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Interdisciplinary Research Leaders

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health equity

Announcing the 2020 IRL Teams!

October 21, 2020 by Haley Cureton

Welcome Cohort Five Research Leaders!

These 15 teams of researchers and community leaders will spend the next three years (2020-2023) working together to explore critical issues in their home communities and apply findings in real time to create healthier and more equitable policies and places to live. 

Filed Under: Article Tagged With: community engaged research, community environment, culture of health, environmental justice, families and child health, fathers, health equity, Interdisciplinary Research Leaders, research leadership

Resilient and Brilliant, Working Hard to Overcome Family Trauma in the South Texas LGBTQ+ Community

October 20, 2020 by Haley Cureton

In 2017, researchers, advocates, and community members formed the Strengthening Colors of Pride team and set out to understand the lived experiences of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and other gender and sexual minority (LGBTQ+) people in the San Antonio Metro Area. Project leaders, with the help of a research team and community advisory board members, developed the largest survey of LGBTQ+ identified individuals ever conducted in South Texas. The survey provides important insight about the demographics of LGBTQ+ people in the area and their experiences with housing and homelessness, healthcare, employment, familial rejection and support, financial stability, resiliency, and much more.

The one thing that was clear is that the LGBTQ+ community is extremely resilient and community members often have strong social networks.

Filed Under: Article Tagged With: ACEs, community engaged research, culture of health, health equity, interdisciplinary research, Interdisciplinary Research Leaders, LGBTQ, Texas

Meet the Research Leaders: Isaias Hernandez & Luisa Blanco, PhD, MBA

October 19, 2020 by Haley Cureton

Isaias: I believe LA County is facing a crisis when it comes to the financial wellbeing of its residents. I would like to present the data to the Board of Supervisors in hopes that it will encourage them to invest in the necessary resources and tools that will help lift many low-income individuals out of poverty and into financial security. Financial health should be seen as a component to public health. 

Luisa: I want to do research that has a meaning, that leads to policy change. I want to be part of the LA community. It’s very important, if we want to change things, that we do community-based research. 

Filed Under: Article Tagged With: community engaged research, culture of health, financial coaching, health equity, interdisciplinary research, Interdisciplinary Research Leaders, IRL fellows, LA County

Meet the Research Leaders: Bruce Reilly, JD

September 11, 2020 by Haley Cureton

I’m Bruce Reilly. I’m the Deputy Director of Voice of the Experienced. I’m also at another organization called Voters Organized to Educate (VOTE). I come to the work that I do from growing up in foster homes, being homeless, going to prison for 12 years, getting out on parole, and then I moved to New Orleans to go to the one law school that admitted me. 

I was a former jailhouse lawyer, which is when you’re on the inside and everyone comes to you and says, “Hey, here is my case,” or, “I gotta write a letter to the judge.” All the different issues that people tangle with, they would come to the guy who can write the petition for you, do the research. I was a lawyer before I was a lawyer.

Filed Under: Article Tagged With: community engaged research, culture of health, Department of Corrections, health equity, Louisiana, Re-entry, research leadership, Voice of the Experienced

Meet the Research Leaders: Jane Chung-Do, DrPH, MPH

August 28, 2020 by Haley Cureton

The MALAMA Aquaponics Project actually started back in 2009. One of our team members, Auntie Ilima Ho-Lastimosa, is a community leader in Waimānalo and has been doing community aquaponics education for over 10 years now. She saw the need and the interest for the community to grow their own food. Colonization impacted Native rights that people have lost in Hawaii, which fragmented and disconnected Native Hawaiians from their own traditional food systems, and being able to grow their own food and having access to land. She saw this disconnect and how it contributed to high rates of obesity and cardiovascular diseases among Native Hawaiians. I got connected with Auntie Ilima through my graduate research assistantship. I just kind of followed her around, and I was one of her fans.

Filed Under: Article Tagged With: Aquaponics, community engaged research, culture of health, Hawaii, health equity, health research, interdisciplinary research, Interdisciplinary Research Leaders, MALAMA

Meet the Research Leaders: Carlton Turner

August 21, 2020 by Haley Cureton

I am the community partner in a project focusing on reimagining, both the health infrastructure and food infrastructure, in our small community of Utica, Mississippi. So far it has looked like the community building skills in collecting data in the form of story, learning how to do oral histories, learning how to do interviews, and really understanding how those pieces can aid us in reconstructing a rural community that basically has been decimated by disinvestment and deterioration over the last three decades. 

Filed Under: Article Tagged With: community building, community engaged research, Community partner, culture of health, health equity, Mississippi, Storytelling

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