetes & More

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Editor’s Note: This post is part of an ongoing series that will highlight the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s work in Latino communities across the country.

Gabriel Rincón

In the early days of his career—and also of the HIV/AIDS epidemic—Gabriel Rincón, DDS, spent part of his dental residency caring for AIDS patients in the final stages of their disease. During the late 1980s and early 1990s, there was not much information being circulated about HIV, particularly in New York City’s Mexican American community, for whom the topics of sex and gender roles were taboo.

“I saw people in my community getting infected with HIV/AIDS, yet there was nothing in Spanish about the disease or how to prevent it,” Rincón said.

So Rincón developed a culturally sensitive presentation to educate Mexican Americans and other Latinos about HIV, its signs and symptoms, how it is spread, and how it can be prevented. He bought an overhead projector and traveled to restaurants, factories, and churches to give his presentation. “I talked to anyone who would listen,” Rincón said. His efforts led him to launch Mixteca Organization, Inc., which provides health and education programs to thousands of Latino New Yorkers each year.

For his undaunted quest to educate and support Latino immigrants in need, Rincón has been named one of 10 recipients of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Community Health Leaders Award. The award honors exceptional men and women who have overcome significant obstacles to tackle some of the most challenging health and health care problems facing their communities.

After a year of making his presentation on HIV/AIDS, it became clear to Rincón that his community also was severely affected by heart disease and diabetes, so he started to educate about those issues as well. He found himself helping Latino immigrants get access to basic health care. Nearly a decade later, in 2000, someone suggested that he turn his work into a nonprofit organization.

Today, in addition to offering a broad range of health education programs, Rincón’s Mixteca provides literacy and computer classes, English language courses, and after-school programs. “A young man we worked with just graduated from the Rochester Institute of Technology. In order to be healthy, you have to be educated,” Rincón said.

Originally from Puebla, Mexico, Rincón was 17 years old when he came to the United States in 1972. “My family was very poor but I wanted to study, so I thought I could find a better life in the United States,” said Rincón, who found himself working as a dishwasher until immigration sent him back to Mexico. He became a dentist while in Mexico, learned English by reading Ian Fleming’s popular James Bond books, and then came back to the United States in 1984. “Sometimes things happen in life for a reason,” said Rincón, who had to repeat dental school in the United States before being allowed to practice here, and who continues to practice dentistry in Brooklyn.

Community Health Leaders National Program Director Janice Ford Griffin said that the selection committee honored Rincón for his compassion and commitment to tackling culturally sensitive health issues. “Dr. Rincón is incredibly committed to assuring access to quality health care, especially for Mexican Americans, in spite of the enormous impediments and barriers presented by language and a climate of fear and hostility they encounter on a daily basis. His collaborative leadership has provided a base for education, referral, and direct services that has influenced the lives of families that extend far beyond the Brooklyn neighborhood,” Griffin said.

Although based in Brooklyn, Mixteca serves people from all over New York City, including the Bronx, Manhattan, and Queens. “We no longer have to seek out people to help,” Rincón said. “We have proven ourselves to be a trusted community partner. Everything we do is confidential, so people come to us.” In 2010, Rincón, who also serves as a member of the board of trustees of Lutheran Medical Center, started to tackle another big taboo in his community—domestic violence.

Larry McReynolds, executive director of the Lutheran Family Health Centers in Brooklyn, said that Rincón’s dedication has resulted in measurable improvement in community health, especially in Brooklyn’s Sunset Park neighborhood, where Mixteca is based. “Gabriel Rincón’s passion for improving health outcomes for the immigrant population of Sunset Park is a tribute to his dedication and leadership at Mixteca,” McReynolds said. “In 2009 alone, Mixteca provided four community health fairs, 20 community health workshops, 305 referrals to free or affordable health care, 332 HIV rapid tests, and 4,000 health screenings. None of that would have been possible without Gabriel Rincón.”

