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Katie Baker, MPH November 16 th A presentation to the China- ETSU Health Education Institute COMMUNITY COALITIONS AS A MODEL FOR COMMUNICATING HEALTH RISK
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Adolescent Health Sending messages that “work” What to Do When You Know “What Works” Developing a Classroom-Based Health Program for Adolescents The Importance of State and Local Coalitions Disseminating Your Health Program Other Partnerships to Consider The Advantages of Multi-Level Partnerships OVERVIEW
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Critical period of development First time for many high-risk behaviors Very few evidence- based programs addressing adolescent health Parents as educators Comprehensive, classroom-based programs ADOLESCENT HEALTH
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The “health message” is often ineffective. We need more salient messaging. For example, appearance damage Health programs with multiple sessions, multiple components. LESSONS IN ADOLESCENT HEALTH
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Local Pilot Program of a Classroom-Based Program for High School Students 4 Sessions Over 4 Weeks Module 1: Melanoma Module 2: UV Radiation Module 3: Sun Safety Module 4: Appearance- Enhancing Alternatives ADOLESCENT HEALTH PROGRAM: MULTIPLE SESSIONS
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Classroom Lectures presented via PowerPoint Newsletters (small media) Interactive and home- based activities Samples (i.e., sunscreen) DVD of a melanoma survivor’s story ADOLESCENT HEALTH PROGRAMS: MULTIPLE COMPONENTS
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Coalition is defined as ‘an action-oriented partnership with a focus on preventing or ameliorating a community problem.’ Community coalitions are a specific type of coalition defined as ‘a group of individuals representing diverse organizations, factions or constituencies within the community who agree to work together to achieve a common goal.’ ADOLESCENT HEALTH PROGRAM: DISSEMINATION THROUGH COALITION (Butterfoss & Kegler, 2002)
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Tennessee Cancer Coalition Timeline First committee formed in 2001 Planning grant from CDC awarded in 2003 First Comprehensive Cancer Control Plan published for 2005 – 2008 Second Plan published with ‘Burden of Cancer in TN’ document released in 2009 Currently funded by: CDC grant administered through the Tennessee Department of Health $250,000/year Donations ADOLESCENT HEALTH PROGRAM: DISSEMINATION THROUGH COALITION
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Mission Statement To measurably reduce the burden of cancer on the citizens of Tennessee by implementing health plans driven by: Data Science Capacity Outcomes TENNESSEE CANCER COALITION
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Data Melanoma incidence rates, an “epidemic” Epidemiological link between indoor tanning and melanoma. Indoor tanning is most popular among older adolescent females. Science Salient Messaging Capacity “Don’t reinvent the wheel” Outcomes Pre- and post-intervention assessments ADOLESCENT HEALTH PROGRAM MEETS COALITION GUIDELINES
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ADOLESCENT HEALTH PROGRAM: DISSEMINATION THROUGH COALITION
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Each region of the Tennessee Cancer Coalition is made up of counties. Northeast TN = 8 counties Each county has a Health Council. 8 counties = 8 Health Councils ADOLESCENT HEALTH PROGRAM DISSEMINATION THROUGH COALITION
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Attended 8 County Health Council meetings Invited Council members to join the Tennessee Cancer Coalition Offered to give each Health Council a copy of the ‘packaged’ adolescent health program Members responsible for dissemination to adolescents in their county. ADOLESCENT HEALTH PROGRAM DISSEMINATION THROUGH COALITION
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Potential Impact in our Region: 28 High Schools; 30,000+ adolescents Reductions in high-risk behaviors among adolescents Improvements in overall community health Policy changes ADOLESCENT HEALTH PROGRAM DISSEMINATION THROUGH COALITION
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Local and State Partners in Adolescent Health Program Dissemination ETSU Skin Cancer Prevention Lab 8 County Health Councils Health Occupations Students of America 360 Instructors; 12,000 students Tennessee Cancer Coalition American Cancer Society ADOLESCENT HEALTH PROGRAM DISSEMINATION THROUGH PARTNERSHIP
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From National Cancer Institute (NCI) Research to Reality Cyber Seminar, we know that multi-level partnerships have advantages. Access to program participants Legitimacy and trust Problem and solution identification Program development and dissemination ADOLESCENT HEALTH PROGRAM DISSEMINATION THROUGH PARTNERSHIP
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More efficient use of (limited) resources Larger community health impact Networking, continuing education Engaging and empowering members of the community LESSONS IN COALITION WORK
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For adolescents, focus on salient messages. When you know what works, widely disseminate the message. Coalitions, partnerships are key to widespread, low cost dissemination. TAKE HOME MESSAGES
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