healthy people 2020 - Society for Public Health Education
Transcription
healthy people 2020 - Society for Public Health Education
healthy people 2020: Scaling New Heights society for public health education ! 61st annual meeting ng [ n ovem be r 4- 6 , 2010 ! de nve r , co lor a do ] [ f i n a l p r o gr am ] ! 2009-10 sophe board of trustees ! president: diane allensworth, phd president-elect: dan perales, drph, mph treasurer: mary cheryl nacionales, mph, mba secretary: suzanne miro, mph, ches immediate past president: kathryn meier, mph, ches trustee / 2010 midyear meeting: kelli mccormack-brown, phd, ches trustee / 2010 annual meeting: david driscoll, phd, mph, ma trustee / 2011 midyear meeting: sharon thompson, phd, ches trustee / 2011 annual meeting: eva doyle, phd, msed, ches trustee / advocacy & resolutions: robert strack, phd, mba trustee / ethics & research: andrea gielen, scd trustee / membership & leadership: sarah olson, mph, ches trustee / professional development & continuing education: randall cottrell, ded, ches trustee / professional preparation: carol azar, mph trustee / publications & communications: michelle kegler, drph student trustee: melinda j. ikces, phd trustee / house of delegates: melanie stopponi, mpa, ches trustee / house of delegates: kay deaner, med, rn, ches trustee / house of delegates: crystal owensby, ms, ches trustee / house of delegates: karen spiller !""congratulations to the 2010-11 board ! president: dan perales, drph, mph president-elect: robert s. gold, phd, drph, faahb secretary: suzanne miro, mph, ches treasurer: mary cheryl nacionales, mph, mba immediate past president: diane allensworth, phd trustee / 2012 midyear meeting: karen spiller trustee / 2012 annual meeting: kelly bishop, ma, ches, fasha trustee / 2011 midyear meeting: sharon thompson, phd, ches trustee / 2011 annual meeting: eva doyle, phd, msed, ches trustee / advocacy & resolutions: robert strack, phd, mba trustee / ethics & research: andrea gielen, scd trustee / membership & leadership: sarah olson, mph, ches trustee / publications & communications: jesus ramirez-valles, phd trustee / professional development & continuing education: cam escoffery, phd, mph, ches student trustee: rachael dombrowski, mph trustee / house of delegates: melanie stopponi, mpa, ches trustee / house of delegates: crystal owensby, ms, ches trustee/house of delegate: heather alberda, ba trustee / house of delegates: rhonda payne, mph !""sophe staff ! chief executive officer: m. elaine auld, mph, ches assistant chief executive officer: michael dickey, mph, ches senior project director: margaret a. procaccino, ma, ches senior project director: rosemarie matulionis, msph health equity director: nicolette warren, ms, ches project director: laura boyle, mipp, mph, ches project manager: meaghan c. mchugh, mph health policy associate: sarah leonard, bs, ches editorial manager / project coordinator: laura j. drouillard, ba editorial manager/project coordinator: amanda schnitzer, bs administrative assistant: saundra flegler thanks to our outgoing board members! healthy people 2020: Scaling New Heights society for public health education [ novembe r 4-6, 2010 ✯ ✯ 61st annual meeting de nve r marriott city ce nte r hote l de nve r, colorado ✯ ] Conference Overview Welcome to the Society for Public Health Education’s (SOPHE) 61st Annual Meeting, “Healthy People 2020: Scaling New Heights” in Denver, Colorado. Public health professionals working in disease prevention and health promotion have much to celebrate and still more to discover. At the conclusion of the Healthy People (HP) 2010 decade, we should pause to take stock of our achievements and learn from our challenges. At this conference, plenary speakers and presenters will share progress and discovery in disease prevention and health promotion, discuss goals and expectations for the next decade, and describe innovative strategies for achieving those objectives. During this meeting, SOPHE will conclude its 60th Anniversary year and launch a new strategic plan for the years ahead! conference objectives This 1 ½ -day conference will enable you to: • Celebrate the contributions of health education and health promotion to achieving Healthy People 2010 objectives. • Address how community-based participatory research, community engagement, and capacity building strengthened the effectiveness, sustainability, and transferability of community interventions to reduce chronic disease. •Draw on lessons learned to achieve Healthy People 2020 objectives at the international, national, state, territorial, tribal, and community levels. • Foster innovations in health communication and education, science translation, pedagogy, policy, and community interventions across health outcomes and determinants and involving multisectoral, multidisciplinary and participatory approaches. conference supporters SOPHE is grateful to the following conference supporters. table of contents platinum Conference Overview 1 Plenary Speaker Snapshots 2 2010 Award Winners 3 Annual Meeting Highlights 6 Detailed Schedule 7 Be sure to visit them in the Resource Roomthroughout the conference. Sage Publications gold Centers for Disease Control & Prevention National Commission on Health Education Credentialing silver James F. & Sarah T. Fries Foundation bronze Indiana University SurveyMonkey Wiley/Jossey Bass diamond Center for Plain Language Colorado SOPHE FDA Office of Women’s Health GNP Specialties, Inc. Healthy Lifestyle Choices IZZE Sparkling Juice Jil Applegate Larabars Routledge Journals Springer Publishing Company Young Driver Research Initiative, The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia university DePaul University San Jose State University University of Illinois – Chicago University of Minnesota, Population Center Conference Abstracts 13 Poster Presentations 40 Poster Abstracts 42 Poster Promenade 60 Schedule at a Glance 61 Hotel Floor Plan 67 planning committee members 2010 Annual Meeting Trustee: David Driscoll, PhD, MPH Diane Allensworth Christina Bacca Jennifer Conner Kristina Davis Kathy DeBarr Eva Doyle Amilya (Nikkie) Ellis Bridget Gaglio Sherry Grover Jenné Johns Sondra Manske Mondi Mason Nancy Nix Barbara Ozaeta Michele L. Pettit Rob Simmons Yewande A. Sofolahan Karen Spiller Melannie Stopponi Nanette Wong & the entire SOPHE Staff s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 1 ✯ Selected Plenary Speaker Snapshots diane allensworth, phd Diane Allensworth is SOPHE’s 2009-10 President and is a Senior Advisor within the Office of Policy at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Since joining CDC in 1997, she has applied her expertise in children’s health and school health in CDC’s Division of Adolescent & School Health, Division of Partnerships and Strategic Alliances, and the Division of Nutrition and Physical Activity where she recently completed a 120-day detail to assist First Lady Michelle Obama’s Let’s Move! Campaign. Dr. Allensworth is former Executive Director of the American School Health Association and professor emeritus at Kent State University. A passionate child health advocate, she served as a Peace Corps volunteer and received SOPHE’s Open Society Award for her commitment to social justice in 2008. In 2010, she co-edited SOPHE’s first textbook, Health Promotion Programs. w. doug evans, phd Doug Evans is currently serving a 4-year appointment (2007-2011) as a member of the Secretary of Health and Human Service’s National Advisory Committee on Health Promotion and Disease Prevention (Healthy People 2020). Dr. Evans is Director of Public Health Communication and Marketing, and Professor in the Department of Prevention and Community Health and the Department of Global Health at The George Washington University (GWU). Dr. Evans has built his public health career on an insight the private sector has long understood - marketing and communication matter. A research psychologist, his work focuses on two key areas: (1) building the evidence base to establish the effectiveness of marketing and message strategies in promoting healthy behaviors; and (2) expanding the use of effective commercial marketing strategies to public health, especially to reach socially and economically disadvantaged populations. Dr. Evans is also an expert panel member for the health marketing and health communication review of the Guide to Community Preventive Services. lawrence w. green, drph Larry Green retired from CDC in 2004, as Distinguished Fellow-Visiting Scientist. He served as Director of CDC’s World Health Organization Collaborating Center on Global Tobacco Control, and later as Acting Director of the Office on Smoking and Health. In the Public Health Practice Program Office, he served as the Director of CDC’s Office of Science and Extramural Research and as Associate Director for Prevention Research and Academic Partnerships. Dr. Green has broad experience in health education, prevention, and community interventions for health promotion and risk reduction. He served as the first Director of the U.S. Office of Health Information and Health Promotion in the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health under the Carter Administration, and as Vice President of the Kaiser Family Foundation. A former SOPHE President and Distinguished Fellow, he has been on the public health faculties at Berkeley, Johns Hopkins, Harvard, Texas and Emory. He currently serves on the editorial boards of the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, Health Education & Behavior, Health Education Research, Theory and Practice, the American Journal of Health Behavior and 11 other journals. shiriki kumanyika, phd, mph Shiriki Kumanyika is Vice-Chair of the Secretary’s Advisory Committee on National Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Objectives for 2020. Among her many academic appointments, Dr. Kumanyika is the Senior Advisor to the Center for 2 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 ✯ Public Health Initiatives, Professor of Epidemiology, Associate Dean for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, and Senior Fellow of the Institute on Aging at the University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Kumanyika has a unique interdisciplinary background that integrates epidemiology, nutrition, minority health, and women’s health issues with a focus on prevention. Her research addresses the role of nutritional factors in the primary and secondary prevention of chronic diseases, with a particular focus on obesity and related health problems such as hypertension and diabetes. james michael mcginnis, md, mpp Michael McGinnis is Senior Scholar at the Institute of Medicine, as well as Executive Director of its Roundtable on Evidence-Based Medicine. Prior to joining the Institute of Medicine, Dr. McGinnis was Senior Vice President and Director of the Health Group and scholar-in-residence at the National Academy of Sciences in Washington, D.C. Previously, he held appointments throughout the Carter, Reagan, Bush and Clinton Administrations (1977-1995), as Deputy Assistant Secretary for Health and Assistant Surgeon General in the Department of Health and Human Services, responsible for coordinating policies in disease prevention and health promotion. During his government service, Dr. McGinnis was principal architect of the Healthy People process to set national health goals and objectives; the formation of the HHS Nutrition Policy Board and development of the HHS/USDA Dietary Guidelines for Americans; and the creation of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, which produced the Guide to Clinical Preventive Services. john seffrin, phd John Seffrin has been CEO of the American Cancer Society since 1992. During his tenure, Dr. Seffrin has made his organization’s voice heard in legislatures around the country and in forums worldwide. He spearheaded the creation of the Society’s nonprofit, nonpartisan advocacy affiliate, the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network and is a past president of the Geneva-headquartered International Union Against Cancer. He currently serves on the Advisory Committee to the Director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, a Secretary-level appointment. A SOPHE Distinguished Fellow, Dr. Seffrin is a contributing author to more than one dozen books and has written more than 100 articles and other publications. Dr. Seffrin is the 2010 Elizabeth Fries Health Education Award Winner, a $25,000 prize, and will deliver his address on Saturday, November 6. rear admiral penelope slade-sawyer, pt, msw Penelope Slade-Sawyer is Deputy Assistant Secretary for Health, Disease Prevention and Health Promotion where she directs the Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion (ODPHP), Office of Public Health and Science (OPHS) in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). RADM Slade-Sawyer is a Commissioned Corps Officer in the U.S. Public Health Service. She is a senior health advisor to the Assistant Secretary for Health and to the Secretary of HHS. RADM Slade-Sawyer leads the ODPHP in coordinating three key initiatives for HHS: Healthy People 2010; the Dietary Guidelines for Americans; and the 2008 Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans. As Director of the Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, RADM Slade-Sawyer has primary Federal leadership responsibility for Healthy People 2020, Healthfinder, The National Health Information Center, and The National Health Information Infrastructure. ✯ 2010 SOPHE Awards ✯ Join us in congratulating these outstanding individuals throughout the conference and during SOPHE’s Gala Awards Celebration on Saturday evening, November 6. ✯ distinguished fellow award ✯ This award is the highest recognition given by the Society and honors members who have made significant and lasting contributions to SOPHE and the health education field. Jim McKenzie, PHD, MPH, CHES James “Jim” McKenzie is a Professor Emeritus of Physiology and Health Science at Ball State University, where he started as