Online Program

331781
Strengths and challenges of community organizing and policy campaigns for health equity


Wednesday, November 4, 2015 : 1:10 p.m. - 1:30 p.m.

Sandra Villanueva, Ph.D., Psychology Applied Research Center, Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles, CA
Cheryl Grills, Ph.D., Psychology, Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles, CA
Andrew Subica, Ph.D., Psychology Applied Research Center, Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles, CA
Jason Douglas, Ph.D., Psychology Applied Research Center, Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles, CA
Ditra Edwards, The Praxis Project, Washington D.C., DC
Ethnic and racial health disparities have challenged public health practitioners for decades, with low-income communities continuing to suffer from poor health due to inequitable social conditions (food insecurity, poverty, crime, pollution) that prevent residents from making healthy choices. The Communities Creating Healthy Environments (CCHE) project was the first national initiative to fund community-based organizations (grantees) to use social justice-based community organizing practices to address the social conditions underlying ethnic and racial health disparities in communities of color. This presentation instructs attendees in the use of the CCHE Change Model: an evaluation framework for assessing the processes and outcomes of community organizing-based health promotion that served as a roadmap for evaluating the organizing strategies and tactics, policy campaigns, and policy outcomes of all 21 CCHE grantees. Attendees will learn how to use three lenses—Social Justice, Culture/Place, Organizational Capacity/Organizing Approach—to increase their understanding of how to ground health promotion policy campaigns in the needs and characteristics of the community. Next, attendees will discover how various community organizing strategies (e.g., growing community, leader, and ally base, reframing policy messages) impact the intermediate benchmarks/outcomes (e.g., challenging structural inequities in the environment, building community power) and final outcomes—policy wins impacting food and recreation access—of these campaigns. Upon completion of this presentation, attendees will be familiar with how integrating community organizing into health promotion may lead to sustainable reductions in childhood obesity and other health disparities within communities of color.

Learning Areas:

Advocacy for health and health education

Learning Objectives:
Identify common strengths and challenges to community organizing for health equity Describe the process by which strengths and challenges interact to promote or suppress policy achievements involving health equity.

Keyword(s): Community-Based Partnership & Collaboration, Vulnerable Populations

Presenting author's disclosure statement:

Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: I have been involved in designing evaluations, measurement strategies, and tools to assess community-based approaches to health promotion surrounding issues such as food and recreation access for over 10 years and have previously published peer-reviewed articles on this work.
Any relevant financial relationships? No

I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines, and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed in my presentation.