RWJF has honored more than 190 Community Health Leaders since 1993. The work of the nine other 2011 recipients includes a project to help people with disabilities safely and confidently handle routine medical exams in Delaware; a transportation and support program for families with children battling cancer in San Diego; a community initiative to ensure access to medical care in the Kansas farm belt; a campaign for early detection and treatment of breast cancer for uninsured and underserved women in Miami; a nurse training program for disadvantaged Hawaiian students; a home health aide service for elderly Asian Americans in suburban Philadelphia; a rural community health outreach program in the Delta region of Arkansas; an anti-hunger and nutrition program in New Brunswick, N.J.; and health care for the working poor in Altoona, Pa.

For details, visit www.communityhealthleaders.org.

Èxito! Grad Testimonial: Christina Munoz-Masso

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Editor’s Note: This is the testimonial of a graduate of the 2011 Summer Institute of Èxito! Latino Cancer Research Leadership Training. Read more testimonials here or apply by March 1 for the 2012 Èxito! program.

Christina Munoz-Masso
Puerto Rico

Christina Munoz Masso

Christina Munoz-Masso works hard to improve the health of boricuas—Puerto Ricans—and Latinos in general.

She is an epidemiologist at the University of Puerto Rico Comprehensive Cancer Center. She coordinates a study investigating DNA methylation in leukemia patients and collaborates on a population-based study on cervical cancer.

After Munoz-Masso graduated from college with a bachelor’s degree in biology, she applied for a master’s degree in epidemiology because it allowed her to combine science with helping people. To add an additional component to her schooling, she also pursued medical technology. She combined her knowledge in epidemiology with her new knowledge in laboratory methods and began her work in cancer-related research.

She joined Éxito! Latino Cancer Research Leadership Training—which aims to increase diversity in Latino health disparities and cancer research by encouraging Latino master’s-level students and master’s trained health professionals to pursue a doctoral degree and a career in research—to expand her cancer research knowledge and further her career.

Munoz-Masso was inspired to continue developing her cancer research career after hearing the personal stories and career paths of current cancer and health disparity researchers.

“As an epidemiologist, there are many areas within cancer research that interest me, but there is one more step I must take to be able to execute my own ideas—a doctoral degree,” she said. “Éxito! gave me the essential tools to take this next step in the near future.”

PSAs: Childhood Obesity Prevention among Latinos, Minorities

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The Ad Council and several governmental agencies partnered to create a culturally appropriate series of public service announcements (PSAs) to address childhood obesity among communities of color, Forbes reports.

The campaign’s Latino-focused PSA encourages parents to help their kids achieve a healthy body weight.

LIVESTRONG iPad App Helps People Manage, Track Cancer Experience

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LIVESTRONG recently announced the creation of an iPad App to help people manage their cancer experience.

The app, called LIVESTRONG Cancer Guide App + Tracker, lets you store and access information relevant to your treatment and survivorship electronically to your iPad. The tracker helps you track your daily symptoms, provides space for you to journal your experience, keep track of important records and contact information. The app’s Cancer Guide will help you know what to expect, learn what questions to ask, and connect to resources.

Read more about the app or watch a video here or below:

Èxito! Grad Testimonial: Donaji Stelzig

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Editor’s Note: This is the testimonial of a graduate of the 2011 Summer Institute of Èxito! Latino Cancer Research Leadership Training. Read more testimonials here or apply by March 1 for the 2012 Èxito! program.

Donaji Stelzig
Houston, Texas

Donaji Stelzig

Contributing in several research studies at the University of Texas School of Public Health’s Center for Health Promotion and Prevention Research in Houston, Mexico native Donaji Stelzig developed a desire to work with minority populations, promote opportunities, and foster team work with diverse background community members.

Since then, she’s become a full-time senior health education specialist at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center’s Division of Public Affairs, carrying out community outreach.

Stelzig is part of many organizations and is dedicated to improving Latino health and cancer control.

But her dedication to public health and underserved populations does not stop there, as she continues to obtain certifications and continuing education to aid in the care of all individuals.

Stelzig felt Éxito! Latino Cancer Research Leadership Training—which aims to increase diversity in Latino health disparities and cancer research by encouraging Latino master’s-level students and master’s trained health professionals to pursue a doctoral degree and a career in research—would be the perfect next step of her career path.