chairperson in 1989. In his 15 years at Ball State he distinguished himself on campus through his excellent teaching, quality publications, and outstanding service. Dr. McKenzie’s expertise focuses on areas of program planning and evaluation, community health, and patient education. Dr. McKenzie has made significant and lasting contributions to the profession of health education. Over the span of his 30 year career, he has authored numerous textbooks including: An Introduction to Community Health; Principles and Foundations of Health Promotion & Education; and Planning, Implementing and Evaluating Health Promotion Programs. In addition, Dr. McKenzie has contributed chapters to several other books, and has authored close to 50 peer-reviewed articles addressing professional preparation, credentialing, and the accreditation of academic health education programs. He has held leadership positions in several national and state professional associations including Indiana SOPHE Delegate from 2004-06; Co-chair of the SOPHE/AAHE Baccalaureate Approval Committee since 2007; and coordinator of the Division Board of Certification for the National Commission for Health Education Credentialing since 2009. Dr. McKenzie is a reviewer for nine health education journals, including Health Promotion Practice, and has been recognized with more than a dozen awards for his teaching, research and service to the profession. David Sleet, PHD, FASHA Dr. David Sleet is the Associate Director of Science for the Division of Unintentional Injury Prevention at CDC, where he plans and manages research programs and provides direction to a national injury control program. He is also Professor Emeritus at San Diego State University, Adjunct Professor at Curtin University in Australia and on the teaching faculty of the School of Public Health at Emory University in Atlanta. He has spent most of his professional career in academia and government service, conducting research and teaching in public health and health psychology. He was a research psychologist at the U.S. Department of Transportation in Washington, D.C., and a visiting research fellow at the University of Western Australia in Perth, where he directed a research unit on road injury prevention and worked in the Washington State Health Department to develop a statewide approach to injury prevention. Dr. Sleet’s contributions to the field include more than 90 published books, monographs, and chapters, as well as 130 peer-reviewed journal articles related to injury prevention, health promotion, disease prevention, and community health. In 1999, he was awarded the Mayhew Derryberry Award from the American Public Health Association for his contributions to theory and practice in public health, and in 2001, he received the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary’s Award for Distinguished Service for his research on blood alcohol levels and driving, which led to a new national standard. Dr. Sleet’s collaborative research spans the globe including special projects in Australia, Belgium, and Finland. Marc Zimmerman, PHD For the past 13 years, Dr. Zimmerman has served as the Editor-inChief of Health Education & Behavior, one of the most frequently cited journals in the field. He is a highly regarded researcher that has published over 100 peer-reviewed articles, covering a variety of public health topics. Dr. Zimmerman’s primary research interests include the application and development of empowerment theory and the study of adolescent health and resiliency. His research has consistently focused on individual and community health risk and community-based research methods. Dr. Zimmerman has served for more than ten years as Chair of the Department of Health Behavior and Health Education at the University of Michigan School of Public Health, where he has mentored scores of students to become leaders in the field. He is also the editor of Youth and Society, and directs the Prevention Research Center of Michigan (PRC/MI), a CDCfunded center that focuses on both policy and community-based initiatives and projects. In 2010, Dr. Zimmerman, received the Distinguished Contribution to Theory and Research Award from the Society for Community Research and Action of the American Psychological Association. ✯ honorary fellow award ✯ The SOPHE Honorary Fellow Award is SOPHE’s highest recognition to a non-member who has made significant and lasting contributions to health education and public health. David S. Sobel, MD, MPH David Sobel is Director of Patient Education and Health Promotion for The Permanente Medical Group, Inc. and Kaiser Permanente’s Northern California Region. A primary care physician, he also led the national initiative on Patient-Centered Care for Kaiser Permanente’s Care Management Institute, which is dedicated to synthesizing knowledge about superior clinical approaches to ensure the highest quality care delivered to Kaiser Permanente members. He serves on the Northern California Region Contributions Committee, which provides funding and technical support for low-income and safety-net populations, community organizations, and community health initiatives. Dr. Sobel has dedicated his career to research and teaching in the area of medical self-care, patient education, preventive medicine, behavioral medicine, and psychosocial factors in health. He is coauthor of seven books including Living a Healthy Life with Chronic Conditions, The Healing Brain, Healthy Pleasures, and Mind & Body Health Handbook. He also served as an invited delegate to the World Health Organization (WHO) Congress that generated the Ottawa Charter on Health Promotion. After receiving a bachelor’s degree in psychology at the University of Michigan, Dr. Sobel pursued his medical training at the University of California San Francisco with a medical internship at Presbyterian Hospital-Pacific Medical Center in San Francisco. He also completed a master’s degree in Public Health and a residency program in General Preventive Medicine at the School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley. Dr. Sobel has received many awards, including the 2001 national Healthtrac Foundation Health Education Award*, which is given to a health educator who has made a substantial contribution to advancing the field of health education or health promotion through research, program development, or program delivery. He also won the James A.Vohs Award for Quality: Chronic Disease Self-Management Program Multi-Region in 2002 and the TPMG Exceptional Contribution Award in 2005 for creating, developing, and disseminating health education programs that support Kaiser Permanente members throughout the continuum of care. *Award renamed the Elizabeth Fries Health Education Award, and is now given annually by the James F. and Sara T. Fries Foundation. s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 3 ✯ 2010 SOPHE Awards ✯ open society award ✯ This award recognizes an individual or group who embodies and promotes an Open Society through research, practice, and/or teaching. Stephen B. Thomas, PHD, FAAHB Stephen Thomas is one of the nation’s leading advocates in the effort to eliminate health disparities. He is currently the Director of the Center for Health Equity at the University of Maryland’s School of Public Health. Prior to this position, Dr. Thomas was the director of the Center for Minority Health and the Philip Hallen Professor of Community Health and Social Justice at the University of Pittsburgh’s Graduate School of Public Health (GSPH). Under Dr. Thomas’s leadership, the Center implemented community-based interventions that range from the development of culturally tailored health communication materials designed to address an individual’s risk behaviors to using mass media to advocate for policy change. In 2005, Dr. Thomas received the David Satcher Award from the Directors of Health Promotion and Education for demonstrating leadership in reducing health disparities that have resulted in the improvement of health promotion and health education programs at the state and local levels. Additionally, Dr. Thomas served for seven years as an associate professor in the Department of Behavioral Sciences and Health Education at Atlanta’s Emory University. While there, he founded and became director of the Institute for Minority Health Research at the Rollins School of Public Health. Dr. Thomas was also a visiting scientist from 1996 to 1998 at The National Center for HIV/AIDS, STD and TB Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta. He also has held faculty positions at several universities, including the University of Maryland, where he was co-founder and director of the Minority Health Research Laboratory; Southern Illinois University; and the University of North Carolina. Dr. Thomas received his bachelor’s degree from Ohio State University and earned his doctorate in community health education from Southern Illinois University in Carbondale. ✯ 2010 sarah mazelis best paper of the year ✯ This paper recognizes author(s) whose peer-reviewed article has been published in SOPHE’s journal Health Promotion Practice in the last year and has significant contributions to advancing the practice of health education and health promotion programs, policy, or professional preparation. Settings for Health Promotion: An Analytic Framework to Guide Intervention Design and Implementation by Blake Poland, Gene Krupa, and Douglas McCall; Health Promotion Practice, October 2009, 10(4): 505-516. ✯ 2010 lawrence w. green best paper of the year ✯ This paper recognizes author(s) whose peer-reviewed article has been published in SOPHE’s journal Health Education & Behavior in the last year and has made significant contributions to understanding health education, health status, and strategies to improve social and behavioral health. TBA 4 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 ✯ ✯ 2009-2010 sophe/cdc fellows ✯ 2009-10 sophe/cdc child & adolescent student fellowship This fellowship recognizes, assists, and trains graduate students working on projects in child and adolescent health from the perspective of health education or the behavioral sciences. The recognition represents the culmination of their year-long work. Jagdish Khubchandani, PhD (c), MD, MPH, CHES Jagdish Khubchandani is an Assistant Professor of Community Health Education at the Ball State University. He earned his Medical Degree from India, Masters in Public Health from Western Kentucky University, and a PhD in health education from the University of Toledo. His research interests are in the area of clinical epidemiology, youth violence, health related outcomes of intimate partner violence in adolescence, and the roles of school personnel in preventing youth violence. Laura L. Colbert, MPH Laura Colbert recently graduated from Emory University with a Master of Public Health Degree. As the SOPHE Fellow for Child, Adolescent, and School Health, Laura developed and piloted a curriculum for middle school students, to be used in an after-school or summer camp setting. She hopes to implement this curriculum in the Atlanta Public School system in the current school year. In addition to school wellness programming and curricula, Laura is interested in health literacy and increased access to care. 2009-10 sophe/cdc injury prevention student fellowship This fellowship program recognizes, assists, and trains graduate students working on injury prevention projects from the perspective of health education or behavioral sciences. The recognition represents the culmination of their year-long work. Catherine J. Vladutiu, PhD, (c), MPH Catherine Vladutiu is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Epidemiology at the University of North Carolina Gillings School of Global Public Health. Ms. Vladutiu received a Master of Public Health degree in Maternal and Child Health Epidemiology at the University of Rochester School of Medicine & Dentistry in New York. Much of her research has focused on maternal and child health and injury prevention. In particular, Ms. Vladutiu is interested in the intersection between perinatal health and injury epidemiology. Her current research examines adverse maternal and fetal outcomes resulting from trauma during pregnancy. Dorian Lamas, PhD (c), MA Dorian Lamas is a doctoral student in Clinical-Community Psychology at the University of South Carolina. He received his Master of Arts degree in Clinical Psychology from East Tennessee State University. His research focuses on suicidal behaviors and alcohol use and abuse in adolescents and young adults. ✯ 2010 SOPHE Awards ✯ 2009-10 sophe/atsdr environmental health fellowship ✯ This fellowship recognizes, assists, and trains graduate students working on projects in environmental health education, environmental justice, or emergency preparedness from the perspective of health education or the behavioral sciences. The recognition represents the culmination of their year-long work. Tina Yuen, PharmaD, MCP (c), MPH Tina Yuen is a first year student in the Masters of City Planning Program within the Department of City and Regional Planning at UC Berkeley. She recently graduated with her MPH, also from UC Berkeley. She is interested in place-based determinants of environmental health inequities. Her research and professional interests revolve around understanding disproportionate environmental exposures and health disparities and working toward policy solutions that incorporate a framework of vulnerability, cumulative impacts, and precautionary approaches into land use decisions. Brittany Morey, MPH (c) Brittany Morey is currently completing her MPH in Community Health Sciences at the UCLA School of Public Health. For the past year, she has been working with the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Program and the faith-based organization, Kingdom Causes, to conduct Healthy Homes and Lead Poisoning Prevention Workshops in the cities of Alhambra and Monterey Park, California. The goal of the Healthy Homes Workshops is to prevent childhood disease and injury caused by