3236.0: Monday, November 13, 2000 - 7:12 PM

Abstract #15593

Community Outreach Specialists: An integral component of a successful community-based natural helper program

Linda Mayne, PhD1, Eva B. Hill, BSW2, Lucille Bazemore, MEd3, Eugenia Eng, DrPH4, and Jo Anne L. Earp, ScD4. (1) Leo Jenkins Cancer Center, East Carolina University, P.O. Box 8168, Room 201, Greenville, NC 27835-8168, (252) 816-3581, maynel@mail.ecu.edu, (2) North Carolina Breast Cancer Screening Program, Martin-Tyrrell-Washington Health District, P.O. Box 546, Williamston, NC 27892, (3) North Carolina Breast Cancer Screening Program, Bertie County Rural Health Association, Inc, P.O. Box 628, Windsor, NC 27983, (4) Department of Health Behavior and Health Education, School of Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, CB# 7400, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7400

The North Carolina Breast Cancer Screening Program (NC-BCSP) is a community-based intervention to increase mammography use by African American women in eastern North Carolina. The primary strategy is a network of 140 volunteer lay health advisors (LHAs) who promote mammography across 5 rural counties. In each county, LHA activities are coordinated by a paid, full-time Community Outreach Specialist (COS). COSs, like LHAs, are older, African American women with local reputations for being "natural helpers."

The COSs, as conceptualized by NC-BCSP, are unique. They are "boundary spanners" who link traditionally under-served communities with resources administered by local health agencies. Each COS is paid through a local health department or rural health center where she maintains an office. Her responsibilities, however, are defined largely by NC-BCSP. This arrangement has enabled the COSs to retain their focus over the past 6 years on organizing LHAs to promote mammograms, despite being situated within agencies that have limited resources and multiple, often competing, agendas.

Two factors appear to be instrumental to NC-BCSP's success in mobilizing African American women in these rural counties to initiate mammography: 1) positioning COSs in established agencies that are part of the local infrastructure for health care delivery; and 2) defining the COSs' role so that they are authorized to use innovative outreach strategies, departing, when necessary, from health agency procedures and norms. The COS role is integral, both in implementing LHA interventions and in generating community investment in outreach goals.

Learning Objectives:

  1. Describe the structure of an effective lay health advisor outreach program.
  2. Describe the role of Community Outreach Specialists (COSs) in linking low-income, rural African American women with the formal health care system.
  3. Discuss how the COS role contributes to the effectiveness of a community-based intervention and its implications for program institutionalization.

Keywords: Community-Based Health Promotion, Breast Feeding

Presenting author's disclosure statement:
Organization/institution whose products or services will be discussed: None
I do not have any significant financial interest/arrangement or affiliation with any organization/institution whose products or services are being discussed in this session.

The 128th Annual Meeting of APHA