“Attending Éxito! was an incredible, very beneficial workshop,” she said. “Despite the intense amount of information and continuous hours in a very short time, I felt empowered to execute the next steps that will lead me to pursue a doctoral degree.”

Research Synthesis: Minorities Reside in Communities that Lack Physical Activity Options

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Research Synthesis

A new research synthesis by Active Living Research examines studies indicating that racial/ethnic minorities and lower-income people live in communities that are not as supportive of physical activity.

The synthesis summarizes research on racial/ethnic and economic disparities in obesity and physical activity rates among children, and highlights policy recommendations for decision-makers who can support physical activity among people in lower-income communities and communities of color.

Key research results suggest that racial/ethnic minorities and lower-income people:

  • are more likely to live in neighborhoods with fewer and lower-quality sidewalks, and fewer aesthetic amenities like scenery that make walking safer, easier and more appealing;
  • tend to live in neighborhoods with fewer parks and other recreation resources; and
  • experience more danger from crime and traffic than others do, and face more barriers from neighborhood physical and social disorder.

View the synthesis here.

Growing Number of Hispanics Affected By Diabetes

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Diabetes, a disease that is expected to affect 9.9% of the world’s adult by 2030, takes an especially heavy toll on U.S. Hispanics, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the Huffington Post reports.

Hispanics have double the risk of developing diabetes compared with non-Hispanic whites, according to a CDC a study on diabetes prevalence among Hispanics in California, Florida, Illinois, New York/New Jersey, Texas, and Puerto Rico from 1998 to 2002.

The CDC study also found that:

  • Hispanics tend to develop diabetes at a younger age
  • The prevalence of diabetes decreased with higher education levels; among Hispanics with less than a high school education, 11.8% had diabetes, compared to 7% of college graduates

Read the full news report.

Watch an interesting video on one Latino teen’s experience with diabetes here or below:

Apply for Éxito! Latino Cancer Research Training Institute and Internships

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The 2012 Éxito! Latino Cancer Research Leadership Training application is now available for download!

Éxito! conducts a five-day summer institute and offers internships to encourage minority master’s-level students and master’s trained health professionals to pursue a doctoral degree and a career in Latino cancer health disparities research. The 2012 summer institute is June 7-12, 2012, in San Antonio, Texas.

Éxito! participants also are eligible to receive one of six paid internships (see details in application).

How exactly can the program benefit you?

Mariana Arevalo

Ask Mariana Arevalo, a graduate of the 2011 Éxito! program:

Éxito! was a boost of confidence and a tremendous encouragement for me to apply to doctoral programs. Now more than ever, I’m confident that Latino researchers are not only needed in our field, but we can make a difference in improving the health of Latinos in the U.S.,” Arevalo said. “Éxito! gave me leverage, resources, and lots of moral support to continue in my path to a doctoral program.”

Éxito! is funded by the National Cancer Institute and led by the Institute for Health Promotion Research at The UT Health Science Center at San Antonio, the team behind SaludToday.

Visit our website to learn more, read more testimonials and download the application.

The application is due March 1, 2012.

Online Hispanics Have a Hard Time Finding Health Info In Spanish

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How do Hispanics use the Internet to get informed on health issues?

A MediaPost Blog called Engage:Hispanics sought to answer this question and found that, despite a strong demand for health content online among Hispanics, there is very little of it available in Spanish:

According to comScore, Hispanic usage of health care websites is growing twice as fast as the general market. In September 2011, a total of 17.2 million Hispanics visited a health-related website; this represents 52% of all online Hispanics and an annual growth rate of 31%.

Compare this to the general market, where 66% of online users visited a health site in September 2010, up 15% from the previous year. The fact that most Hispanics are young helps explain why they are less likely than the general market to visit health sites, but language preference and the relative lack of Spanish language health information also seem to play a roll.

In the past 12 months, usage of health websites skyrocketed among the bilingual and Spanish-preferring online Hispanics. As a result, more than half of all online Hispanics visits a health site each month.

The blog entry indicates that there is a “clear demand for Spanish language health information online and relatively few companies providing it. Providing online Spanish health content would not only meet this demand, but it would also help Hispanics get healthy.”

Read more here.

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