environmental hazards in the home. ✯ vivian drenckhahn student scholarship award ✯ This Student Scholarship provides support to both undergraduate & graduate level full time students in their pursuit of educational & professional development in health education. Pragati Gole, MD, MPH (c) Pragati Gole is a Master of Public Health candidate at Western Kentucky University. Dr. Gole currently works with the WIC (Women, Infant and Child) Clinic at the Barren River District Health Department in Bowling Green, Kentucky where she focuses on the demands for comprehensive and culturally sensitive health education methods and materials specifically regarding fruit and vegetable consumption. She is also the graduate assistant to the health education program coordinator in the department of public health at Western Kentucky University. Sherry Stephens-Gibson, MPH, CHES, DRPH (c) Sherry Stephens-Gibson is a Doctoratal of Public Health candidate at Jackson State University, where she also received her Master’s of Public Health degree. She is currently the graduate assistant to the Department of Behavioral and Environmental Health at Jackson State University, where she assists with planning and implementation of research projects in addition to other office duties. Ms. Stephens-Gibson serves as Treasurer for Delta SOPHE and has been selected as President-Elect for 2011. ✯ ✯ 2010 annual meeting student scholarship recipients ✯ SOPHE is proud to award four support scholarships to enable the following students to attend this year’s meeting. The scholarships are provided through SOPHE’s “Campaign for the 21st Century” fund. • Rochelle Breyman, San Jose State University • Nolan Heath, University of North Carolina – Wilmington • Marieke Jackson, New Mexico State University • Yewande Sofolahan, Pennsylvania State University ✯ presidential citations ✯ This recognition, given by the SOPHE President, honors individual(s) who have made significant contributions toward the Society’s programs and initiatives. This citation recognizes an individual for her commitment and hard work as editorial manager of Health Education & Behavior. Teresa D. Vogel, University of Michigan These citations honor authors of SOPHE’s first textbook, “Health Promotion Programs: From Theory to Practice,” for their contributions to this landmark publication: • Neyal J. Ammary-Risch, MPH, CHES • M. Elaine Auld, MPH, CHES • Kelly Bishop, MA, CHES, FASHA • Jean M. Breny Bontempi, PhD, MPH • Kelli McCormack Brown, PhD, CHES • Frances D. Butterfoss, PhD, MSEd • Huey-Shys Chen, PhD, RN, CHES • W. William Chen, PhD, CHES • Sara L. Cole, PhD, MA, CHES • Katherine Crosson, MPH, CHES • Joseph A. Drake, MPH, PhD • Michael C. Fagen, PhD, MPH • Carl I. Fertman, PhD, MBA, CHES • Andy Fourney, DrPH • Regina A. Galer-Unti, PhD, CHES •Cezanne Garcia, MPH • Melissa Grim, PhD • Jim Grizzell, MBA, MA, CHES • Tyra Gross, MPH • Michael T. Hatcher, DrPH • Leonard Jack, Jr., PhD, MSc, CHES • Camara Phyllis Jones, MD, MPH, PhD • Laura Linnan, ScD • Sara Lynch, BS • Edward Mamary, DrPH, MS • Francisco Soto Mas, MD, MPH, PhD • Carlen McLin, MPH, DrPH • Angela D. Mickalide, PhD, CHES • Barbara MkNelly, MS • Kimbery L. Peabody, PhD • Daniel Perales, DrPH, MPH • James H. Price, PhD, MPH • Regina McCoy Pulliam, MPH • Kathleen M. Roe, DrPH, MPH • Jiunn-Jye Sheu, MSPH, PhD • David A. Sleet, PhD, FASHA • Karen I. Spiller • Marlene K. Tappe, PhD, CHES • Louise Villejo, MPH, CHES • Britney Ward, MPH • Jennifer Wieland MPH, MCP • Allison Zambon, BS, MHS s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 5 ✯ Annual Meeting Highlights scaling the social ladder - gala opening & book signing Networking at its peak during SOPHE 61st Meeting Opening Gala Social, Friday, November 5, 6:00 – 8:00 pm. Chat with colleagues old and new, dialog with poster presenters, and learn about latest resources from exhibitors. Purchase special books at discounts (including SOPHE’s Health Promotion Programs: From Theory to Practice) and have signed by authors. Enjoy food, fun, and music provided by the Talking Trees, a theraputic drumming group sophe awards celebration Supported by Sage Publications Join your SOPHE colleagues for an enchanting evening of golden history in the extraordinary setting of the Denver Art Museum to celebrate achievements and share accolades. Attendees will feast on gourmet hors d’oeuvres prepared by nationally renowned chef, Kevin Taylor, and explore the breathtaking treasures of the nationally traveling exhibit, Tutankhamun: The Golden King and the Great Pharaohs. You will also discover some of SOPHE’s best and brightest members as we honor those who have contributed to the field of health education. Partake in the Awards Afterglow to personally congratulate and mingle with award winners while enjoying dessert and coffee. A limited number of tickets are available first-come, first served ($45) at the SOPHE Registration Desk; don’t wait! ches continuing education An application has been submitted to award approximately 20 Continuing Education Contact Hours (CECHs) for certified health education specialists (CHES). SOPHE, including it chapters, is a designated multiple-provider of CECHs by the National Commission for Health Education Credentialing, Inc. Administration fees for continuing education are included in the conference registration fees. national prevention and health promotion strategy listening session ✯ sophe all-member business meeting Grab your box lunch on Saturday, November 6, and attend the SOPHE All Member business meeting in Colorado G-J. Review SOPHE’s 2010 accomplishments, meet your 2010-11 officers, learn about SOPHE’s 2011-16 strategic plan, and let us know how we can serve you better! sophe communities of practice roundtables SOPHE Communities of Practice (CoP) will enjoy the opportunity to connect with individuals with similar interests. Topics to be included are the following: Children/Adolescent Health; Medical Care/Patient Education; Health Communications/Social Marketing; Health Disparities; Healthy Aging; Emergency Preparedness; Environmental Health; Worksite Health; Anthropology; International Health; Students/New professionals; and Faculty. Check out CoP breakfast/lunch meeting times on program schedule. ches lounge and clinic - Back by popular demand! Would you like to know more about the CHES credential and if you are eligible? Do you have questions about your current CHES credential? Are you thinking about becoming MCHES? Are you an employer that seeks to hire a CHES/MCHES? NCHEC staff and board members will be available on Friday, November 5, from 8:30 am to 5:00 pm to answer your questions. Anyone and everyone are welcome. Please stop by and learn more! Located in the Matchless Room, Lower Level 1. “ask me about my chapter” challenge e ask m t my Representatives from SOPHE’s Chapters will be wearing u o b a apter “Ask Me About My Chapter” stickers. Chat with them to ch learn more about the Chapter in your area. Be sure to have them initial your Chapter Challenge card found in your conference bag to be entered into a drawing for fabulous prizes. You are also invited to stop by the Chapter Poster Session at the Opening Reception, and visit the Chapter Table in the Resource Room. Join your colleagues on Saturday, November 6 from 2:30-3:30 pm in Colorado E-F in providing feedback on the National Prevention Strategy framework. Participants will be given a chance to provide comments on priorities to improve the Nation’s prevention efforts and opportunities to engage across multiple sectors to advance prevention. This brief session is a great opportunity to hear about The National Prevention and Health Promotion Strategy and voice your opinion. CHES credits! sophe snapshot/meeting mentoring program new! poster gallery & poster promenade resource room - publications mart opportunities View some 40+ posters on display during the conference and interact with authors at the Gala Opening Social on Friday evening, November 5, 6:00 – 8:00 pm. On Saturday morning from 7:30-8:15 am, participate in our Poster Promenade, consisting of guided poster tours on select topics. Grab your java and enjoy the extra debate and dialogue! Choose one of three groups of posters: College Health, Health Disparities and Web/Internet. twitter alert! This conference will feature an opportunity to twitter, enhancing your professional exchange with other attendees. Share insights, reactions to speakers, resources, and overall experiences with your SOPHE colleagues. Visit www.twitter.com/SOPHEtweets, and join in the conversation by referencing #SOPHE 2010 in your tweets. (Note – participants are responsible for any individual fees that may apply.) dine around downtown denver! Join your colleagues after the Social Gala on Friday for a night out at an award-winning restaurant in downtown Denver. Choose from seven incredible restaurants including Italian, Irish, Mexican, and American cuisine. Prices vary depending on restaurant. Sign-up at Hospitality desk. 6 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 First-time meeting attendees are invited to the SOPHE Snapshot, Friday, November 5, 7:00-8:15 am, in Colorado G-J. Enjoy continental breakfast and learn about SOPHE’s programs and how you can be involved. This session will also kick off SOPHE’s Meeting Mentoring Program, joining mentors and protégés over the conference. Watch for participants wearing red Meeting Mentor lanyards! Peruse information, publications, tools, and the latest technological innovations from an array of organizations and companies, starting on November 5 located in Room: Colorado A-D. career resource center The SOPHE Career Resource Center is a valuable connection of tools, resources, internships, and employment opportunities in health education, health promotion and prevention. Be sure to check out the latest job postings and resumes for candidates in Colorado A-D throughout the conference. wellness challenge - climbing your way to a healthy summit The conference sponsors are committed to providing healthy foods and encouraging healthy behaviors addressing the mind, body and spirit connections. Join other conferees Friday and Saturday morning for running and walking groups of varying abilities. Groups depart from the lobby of the hotel each morning at 7:00 am. Yoga is also available 7:00 am each morning in the Gold Coin room. In addition, take advantage of the hotel’s complimentary fitness center and indoor pool. Check out the city’s bike share program; informational flyer in conference bag. Engage in 30 minutes or more of exercise daily to be eligible for a raffle with great prizes. ✯ Detailed Schedule THURSDAY | NOV 4 7:30 am – 6:00 pm Registration / Hospitality / CHES Open Room: Central Registration 8:00 am – 11:00 am SOPHE House of Delegates Meeting Room: Colorado G-H 11:00 am – 6:00 pm SOPHE Board of Trustees Meeting Room: Mattie Silks 1:00 pm – 5:00 pm pre-conference workshop i Moderator: Joyce Morris, PhD, Oklahoma Department of Health Room: Molly Brown Evaluation: A Key Tool to the Trade Presenter: Richard Windsor, MS, PhD, MPH, Professor, George Washington University School of Public Health 2:00 pm – 5:00 pm pre-conference workshop ii Moderator: Nicolette Warren, MS, CHES, Society for Public Health Education Room: Matchless The Spirit Health Resides in the People of the Land: Healing our Community Presenters: Pamela Jumper-Thurman, MA, PhD, Senior Research Scientist/Scholar- Ethnic Studies at Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, Research Supervisor- Community Readiness and HIV/AIDS Capacity Building supplemented by Centers for Disease Control; Martha A. Burnside, BA, National Center for Community Readiness, Ethnic Studies Department, Colorado State University 3:00 pm – 7:00 pm Resource Room & Posters Set-Up Room: Colorado A-D 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm pre-conference workshop iii Moderator: Marita Murrman, EdD, Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health Room: Molly Brown Is Your Health Website Easy to Use? Strategies for Improving Health Literacy & the Web Presenters: Xanthi Scrimgeour, MHEd, CHES, CommunicateHealth, Inc.; Stacy Robison, MPH, CHES, CommunicateHealth, Inc 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm pre-conference workshop iv Moderator: Sandra Bulmer, PhD, Southern Connecticut State University Room: Denver 3 The Future is in Your Hands: Key Components of Professional Preparation and Success Presenters: Melinda Ickes, MEd, PhD, University of Kentucky and SOPHE Student Trustee; Kelli McCormack Brown, PhD, Associate Dean and Professor, University of Florida; and Robert McDermott, PhD, Professor, University of South Florida ✯ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm PRE-CONFERENCE WORKSHOP V Moderator: Ellen Capwell, PhD, CHES, Co-Chair, SABPAC and Professor, Otterbein College Room: Gold Coin SABPAC 101: For Faculty and Practitioners Presenters: Ellen Capwell, PhD, CHES, Co-Chair, SABPAC and Professor, Otterbein College 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm National SOPHE Leadership Orientation Room: Nat Hill friday | nov 5 7:00 am – 6:00 pm Registration / Hospitality / CHES Open Room: Central Registration 7:00 am – 7:45 am Wellness Challenge Activities: • Run/Walk Room: Meet at Hotel Lobby • Yoga by Jennifer Wieczorek Room: Gold Coin 7:00 am – 8:15 am SOPHE Snapshot Orientation & Meeting Mentoring Kick-Off (Session includes free continental breakfast) Room: Colorado G-H 7:00 am – 8:15 am SOPHE Committee Meetings 2011 Annual Meeting Planning Committee Room: Saratoga Communities of Practice Chairs Room: Mattie Silks 8:30 am – 5:00 pm CHES Lounge & Clinic (All Welcome) Room: Matchless 8:30 am – 8:00 pm Resource Room and Posters Open Room: Colorado A-D 8:30 am – 8:45 am opening remarks & welcome Presenters: David Driscoll, PhD, MPH 2010 Annual Meeting Planning Committee Chair; M. Elaine Auld, MPH, CHES, Chief Executive Officer, SOPHE; and Honorable Senator Betty Boyd, Colorado State Senate, Health and Human Services Chair Room: Colorado E-F 8:45 am – 9:15 am sophe 2010 presidential address Moderator: David Driscoll, PhD, MPH, University of Alaska Room: Colorado E-F Addressing the Social Determinants of Health A Focus on Children and Youth Presenter: Diane Allensworth, PhD, 2009-2010 SOPHE President and Centers for Disease Control & Prevention s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 7 ✯ Detailed Schedule 9:15 am – 10:00 am plenary session i Moderator: David Driscoll, PhD, MPH, University of Alaska Room: Colorado E-F Healthy People Objectives for the Nation: Three Decades of Achievement Presenter: J. Michael McGinnis, MD, MPP, Institute of Medicine and SOPHE Honorary Fellow, 1987 ✯ Theory in Practice: Is Self-efficacy Different in Minority Children? Presenters: Melvena Wilson, DrPH, MPH, CHES, Health Educator/ Graduate, Florida A&M University a iii – electronic media: new avenues for reaching healthy people goals Moderator: Jennifer Conner, MPH, CHES, Marion County Health Department Room: Denver 5-6 10:00 am – 10:30 am Increasing the Quality of Health Web Sites: An Action Agenda Presenter: Stacy Robison, MPH, CHES, Principal, CommunicateHealth, Inc. 10:30 am – 11:45 am Pre-conceived Expectations Not Always Predictive of Actual Ability: E-health Literacy Skills Among College Students Presenter: Michael Stellefson, PhD, University of Florida Refreshment Break Room: Colorado A-D concurrent sessions a a i – clearing the smoke: looking back, looking forward at healthy people objectives Moderator: Brick Lancaster, MA, CHES, CDC Office on Smoking and Health Room: Colorado E-F The Healthy People 2010 Tobacco Use Chapter: Looking Back Presenter: Ralph S. Caraballo, PhD, MPH, Office on Smoking and Health, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services A Decade of Progress: Tobacco Control in Mississippi Presenter: Roy Hart, MPH, CHES, Director, Office of Tobacco Control, Mississippi State Department of Health Put it Out Rockland: A County Health Department’s Collaborative Efforts to Surpass the Healthy People 2010 Tobacco Goals Presenter: Lisa Lieberman, PhD, CHES, Assistant Professor, Department of Health & Nutrition Science, Montclair State University The Healthy People 2020 Tobacco Use Chapter: Looking Forward Presenter: Terry Pechacek, PhD, Associate Director for Science, Office on Smoking and Health, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services a ii – innovative uses of health education and promotion theory Moderator: Martha King, National Conference of State Legislatures Room: Colorado I-J The Use of the Expanded Model of the Theory of Planned Behavior as a Guide in the Development of an Intervention Promoting Mammography Screening Among American Indian (AI) Women in Oklahoma Presenter: Eleni Tolma, PhD, Assistant Professor, Health Promotion Sciences, University of Oklahoma Health Science Center Health Promotion Agenda Setting: Promising Innovative Advocacy and Policy Development for Health Promotion Practitioners Presenter: Charles T. Kozel, PhD, MPH, CHES, Associate Professor, Department of Health Science, New Mexico State University When Politics and Public Health Collide: How Can Policy Theory Improve Public Health Advocacy? Presenter: Tyler Watson, MPH, CHES, Professor, Health Science/Brigham Young University-Idaho 8 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 Incorporating Social Media into a Health Education Campaign: Lessons from Confess! Cervical Cancer Awareness Campaign Presenter: Jessica Albeita, MPH, Assistant Director, Research Administration and Community Outreach, Prevent Cancer Foundation Health Education and the Electronic Health Information Exchange Revolution Presenter: William Livingood, PhD, Senior Researcher, Duval County Health Department a iv – mile high strategies for professional preparation in health education Moderator: Michelle Kegler, DrPH, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University Room: Nat Hill Extending Students’ Learning with the New SOPHE Textbook: Semester Class Projects, Needs Assessments and Internships Presenter: Carl Fertman, PhD, MBA, CHES, Associate Professor, University of Pittsburgh Enhancing Teaching with the New SOPHE Textbook: CHES Competencies and Web 2.0 Presenter: Beth Chaney, PhD, CHES, University of Florida, Melissa Grim, PhD, Radford University Adapting Distance Learning Technology: Lessons Learned in the Third Year of a University’s Public Health Education Distance Program Presenter: Frank Strona, MPH, Lecturer, San Jose State University How Students in a Community Health Social Marketing Course Can Assist Communities to Create Change Presenter: Rosy Contreras, BSc, Graduating Senior, San Jose State University a v – diversity in action: addressing the needs of immigrants and special populations Moderator: Melanie Stopponi, MPA, CHES, Kaiser Permanente Room: Colorado G-H Immigration Policies, Integration and Social Capital: an International Comparison of Public Health Outcomes Presenter: Alberto Cardelle, PhD, MPH, Professor, East Stroudsburg University Challenges Faced by Immigrant Pregnant Women to Get Quality Maternal Health Care Presenter: Kamrun Mustafa, PhD, Southern Illinois University Carbondale ✯ Detailed Schedule ✯ Relationships Between Risky Health Behaviors And Behavioral Motivational Systems In Hispanic Populations Presenter: Marieke Jackson, BA, Research Assistant, Health Sciences/NMSU Exam Item Writing for the Health Education Specialist: “Yes This Will Be on the Test.” Presenter: Jacquie Rainey, DrPH, Professor and Associate Dean, College of Health and Behavioral Sciences Lations Reduciendo el Disabetes en Southeast Georgia: a Best Practices Approach Presenter: Mondi Mason, PhD, MPH, Assistant Professor, Georgia Southern University Parallels Between the Professionalization of Health Education and the Medical Profession’s Historic Quest for Licensure Presenter: Kathy DeBarr, MS, PhD, Associate Professor, Department of Public Health, University of Illinois Springfield 11:45 am – 12:15 pm b iii – community and population health: challenges for a new decade Box Lunch Pick-Up Room: Central Registration Area 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm SOPHE Communities of Practice/ Roundtable Luncheons Room: Colorado E-F 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm SOPHE Continuing Education Committee Meeting Room: Matchless 1:15 pm – 2:30 pm Moderator: Mondi Mason, MPH, CHES, Georgia Southern University Room: Colorado E-F Changing Expectations: Advancing the Community Role in Translational Research Presenter: Alexandra Lightfoot, EdM, EdD, Assistant Director, Community-Based Participatory Research, UNC Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Social Determinants of Health Presenter: Sally Lin, PhD, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention concurrent sessions b Health Disparities Curriculum: Involving Students in Public Health Advocacy (High School Students) Presenter: Nell Curran, BA, Program Coordinator/MPH student, Stanford University, Youth Science Program/San Jose State University Moderator: Amilya N. Ellis, BSED, DS, New Mexico State University Room: Nat Hill The Adaption & Implementation of Evidence-Based Asthma Interventions to Address Asthma Morbidity in Post Katrina New Orleans Presenter: Eleanor Thornton, MS, CHES, AE-C, President and CEO, Visionary Consulting Partners, LLC. b i – reach and recovery: strategies and interventions for high risk adolescents Mental Health and Substance Abuse Prevention for Male Adolescence Detainees Presenter: William Moore, MPH Candidate, Graduate Research Assistant, Satcher Health Leadership Institute, Community Voices: Healthcare for the Underserved, Morehouse School of Medicine Building Health Equity on the U.S./Mexico Border: Innovative Strategies to Reduce Alcohol Consumption and Related Consequences in Adolescents Presenter: Sharon Thompson, PhD, MPH, CHES, Associate Professor, Department of Public Health Sciences, The University of Texas at El Paso b iv – a health educator’s call to action: emergency preparedness & response Moderator: Michael Dickey, MPH, CHES, Society for Public Health Education Room: Colorado H-G CDC’s Challenges and Successes in Providing Public Health Information During the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill Presenter: Daniel L. Holcomb, ATSDR, Senior Environmental Health Scientist, Emergency Response Coordinator, US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Application of Adapt-it: Adapting an Evidence-based HIV Prevention Intervention for Incarcerated African American Adolescent Females Presenter: Teaniese Latham, MPH, Doctoral Candidate, University of Georgia Pandemic Preparedness and Response: The New Jersey Experience Presenter: Suzanne Miro, MPH, CHES, New Jersey Department of Health and Senior Services Empowering Our Spirit: Adapting Evidence-based Practices and Utilizing Community Paraprofessionals to Prevent Apache Youth Suicide Attempts Presenter: Kristin Lake, MPH, Health Education Specialist, JHU Center for American Indian Health Snaps: Community Demographic Profiles in a Snap through an Interactive Situational Awareness Tool Presenter: Gail Williams, MPH, CHES, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/Division of Emergency Operations b ii – challenges in health education: building professional identity b v – healthy faculty 2010 and beyond: commitment to health for all How We Got Here: a Brief History of the Health Education Credentialing Process Presenter: Michele Pettit, PhD, MPH, CHES, Assistant Professor, Health Education and Health Promotion, University of Wisconsin-La Crosse Consideration of Some Great Contributors to Philosophy of Education as Foundation for Developing a Personal Practice Theory and Philosophy of Education Presenters: Stephen F. Gambescia, PhD, MEd, MBA, MHum, CHES, Drexel University Moderator: Diane Allensworth, PhD, SOPHE President and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Room: Colorado I-J Outcomes of the National Health Educator Job Analysis: Implications for Healthy People Presenter: Eva Doyle, PhD, MSEd, CHES, Program Director, MPH in Community Health Education, Baylor University Moderator: Rob Simmons, DrPH, MPH, CHES, Thomas Jefferson University Room: Denver 5-6 On Becoming a Teacher…How to Shift to a Student Centered Classroom Presenter: Bojana Beric, MD, PhD, CHES, Monmouth University Staying Motivated During the Ups and Downs of a Research Career Presenter: Marc A. Zimmerman, PhD, MS, University of Michigan s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 9 ✯ Detailed Schedule c iv – college health: emerging trends among the millennial generation 2:30 pm – 3:00 pm Break Room: Colorado A-D Moderator: Michele Pettit, University of Wisconsin, La Crosse Room: Denver 5-6 3:00 pm – 4:15 pm concurrent sessions c c i – health education quality assurance: a recipe for excellence Moderator: Carol Azar, MPH, Kaiser Permanente Oakland Room: Colorado I-J Strengthening Quality Assurance: a Decade of Progress Presenter: David Birch, PhD, CHES, Professor, Department of Health Education and Promotion, East Carolina University Master Certified Health Education Specialist (MCHES): New Heights in Credentialing in Health Education Presenter: Linda Lysoby, MS, CHES, CAE, Executive Director, National Commission for Health Education Credentialing, Inc. A Partner in Quality Assurance: the Role of the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE) in the Accreditation of School Health Education Programs Presenter: Margaret D. Crutchfield, PhD, Associate Vice President for Program Review, National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education Quality Assurance in Professional Preparation: a CEPH Update Presenter: Laura Rasar King, MPH, CHES, Executive Director, Council on Education for Public Health c ii – shifting the paradigm: utilizing innovative policy strategies for improvements in chronic disease Moderator: Amy Winterfeld, National Conference of State Legislatures Room: Nat Hill Shifting the Paradigm: Utilizing Innovative Policy Strategies for Improvements in Chronic Disease Presenter: Carra Moroni, MEd, RD, LD, Texas Department of State Health Services; Karma E. Edwards, MSPH, NSCA, CPT, Gaston County Health Department; Celeste Shoenthaler, MPH, Director of Youth and Young Initiatives, Colorado Department of Public Health & Environment c iii– promising directions in nutrition and wellness promotion Moderator: Karen Spiller, Boston Collaborative for Food and Fitness Room: Colorado E-F Fruit and Vegetable Consumption Among Immigrant and Non-immigrant Women Served by WIC in South Central Kentucky Presenter: Pragati Gole, MD, Graduate Student, Department of Public Health, Western Kentucky University Elementary School Student Health Beliefs and Perceptions of a School Based Nutrition Intervention Presenter: Kristina Davis, MS, MPH, CHES, Prevention Science Fellow, Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, US Department of Health & Human Services Digital Photographic Food Diaries for Weight Loss Presenter: Lydia Burak, PhD, CHES, Professor, Bridgewater State University Using a CBPR Approach to Explore Health Literacy and Type-2 Diabetes Prevention Needs in African American and Hispanic Adolescents Presenter: Melissa Valerio, PhD, MPH, Assistant Professor, University of Michigan SPH - HBHE 10 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 Safe Medication Use Among Hispanic College Students: Knowledge, Attitudes, and Behaviors Presenter: Tania Quiroz, DrPH Candidate, BIS, MA, UT Houston School of Public Health College Health: Differences in Breast Cancer and Breast-Self Examination Knowledge and Attitudes Among College Women Presenter: Cynthia Kratzke, PhD, CHES, Department of Health Science, New Mexico State University How to Achieve a Healthy Campus in 2020 Presenter: Melinda Ickes, MEd, PhD, University of Kentucky, Department of Kinesiology and Health Promotion An Exploration/Assessment of Health Promotion Lifestyle Factors and Degree of Stress Experienced by College Students Presenter: Billie Lindsey, EdD, CHES, Associate Professor, Community Health, Western Washington University c v – novel uses of electronic media: adapting to diverse audiences Moderator: Kathy DeBarr, MS, PhD, Associate Professor, Department of Public Health, University of Illinois Springfield Room: Colorado G-H CDC Fruit & Vegetable Access Online Toolkit for State Coordinators: Addressing Disparities and Increasing Availability Presenter: Jennifer James, MPH, Account Director, Ogilvy Public Relations Exploring the Trends and Challenges of New Cancer Health Promotion Strategies to Reduce Social Inequities in Health Among Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Populations Presenter: Carolina Casares, MD, MPH Improving the Cultural Competence of Cardiovascular, Cancer, and Pulmonary Disease Prevention and Early Detection Practices of Public Health, Mental/Behavioral Health and Health Care Providers Through Online Training Presenter: Kathy Zavela Tyson, MPH, PhD, CHES, Director of Research Development, Professor Emeriti, Center for Research Strategies, University of Northern Colorado Identifying Demographic and Situational Factors that Influence the Use of an Electric Hematological Cancer Toolkit: a Multivariate Analysis Presenter: Bruce Dotterrer, MS, University of Alaska, Institute for Circumpolar Health Studies 4:30 pm – 6:00 pm plenary session ii Moderator: Robert S. Gold, DrPH, PhD, FASHA, University of Maryland School of Public Health and 2010-2011 SOPHE President -Elect Room: Colorado E-F Healthy People 2020: Mile High Expectations Presenters: Shiriki Kumanyika, PhD, MPH, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine; Rear Admiral Penelope Slade-Sawyer, PT, MSW, Office of Public Health & Science, DHHS Office of the Secretary; Doug Evans, PhD, The George Washington University 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm Opening Gala Reception Poster Presentation with Authors, Resource Room Room: Colorado A-D ✯ Detailed Schedule ✯ saturday | nov 6 8:30 am – 9:45 am 7:00 am – 3:45 pm d i– sophe student fellowship presentations Registration / Hospitality / CHES Open Room: Central Registration 7:00 am – 7:45 am Wellness Challenge Activities Run/Walk Room: Meet at Hotel Lobby Yoga by Jennifer Wieczorek Room: Gold Coin 7:00 am – 8:00 am Continental Breakfast Room: Central Registration Area 7:00 am – 8:15 am early riser sessions er1-holistic approach to health: the mind/body connection Moderator: Meaghan McHugh, MPH, Society for Public Health Education Room: Matchless Before, I Didn’t Dream: A Promotor Based Mental Health Intervention Presenter: Pamela Gudino, MPH, Program Director, Somos Mayfair The Health-Related Quality of Life Curriculum Development Project Presenter: Cecily Luncheon, MD, DrPH, MPH, ORISE Fellow, Division of Adult and Community Health/NCCDPHP/CDC Social Support Experiences of HIV Positive HIV/AIDS Coalition Participants: A Grounded Theory Approach Presenter: Melissa Haithcox-Dennis, PhD, MA, CHES, Department of Health Education and Promotion, East Carolina University; Kathleen Welshimer, PhD, MPH, Department of Health Education, Southern Illinois University Carbondale er2-critical thinking: a necessary skill for leadership (Chapter Development Session; All Welcome) Moderator: Karen Spiller, Boston Collaborative for Food and Fitness Room: Molly Brown Presenter: Mike Kallet, HeadScratchers 7:00 am – 8:15 am SOPHE Faculty Community of Practice Room: Colorado G-H 7:00 am – 8:15 am SOPHE Student/New Professional Community of Practice Room: Colorado I-J 7:00 am – 8:15 am SOPHE Publications Committee Meeting Room: Denver 2 7:00 am – 8:15 am SOPHE 2011 Mid Year Meeting Planning Committee Meeting Room: Denver 1 7:00 am – 2:00 pm Resource Room, Career Center & Posters Room: Colorado A-D 7:30 am – 8:15 am NEW! Poster Promenade Room: Colorado A-D Moderators: Darigg C. Brown, PhD, MPH, ORISE Post-Doctoral Research Fellow, Centers for Disease Control & Prevention; Kristina Davis, MS, MPH, CHES, Prevention Science Fellow, Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, US Department of Health & Human Services; Yewande Sofolahan, BS Pennsylvania University concurrent sessions d Moderator: David Sleet, PhD, FASHA, Centers for Disease Control & Prevention Room: Colorado I-J Adolescent Dating Violence: a National Assessment of School Counselor’s Practices Presenter: Jagdish Khubchandani, PhD (c), MD, MPH, CHES, University of Toledo, Department of Health and Rehabilitation Alcohol-Related Problems and Suicidal Behavior Among College Students: Belongingness and Burdensomeness as Potential Mediators Presenter: Dorian Lamis, PhD (c), MA, University of South Carolina Grounds for Change: How Transportation-Related Analysis as Part of a Health Impact Assessment Can Be Used to Advance the Healthiest Cap and Trade Program Presenter: Tina Yuen, PharmD, MPH, MCP (c) University of California Berkeley Powerplay Curriculum Project Presenter: Laura L. Colbert, MPH(c), Emory University d ii – healthy aging: living long, living well Moderator: Kay Deaner, MEd, RN, CHES Room: Mattie Silks Examining the Relationship Between the Health Literacy and Health-Related Outcomes in an Older Cohort-Study Population Presenter: Melissa Valerio, PhD, MPH, Assistant Professor, University of Michigan SPH - HBHE Do Well, Be Well Con Diabetes: a Pilot Study of a Type-2 Diabetes SelfManagement Education Program for Hispanic/Latino Rural Older Adults Presenter: Ninfa Purcell, PhD, CHES, Assistant Professor/Health Specialists, Family Development and Resource Management, Texas A&M University The Impact of Health Beliefs and Demographic Characteristics on Breast Cancer Screening Practices Among Women Age 55 and Older Presenter: Peggy Johnson, MPH, Assistant Professor, School of Health Administration, Texas State University d iii – scaling new heights in health education leadership: revisiting our past to inform our future Moderator: John P. Allegrante, PhD, Professor and Deputy Provost, Teachers College, Columbia University Room: Colorado E-F Scaling New Heights in Health Education Leadership: Revisiting Our Past to Inform Our Future Presenter: John P. Allegrante, PhD, Professor and Deputy Provost, Teachers College, Columbia University; Emily Tyler, MPH, CHES, Greesboro, NC for Harriet Hylton Barr; David A. Sleet, PhD, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, for Martin Fishbein; David S. Sobel, MD, MPH, Kaiser Permanente Northern California, Oakland, CA, for Laura Keranen d iv– food for thought: examining connections between nutrtion and disease prevention Moderator: Kristina Davis, MS, MPH, CHES, Prevention Science Fellow, Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, US Department of Health & Human Services Room: Molly Brown Reducing the Prevalence of Obesity Among Low Income Adults in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Presenter: Neeti Doshi, BA, Medical student, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 11 ✯ Detailed Schedule Partnership for Success: Food Bank and Community Coalition Team Up to Provide Healthy Snacks for Low-Income Kids Presenters: Sarah Morales, MS, RD, Wellness Dietitian, Poudre Valley Health System. Nutrition Security: Approaching Food-related Health Issues Differently Using an Ecological Analysis with Political Economy and Social Cognitive Theories Presenter: Robin Haguewood, BA, MPH Candidate, Department of Health Education, San Francisco State University Georgia Stroke & Heart Attack Presenter: Marylen Rimando, MPH, CHES, PhD Candidate, University of Georgia Department of Health Promotion and Behavior d v– innovative approaches to health communication: a look at photovoice & digital storytelling Moderator: Mary Nacionales, MPH, MBA, CHES, Cancer Prevention Institute of California Room: Colorado G-H Photovoice: From Image to Community and Policy Action Presenter: J. Elaine Borton, MPH, Sage Health Consulting, LLC. ✯ 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm plenary session v Moderator: Kathleen Roe, DrPH, MPH, San Jose State University Room: Colorado E-F Reaching the Healthy People Summit: Elevating Health Education Prominence in US Public Health Policy and Practice Presenters: Lawrence W. Green, DrPH, University of San Francisco Respondents: Collins Airhihenbuwa, PhD, MPH, Penn State University; Patricia Mullen, MPH, DrPH, The University of Texas School of Public Health, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston 2:00 pm – 2:15 pm concluding remarks Presenter: Dan Perales, DrPH, 2010-2011, SOPHE President, San Jose State University Room: Colorado E-F 2:15 pm – 3:30 pm Posters, Resource Room Break Down 2:30 pm – 3:30 pm the national prevention & health promotion strategy: listening session Promoting and Evaluating Community Change Using Photovoice: Lessons Learned from Kaiser Permanente’s Community Health Initiative Presenter: Pamela Schwartz, MPH, Director, Program Evaluation, Kaiser Permanente Moderator: Rob Simmons, DrPH, CPH, Thomas Jefferson University Presenters: Kathleen A. Ethier, PhD and Corinne M. Graffunder, DrPH, MPH, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Room: Colorado E-F Using Photovoice to Explore Health Concerns in Female Asian-indian College Students Women Presenter: Cheryl Cooper, PhD, RN, Assistant Professor, College of Health Sciences, The University of Texas at Tyler SABPAC Meeting Room: Matchless 9:45 am – 10:00 am Break Room: Colorado A-D 2:30 pm – 5:00 pm 2:30 pm – 5:00 pm SOPHE Executive Board Meeting Room: Denver 2 2:30 pm – 5:00 pm SOPHE Health Equity Grant Meeting Room: Mattie Silks 10:00 am – 10:45 am plenary session iii Moderator: Dan Perales, DrPH, MPH, San Jose State University Room: Colorado E-F Presentation of Elizabeth Fries Health Education Award – Presenter: Viktor Bovbjerg, PhD, Board of Directors, James F. and Sarah T. Fries Foundation Elizabeth Fries Health Education Award and Lecture Conquering Cancer in the 21st Century Presenter: John Seffrin, PhD, American Cancer Society 10:45 am – 11:30 am plenary session iv Moderator: Dan Perales, DrPH, MPH, San Jose State University Room: Colorado E-F Presentation of SOPHE 2010 Honorary Fellow Award Presenter: Diane Allensworth, PhD, 2009-2010 SOPHE President SOPHE 2010 Honorary Fellow Lecture – Implementation Disorders: Diagnosis and Treatment Presenter: David S. Sobel, MD, MPH, Kaiser Permanente Northern California 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm Wiley/Jossey-Bass Reception (By Invitation) Room: Molly Brown 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm SOPHE Awards Ceremony (By Ticket) Location: Denver Art Museum 9:00 pm – 10:00 pm Awards AfterGlow (Optional) Location: Denver Art Museum sunday | nov 7 9:00 am – 10:30 am National SOPHE Past Presidents Breakfast Room: Mattie Silks 9:00 am – 11:00 am Health Promotion Practice Editorial Breakfast Room: Molly Brown 10:30 am – 12:30 pm National SOPHE Old & New Executive Boards Room: Mattie Silks 11:30 am – 11:45 am 1:00 pm – 5:00 pm 11:45 am – 12:45 pm monday | nov 8 Minority Communities Advisory Committee Room: Silverton Lunch Pick-up Room: Central Registration Area SOPHE All Member Business Meeting & Luncheon Room: Colorado G-J 12 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 12:00 pm – 2:00 pm Health Education & Behavior Editorial Luncheon The Corner Office Restaurant + Martini Bar ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ thursday | november 4 thursday | november 4 pre-conference skill-building workshop i thur / nov 4 / 1:00 pm – 5:00 pm / Room: Molly Brown Evaluation: A Key Tool to the Trade Richard Windsor, Ms, PhD, MPH, George Washington University School of Public Health The objective of almost all Health Promotion-Disease Prevention (HPDP) Programs (and proposals) is to produce data/insight about the “effectiveness” of a new policy, intervention, and/or evidenced based practice(s) for a specific health problem, population at risk, and practice setting. This Workshop will provide a synthesis of salient conceptual, methodological, and design issues routinely faced by professionals in practice. Case material from multiple, peer reviewed/funded proposals and completed Process, Impact, and Cost-Effectiveness Evaluations will be presented. Published evaluations discussed in Professor Windsor’s textbook: “Evaluation of Health Promotion-Disease Prevention Programs; Improving Population Health Through Evidenced Based Professional Practice, 4th Edition” will be used to provide specific examples about how on-going public health programs can select and apply rigorous methods. Textbook included in workshop fee. pre-conference skill-building workshop ii thur / nov 4 / 2:00 pm – 5:00 pm / Room: Matchless The Spirit of Health Resides in the People of the Land: Healing Our Community community); 5) knowledge of the issue, and 6) resources within the community available for addressing the issue. The result of a Community Readiness assessment is a “community diagnostic” for intervention. pre-conference skill-building workshop iii thur / nov 4 / 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm / Room: Molly Brown Is Your Health Web Site Easy to Use? Strategies for Improving Health Literacy and the Web Xanthi Scrimgeour, MHEd, CHES, CommunicateHealth, Inc., Stacy Robinson, MPH, CHES, CommunicateHealth, Inc. Today, more Americans are turning to the Internet for health information than ever before. In response, there is growing demand for accurate, understandable, and appropriate health content to meet consumers’ evolving information needs. However, many Americans do not have the skills they need to obtain, interpret, and use health information effectively. During this interactive workshop, participants will discuss the practical implications and challenges of creating online health content for the roughly 93 million adults in the United States with limited health literacy skills. We will review best practices from the fields of usability, health literacy, and user-centered design and discuss their significance for health promotion. We will explore the ways in which our communication skills as health educators can improve the health literacy of our priority populations. The workshop will focus on specific techniques for improving health literacy through Web site design, navigation, and content. pre-conference skill-building workshop iv thur / nov 4 / 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm / Room: Denver 3 Pamela Jumper-Thurman, MA, PhD, Senior Research Scientist/ScholarEthnic Studies at Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, Research Supervisor- Community Readiness and HIV/AIDS Capacity Building supplemented by Centers for Disease Control; Martha A. Burnside, BA, National Center for Community Readiness, Ethnic Studies Department, Colorado State University The Future is in Your Hands: Key Components of Professional Preparation and Success Participants will gain an understanding of Native American beliefs, values and traditions that can influence the population’s health outcomes. Discussions will focus on cultural competencies and responsibilities of health education specialists to be knowledgeable and equipped with strategies to work effectively within Native American communities. Whether you are a student considering where you are headed in the future, a new professional wondering how to be a successful health educator, or a veteran in the field looking to expand your horizons, this workshop is for you. Many individuals enter the field of public health education and health promotion with great dreams and aspirations. However, taking the next step – be it graduate level study, gaining work-related experience, or finding that dream job – can be quite overwhelming. The purpose of this workshop is to give participants the opportunity to learn more about the key components of professional preparation and success. Questions related to discovering the right career path, understanding potential settings for employment, and determining the next steps will be discussed. Current health professionals representing a variety of fields will be on hand to share their perspectives related to the job search process, roles and responsibilities within their particular career, deciding if a graduate program is the right choice, and the importance of networking. Participants will be given the opportunity to engage in self-reflective and hands-on activities including: resume building, interviewing with confidence, and fostering a successful career. This session will introduce an effective health behavior change model used within Native communities. The Community Readiness Model (CRM) is a nine stage, multi-dimensional model to facilitate community change. The model was developed 17 years ago by the research staff at the Tri-Ethnic Center at Colorado State University. Presenting at this workshop will be two of the original developers of the CRM. The model is community-specific and issue specific and is designed to build cooperation among systems and individuals. The Community Readiness model has been used in Native communities throughout the United States and Canada. It has been used for mobilizing a community to develop intervention strategies for prevention of HIV/AIDS, drug and alcohol use, intimate partner violence, suicide, and many other topics. When applied to prevention of a social concern, community readiness determines and guides the timing for each step of efforts aimed at changing community norms, behaviors and attitudes. It utilizes key respondent interviews to determine readiness based on six dimensions: 1) local programs currently existing that address your issue; 2) community knowledge of existing efforts; 3) involvement of leadership; 4) community climate (overall “energy” of the Melinda Ickes, MEd, PhD University of Kentucky & SOPHE Student Trustee; Kelli McCormack Brown, PhD, Associate Dean & Professor, University of Florida; and Robert McDermott, PhD, Professor, University of South Florida pre-conference skill-building workshop v thur / nov 4 / 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm / Room: Gold Coin SABPAC 101: For Faculty and Practitioners Ellen M. Capwell, PhD, CHES, Co-chair, SABPAC and Professor, Department of Health and Sport Science, Otterbein College s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 13 ✯ Conference Abstracts thursday | november 4 & friday | november 5 Do you want to improve the pipeline of the future health education workforce? Do you care about quality assurance in higher education? This interactive workshop will describe the role of the SOPHE/AAHE Baccalaureate Approval Committee (SABPAC) in assuring the quality of professional preparation programs in health education, including the committee’s purpose, composition, organization and accountability. It will also explain the major steps in SABPAC’s approval process. Find out how you can prepare your institution for SABPAC review and/or how to join a SABPAC site review team and earn CHES credits. SABPAC Manual included in workshop fee. friday | november 5 presidential address fri / nov 5 / 8:45 am – 9:15 am / Room: Colorado E-F Addressing the Social Determinants of Health A Focus on Children and Youth Diane Allensworth, PhD, 2009-2010 SOPHE President and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Only recently have the specific health disparities experienced by children and youth and the long-lasting consequences become the focus of research. Among the various determinants of youth health disparities are poverty, unequal access to health care, poor environmental conditions, and educational inequities. Poor and minority children have more health problems and less access to health care than their higher SES cohorts. Having more health problems leads to more absenteeism K-12 which in turn can effect achievement. Achieving a high school diploma and a college degree is an acknowledged route out of poverty. However that route is blocked for many poor and minority students. The educational level that one attains is a significant determinant of one’s earning potential and health. Those who learn more earn more money have better health status. Those who do not attain a high school diploma on average live six to nine years less than those who do graduate from high school. Further, their children also experience poorer health and the cycle repeats. Currently, three fourths of minority students attend high poverty/high minority schools while only one third of whites attend high poverty/high minority schools. Many high poverty/high minority schools are in inadequate, rundown facilities; receive lower per-pupil spending allocations; have less credentialed and qualified teachers; experience higher teacher turnover; have larger class sizes; have less technology-assisted instruction; and lack school safety. Consequently, every school day over seven thousand students drop out of school each year. High school drop outs are more likely to rely on government health care, use public services such as food stamps or housing assistance and are less likely to raise healthier, well-educated children. This presentation will explore what health educators can do individually and collectively as SOPHE members to address the health and educational challenges facing our most vulnerable children. ✯ plenary session i fri / nov 5 / 9:15 am – 10:00 am / Room: Colorado E-F Healthy People Objectives for the Nation: Three Decades of Achievement J. Michael McGinnis, MD, MPP, Institute of Medicine In 1979, Healthy People: The Surgeon General’s Report on Health Promotion and Disease Prevention provided national goals for reducing premature deaths and preserving independence for older adults. In 1980, another report, Promoting Health/Preventing Disease: Objectives for the Nation, set forth 226 targeted health objectives for the Nation to achieve over the next 10 years. This document was followed by Healthy People 2000: National Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Objectives, and Healthy People 2010: Understanding and Improving Health. As we stand on the threshold of the next decade’s set of national health objectives, this presentation will describe how the goals have evolved over the years in relation to population health and challenges and opportunities for improving the quantity and quality of life. concurrent sessions a fri / nov 5 / 10:30 am – 11:45 am concurrent session a1 clearing the smoke: looking back, looking forward at healthy people objectives Room: Colorado E-F The Healthy People 2010 Tobacco Use Chapter: Looking Back Ralph S. Caraballo, PhD, MPH, Office on Smoking and Health, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Terry Pechacek, PhD, Associate Director for Science,Office on Smoking and Health, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Tobacco use is the leading cause of preventable death and disease in the Nation and is a major risk factor for heart disease, stroke, lung cancer, and chronic lung diseases. Smoking exacts a toll of 443,000 deaths each year. Healthy People 2010 is a statement of national health objectives designed to identify the most significant preventable threats to health and to establish national goals to reduce these threats. Communities can, and often do, implement the interventions that bring the Nation closer to achieving these objectives. Healthy People 2010: Focus Area 27 – Tobacco Use is one of the leading health indicators used to measure the health of the Nation. As the Nation approaches the end of 2010, tobacco use objectives were examined to determine what progress has been made and what challenge areas remain for reducing, and ultimately, ending the tobacco use epidemic. Most objectives are improving or remaining the same. Of the objectives and subobjectives, 5 have met or exceeded their target, 23 are moving toward the target, 10 are showing little or no change, and 2 are moving away from the target. While significant progress is being made towards reaching the Healthy People 2010 objectives, comprehensive programs are needed to end the tobacco epidemic. If states fully invested in comprehensive tobacco control and prevention at CDC recommended levels for 5 years, there would be an estimated 5 million fewer smokers. As a result, hundreds of thousands of premature tobacco related deaths would be prevented. 14 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ friday | november 5 A Decade of Progress: Tobacco Control in Mississippi Roy Hart, MPH, CHES, Director, Office of Tobacco Control, Mississippi State Department of Health introduction: During the Healthy People 2010 decade, Mississippi made substantial progress in all four Healthy People 2010 tobacco priority areas: tobacco use in population groups, cessation and treatment, exposure to secondhand smoke, and social and environmental changes. in the beginning: The Mississippi Attorney General Mike Moore filed the first lawsuit against 13 tobacco companies; making Mississippi the first state to insist that cigarette manufacturers reimburse the state for costs it incurred treating smoking-related illnesses. This resulted in a $4.1 billion settlement for Mississippi and eventually a Master Settlement Agreement for 46 states. changing the culture: A Court-ordered tobacco prevention and control program was implemented to reduce youth tobacco use. The Partnership for a Healthy Mississippi was established in 1998 as a pilot program that utilized CDC’s Best Practices for Tobacco Control Programs to develop program components which were overseen by a Board of Directors, including a State Health Officer. At the conclusion of the pilot program, the Partnership for a Healthy Mississippi began receiving $20 million annually to implement tobacco prevention and control programs which included: community coalitions, youth programs, school programs, law enforcement, counter marketing, and surveillance and evaluation. policy: In 2000 a tobacco-free school law was enacted. The law prohibits the use and possession of tobacco by students and adults on any educational property. From 2002 to present thirty-three municipalities have enacted comprehensive smoke free air ordinances. In 2009 excise tax on cigarettes was raised from $.18 to $.68. Most recently, in 2010 youth sporting events law was enacted. The law prohibits smoking at organized youth sporting events. funding challenges: Mississippi Governor, the Mississippi Healthcare Trust Fund, and Medicaid filed a lawsuit to rescind the court order that granted the allotment to the Partnership for a Healthy Mississippi. The courts ruled in favor of the Governor and the allotments to the Partnership were directed to the Mississippi Healthcare Trust Fund. mississippi state department of health oversight: During the 2007 Mississippi Legislative Session legislation was passed creating the Office of Tobacco Control within the Mississippi State Department of Health. This required the establishment of the Mississippi Tobacco Control Advisory Council to advise the MSDH on the development and implementation of the program. Eight million dollars was then appropriated to MSDH for tobacco control. In January 2008, the MSDH Office of Tobacco Control awarded funds for the following programs: Mississippi tobacco-free coalitions, targeted interventions, youth programs, cessation interventions, health communications, surveillance and evaluation. results: From 1999 to 2009, the rate of current cigarette use among Mississippi youth dropped nearly 12% from 31.5% to 19.6%. Put It Out Rockland: A County Health Department’s Collaborative Efforts to Surpass the Healthy People 2010 Tobacco Goals Lisa Lieberman, PhD, CHES, Department of Health and Nutrition Sciences, Montclair State University, Una Diffley, MPH, Rockland County Department of Health; Sandy King, MPH, Rockland County Department of Health; Shelley Chanler, MA, CHES, Rockland County Department of Health; Joan Facelle, MD, MPH, County of Rockland, NY Rockland County, NY utilized sustained government funding for its comprehensive tobacco program over the past decade. Master Settlement Funds, regular county revenues, and funding from the NYS Tobacco Control Program were used by the Department of Health to create a comprehensive and sustained program of cessation, prevention, and policy, built upon ongoing evaluation, logic models and theory. The Transtheoretical Model underlied the cessation program’s efforts to reach smokers at their stage of readiness and provide tailored NRT dosing. Social Cognitive Theory and the Health Belief Model were critical in designing media and direct messages to address smoking in homes and cars, and generate support for strong indoor and outdoor air policies. The program had three overarching objectives: reduce the adult smoking rate to 12%; reduce the percent of teens who take up smoking by 20%; and reduce exposure to second-hand smoke by 20%. Interventions were planned and carried out by the health department: The award winning PIOR cessation program was offered in collaboration with schools, businesses, non-profit agencies, and health care institutions; Schools supported the Reality Check youth empowerment initiative and consistent tobacco policies; Technical assistance was provided to health care providers to help their patients quit; Schools, Headstart programs, and health care providers promoted the EPA’s second-hand smoke campaign; the county legislature and municipalities promoted strong indoor and outdoor air policies, such as restricting smoking in cars with minors, and smoke-free parks and playgrounds. Ongoing evaluation included: an annual countywide telephone survey, and data from the annual NYS BRFSS; longitudinal evaluation of the effectiveness of the cessation program; data from the school-based PRIDE survey; and continuous process evaluation of all activities. The adult tobacco use rate dropped from 16% in 2003 to 9.7% in 2009, and demonstrated diminishing differences in tobacco use across various age, ethnic, and gender groups. Teenage use declined by 17%, and the percent of homes in which smoking is allowed declined by 27%. The PIOR cessation program has served over 1000 smokers, with a one year quit rate of 33%. New efforts based on process and outcome evaluation efforts resulted in the creation of a one-on-one counseling version of the cessation program. The cost per capita of tobacco prevention and cessation in Rockland was $4.54. The Healthy People 2020 Tobacco Use Chapter: Looking Forward Terry Pechacek, PhD, Associate Director for Science, Office on Smoking and Health, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services The burden of tobacco use results in death, disease, and high financial costs. In the United States, tobacco use is the leading preventable cause of death and disease. Smoking and exposure to secondhand smoke cause an estimated 443,000 deaths each year. An estimated 8.6 million U.S. residents have a serious illness caused by smoking. Smoking costs $96 billion in medical costs and $97 million in lost productivity each year. To address this burden, the CDC’s Office on Smoking and Health is the leading federal agency for comprehensive tobacco prevention and control. It is also the lead agency for the national objectives on tobacco use for Healthy People. Healthy People 2020 is a set of science-based health objectives for the nation to achieve over the coming decade. It identifies areas of significant risk to our nation’s health and sets targets to reduce these risks. The objectives are then used by many different people, states, communities, and organizations to develop programs to improve health. The tobacco chapter for Healthy People 2020 has 21 objectives divided into four focus areas: Tobacco Use, Health Systems Changes, Social and Environmental Changes, and Products. To crosswalk the objectives from 2010 to 2020, objectives were divided into the following categories: s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 15 ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ friday | november 5 •Four objectives were retained as is from Healthy People 2010, • Twelve objectives were retained but modified from Healthy People 2010, • One objective moved from another Healthy People topic area, • Four objectives were created new for Healthy People 2020, and • Eight objectives were archived from Healthy People 2010. The selection process for Healthy People 2020 looked at the status of the 2010 objectives and tobacco use prevention and control trends. The strength of Healthy People is directly tied to its collaborative process. The development process utilized public and stakeholder input. It also drew on the expertise of scientists in each subject matter area to ensure that Healthy People 2020 addressed the significant risk factors and determinants of health and the diseases that affect communities in the United States. While significant progress was made towards reaching the Healthy People 2010 objective targets, more aggressive efforts are needed to end the tobacco epidemic in the future. If every state were to fully fund and implement a comprehensive tobacco control program, hundreds of thousands of premature tobacco related deaths would be prevented. Room: Colorado I-J innovative uses of health education & promotion theory The Use of the Expanded Model of the Theory of Planned Behavior as a Guide in the Development of an Intervention Promoting Mammography Screening Among American Indian (AI) Women in Oklahoma. Tolma Eleni, PhD, University of Oklahoma Health Science Center; Valerie Skaggs, PhD, University of Oklahoma Health Science Center; Robert Hamm, PhD, University of Oklahoma Health Science Center; Chasity Battertom, MHA, University of Oklahoma Health Science Center background: Despite efforts to promote breast cancer screening, the number of Oklahoman women who died from breast cancer during the last two decades did not substantially change, and women of ethnic minorities were disproportionally under-screened. The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between personal beliefs and the decision to get a future mammogram. The study took place at a tribal clinic in Oklahoma. theoretical framework: An expanded theoretical framework of the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) was used which included external to the model constructs relevant to mammography screening (i.e. selfefficacy, perceived susceptibility to breast cancer, fatalism) and to the AI culture (i.e. cultural norms). Hypothesis: All cognitive constructs (i.e. TPB constructs and those external to the model) will be associated with the intention and receipt of future mammography screening of AI women. methods: Through the use of qualitative and quantitative formative research, the Women’s Health Survey (WHS) was developed and then administered to a random sample of 162 women. The factor and reliability analyses yielded 15 constructs/scales which were proven to be reliable. The statistical analysis consisted of univariate and bivariate analysis and multivariate analysis (ANOVA). Receipt of mammogram was assessed via record review. Results: A total of 162 women (mean age: 50, 35% with an annual income below $15,000, and 59% with private health insurance) participated in the study. Sixty percent of the women intended to get a mammogram within the next 6 months; among those only 48% actually got one. Bivariate data analysis results showed that intention was associated with future mammography. Among the TPB constructs, subjective norms-physicians and subjective soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ conclusion: The results of this study support the above hypothesis and thus, in the development of theory-based interventions to promote mammography screening among AI women the expanded TPB can be used as a guiding model. Implications for practice: The results indicate that emphasis should be in the promotion of subjective norms related to the physician, and to social modeling. Interestingly enough, cultural norms did not seem to play a major role in the decision-making process to get a future screening mammogram Health Promotion Agenda Setting: Promising Innovative Advocacy and Policy Development for Health Promotion Practitioners Charles T. Kozel, PhD, MPH, CHES, New Mexico State University; Anne P. Hubbell, PhD, New Mexico State University; Michael T. Hatcher, DrPH, MPH, Toxicology and Environmental Medicine, ATSDR; Frank G. Pe’rez, PhD, University of Texas at El Paso; Sharon Thompson, PhD, CHES, University of Texas at El Paso concurrent session a2 16 norms-family were highly correlated with intention, followed by negative attitude, perceived behavioral control-barriers, positive attitude, and perceived behavioral control-facilitators. Among the external to the TPB variables, social modeling was the most highly correlated construct with intention. Based on the ANOVA results, social modeling was strongly associated with intention, followed by subjective norms-physician. n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 Health promotion practitioners must continuously address health promotion issues using the most innovative strategies and research. Agenda-setting theory postulates that mass media do not determine what people think but do influence what they talk about. Agenda-setting offers understanding of how issues move from relative unimportance to the forefront of supportive action among the media, public, and policymakers. Health Promotion Agenda-Setting (HPA-S), a subset of agenda-setting research, has identified four factors that influence health promotion policy agendas. These factors are characteristics of agendasetters, HPA-S design and mechanism factors, and mass media content . HPA-S provides practitioners a theoretical framework to guide environmental change and achieve sustainable courses of practice for advocacy, and policy development. HPA-S is used to specify and prioritize health problems and alternative solutions by influencing the efficacy of the above factors in policy development. The crucial link between agendasetting and processes of establishing effective legislation, policy, and programs has been researched. However, many health promotion practitioners neither understand what agenda setting is, nor how to apply it to advocacy and policy development. An interdisciplinary bi-national research team examined how public health agendas are determined within the Paso del Norte region of the U.S.-Mexico border. HPA-S findings offer practitioners professional development opportunities to gain new knowledge, skills, and methods to reshape and strengthen health promotion advocacy and policy development practices. This research identifies knowledge and cultural gaps in how mass media, public health and policy agendas foster innovative health advocacy and policy development opportunities to eliminate health disparities. Key words: Advocacy and Policy Development Innovation through health promotion research for promising health promotion practice to eliminate health disparities. Acknowledgement The project described was supported by a grant from the Paso del Norte Health Foundation through the Center for Border Health Research located in the U.S.-Mexico border region. Its contents are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessary represent the official views of the Paso del Norte Health Foundation or the Center for Border Health Research. ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ friday | november 5 When Politics and Public Health Collide: How Can Policy Theory Improve Public Health Advocacy? Tyler Watson, MPH, CHES, Health Science/Brigham Young University-Idaho This presentation explores how dominant policy theory should be used the advance public policies by using an indoor smoking ban as a case study. background: Public health officials are trained in rational-scientific methods. The importance of clear goals, procedures and rigorous research methodologies in such official’s formal training influences how these officials analyze problems, develop policy options, and ultimately promote a favored policy. Indeed, discussion of smoking by health advocates has traditionally been dominated by the rational model of decision making which includes policy ideas like increased taxation, health care coverage for tobacco cessation programs, tobacco education programs and indoor clean air acts (Franks et. Al, 2007). Health officials press forward with convincing scientific evidence that smoking tobacco is harmful to a person’s body and that all efforts should be employed to stop the practice. But increasingly there is evidence that such rational appeals do not work. Lindstrom (2008) argues about the increased international use of labeling on cigarette packages, “But such warnings don’t work. Worldwide people continue to inhale 5.7 trillion cigarettes annually –a figure that doesn’t even take into account duty-free or black-market cigarettes.” theoretical basis: Yet, increasingly, literature in political science and public policy argues that policy formulation and adoption is far from a rational process. That is, policies are adopted not because of their rational appeal but rather because they have an emotional appeal (Stone, 2002), a favorable image (Baumgartner and Jones, 1994), or because they meet the policy beliefs and power interests of various political actors (Sabatier and Jenkins-Smith). In this presentation, different policy theories are explored by empirically examining a case study of smoking bans in the Midwest of the United States. methods: A content analysis of newspaper articles was conducted to evaluate the arguments for and against an indoor smoking ban and in order to identify the groups advocating for each policy position. The public health coalition eventually “won” the policy debate and an indoor smoking policy was passed. Implications for enhanced practice: Increasingly, public health professionals must engage in political advocacy. Just as behavior intervention specialists would never approach programming without using behavior theory, policy advocates should understand policy theory in order to be more effective change agents. This presentation will explain how to utilize policy theory to advance public health policy. Theory in Practice: Is Self-Efficacy Different in Minority Children? Melvena Wilson, DrPH, MPH, CHES, Florida A & M University; Saleh Rahman, MBBS, PhD, MPH, Florida A & M University Overweightness in childhood is a serious public health concern. Approximately 31% of 6- to 19-year-old children in the United States are overweight or at risk of overweight, as defined by a Body Mass Index (BMI) at or above the 85th percentile. Avoiding sedentary behavior may be a key in fighting the obesity epidemic. The purpose of this study was to explore the associations among those variables and how they in turn influence overweightness among African American children. Guided by the Social Cognitive Theory, this study hypothesized that perceived parental support influences youth self-efficacy related to sedentary behavior avoidance, and would be inversely associated with child’s BMI. This study also explored the relationship among self-efficacy and self-reported sedentary behavior, and hypothesized that there would be an association between perceived parental supports, self-efficacy, selfreported sedentary behavior avoidance and overweightness as reported body mass index (BMI) percentile. methods: A primary data analysis was done on data collected by Dr. Wilson in Leon County Schools and Gadsden County Schools among 4th- 8th graders. Data from US Census Bureau were combined with this data for further analysis on geo-location. results/conclusions: The multinomial regression model, at the 95th percentile (overweight category) self-efficacy was moderately significant (AOR=1.40; CI=1.01-1.93). County was significant (AOR=1.68; CI=1.08-2.61), Gender was also significant (COR=1.41; CI=1.00-2.00), enrollment in the free/reduce lunch program was significant (AOR=0.61; CI=0.39-0.93). Indicating that those participants who had increased perceived self-efficacy were approximately 1.4 times more likely to be overweight than their counterparts, and those who lived in Gadsden County were 1.7 times more likely to be overweight. Finally, that those enrolled in the free/reduced lunch program were 7% less likely to be overweight than their normal counterparts. These findings imply that further research with a sample that is predominantly minority need to be conducted. Given the lack of association with self-efficacy, another theoretical model may offer a better fit, including a larger focus on cultural and environmental variables. The study findings also highlight the importance of possible differences among African American children and White children in perceived self-efficacy, as well as difference among urban and rural overweightness. concurrent session a3 Room: Denver 5-6 electronic media: new avenues for reaching healthy people goals Increasing the Quality of Health Web Sites: An Action Agenda Stacy Robison, MPH, CHES, CommunicateHealth, Inc.; Sandra Williams Hilfiker, MA, Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, USDHHS; Sean Arayasirikul, MSPH, CHES, Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, USDHHS; Xanthi Scrimgeour, MHEd, CommunicateHealth, Inc. Health communication and Health IT is a cross-cutting topic in Healthy People 2020. This decade, health IT objectives have increased in number and scope to reflect the expanding role of health IT in public health. Healthy People 2020 includes an objective to increase the proportion of quality, health-related Web sites, and more specifically, to increase the proportion of health-related Web sites that follow established usability principles. To assist health professionals in meeting this objective, the Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion (ODPHP), U.S. Office of Health and Human Services, has published Health Literacy Online: A Guide to Creating Easy to Use Health Web Sites. The guide synthesizes lessons learned from ODPHP’s original research with more than 700 Web users, most of whom had limited literacy skills and limited experience using the Web. This presentation will discuss the implications of the Healthy People objective on Web site quality and review specific strategies for creating understandable, actionable health Web sites that adhere to established principles of usability and good Web design. Pre-conceived Expectations not Always Predictive of Actual Ability: E-health Literacy Skills among College Students. Michael Stellefson, PhD, University of Florida; Bruce Hanik, MS, Texas A&M University; J. Don Chaney, PhD, CHES, University of Florida; Beth Chaney, PhD, CHES, University of Florida Innovations in health communication and education have brought about the utilization of the internet to transmit health information to a wide variety of audiences. E-health is the emerging field intersecting s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 17 ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ friday | november 5 health informatics, public health, health services, health education, and information transmission processes, all blended together to facilitate the widespread dissemination of relevant public health information. The synergy among these fields is evidenced primarily through the use of the internet and other related technologies to ultimately improve health outcomes. College students generally have easy access to health information on the internet and feel comfortable using the internet; therefore, they are often thought to be adept consumers of e-health information. There is important research which has been conducted investigating perceived and actual “e-health literacy” among college students which somewhat contradicts this pre-conceived expectation. E-health literacy has been defined as the ability of individuals to seek, find, understand, and appraise health information from electronic sources and apply such information to addressing or solving a particular health problem. The purpose of this presentation will be to highlight a literature review done to evaluate the results of existing research on e-health literacy among college students. This review suggests that pervasive internet access and usage among college students have not necessarily translated into an ability to discern quality health information on the web. Studies indicate that many students lack competencies which limit their ability to utilize electronic resources to obtain quality health information. Interestingly, however, students’ self-ratings of their own e-health literacy skills tend to be quite high, even though these perceptions may not be accurate predictors of their actual e-health information competencies. In addition, the frequency of college students attempting to use the internet to obtain health-related information was not as prevalent as what might be expected. Moreover, there is significant room for improving college students’ ability to obtain and evaluate electronic health information. These findings present an important opportunity to build e-health information competencies among college-age students, especially in health education. Future e-health educators should be equipped with planned learning experiences contained within professional preparation programs, given that this skill set is becoming a core element within the overall health education field. Suggestions for future coursework dedicated to e-health literacy will be proposed based on the findings of this literature review. Incorporating Social Media into a Health Education Campaign: Lessons from Confess! Cervical Cancer Awareness Campaign. Jessica Albeita, MPH, Research Administration and Community Outreach, Prevent Cancer Foundation; Karen J. Peterson, PhD, Prevent Cancer Foundation; Kristina Hunken, MA, Prevent Cancer Foundation; Apoorva Sabnis Stull, MA, National Committee for Quality Assurance; Erica Childs Warner, MPH, Prevent Cancer Foundation With a grant from the Fund to End Cervical Cancer, the Prevent Cancer Foundation developed an interactive cervical cancer education and awareness campaign. Launched in July 2009 at http://confess.preventcancer.org, the Confess! Cervical Cancer Awareness Campaign includes a Web site geared toward women ages 20 – 29 and a tool that provides tailored information to a variety of age groups seeking information about cervical cancer prevention and early detection, as well as an opportunity to express behavioral intention supportive of early detection of cervical cancer. Confess is similar to other “consciousness raising” media campaigns. Confess is solely Web-based, includes very little paid media and incorporates a significant amount of social marketing via Twitter and Facebook. This presentation will examine the Confess campaign from July to December 2009. Over these six months, Confess had over 7,325 page views, including 6,376 unique page views. Visitors taking action on the site resulted in 323 notes posted and 235 pledges to get screened. Individuals spent an average of 2:53 minutes viewing the Confess page. Social marketing was added to Confess in August 2009 with two Twitter accounts, @weconfess and @6kpledge2screen. @we- 18 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 confess tweeted (posted messages) 115 times and had 54 followers and @6kpledge2screen tweeted 105 times and had 46 followers. A Confess Fan Page was started on Facebook with some daily advertising. The Confess Fan Page sent out 52 messages and had 191 fans. Many lessons were learned during this period from both successes and failures. The lessons include: 1) Use a multi-disciplinary team approach to development; 2) Focus-test content and format with your core audience, even if it isn’t in your budget; 3) Stretch your dollars by using strategically placed Web ads that specifically target your key audience; 4) In addition to using conventional media outlets, reach out to Web-based outlets for earned media, including bloggers, popular tweeters and magazines; 5) Safeguard the quality of information shared and consistency of the tone and voice used to speak with and engage your audience; and 6) Understand that social marketing takes a lot of time! We consider Confess to be a success and are planning to dedicate more resources to this campaign and address some of these lessons learned. Health Education and the Electronic Health Information Exchange Revolution. Authors: William Livingood, PhD, Duval County Health Department Abstract: Major resources are being dedicated to electronic health records (ehr) and information exchange (ehie) following enactment of the ARRA. “Meaningful Use” of electronic health record systems requiring ehie is a major foundation of health care reform and a critical strategy for improved effectiveness and quality of health care as well as reduced costs and increased efficiency. Despite the strong rationale for ehie systems and major commitments of dedicated resources, wide scale adoption faces many barriers. Fragmentation and competition at virtually all levels present major challenges to coordination and collaboration necessary for the development of effective ehie. The challenges to developing ehie networks for heath care and public health are increasingly recognized as behavioral, social and political, rather than technological. Although disseminating and transmitting health Information has been a major focus of Health Education and overcoming social and behavioral barriers to health are also basic to health education, health education’s role in developing health information exchange has been elusive at best. We provide a rationale for why this is a public health issue of major societal concern and an example of how health education research and practice can play a pivotal role in developing this critical element of health care reform. In particular, Health Education research and practice related to coalitions provide important strategies for overcoming the challenges in developing ehie. The application of this health education strategy by local health agencies can be found in a leadership guide on NACCHO and PHII websites and presents one example of how health education can plan a major role in this societal transformation concurrent session a4 Room: Nat Hill mile high strategies for professional preparation Extending Students’ Learning with the New SOPHE Textbook: Semester Class Projects, Needs Assessments and Internships. Carl Fertman, PhD, MBA, CHES, University of Pittsburgh; Randy Cottrell, DEd, CHES, University of Cincinnati; Robert Strack, PhD, MBA, University of North Carolina Greensboro In April 2010 SOPHE published it first text book - Health Promotion Programs: From Theory to Practice. The book presents an overview of best program practices based on theory to promote health equity from a wide variety of settings that include schools, health care organizations, ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ friday | november 5 workplace and community. The book is aimed at three audiences. The first audience is individuals pursuing an undergraduate major or minor in health education, health promotion, community health, public health, or health-related fields such as environmental health, physical activity and education, allied health, nursing, or medicine. The second audience is young and mid-career practitioners, practicing managers, researchers, and instructors who for the first time are responsible for teaching, designing, or leading health promotion programs. The third audience is colleagues and professionals not trained in the health fields but working in settings where health promotion programs are increasingly prevalent and might be under their supervision (for example, school superintendents and principals, human resource directors working in business and health care, college deans of student affairs, faculty members, board members of nonprofit organizations, community members, and employers and staff members in businesses and health care organizations). Session presenters using the book and the book ancillaries (chapter test item banks, power points, syllabus, student materials) will discuss best practices and strategies to teach health promotion program planning, implementation and evaluation that promote and extend student learning, engagement and effective practice. Enhancing Teaching with the New SOPHE Textbook: CHES Competencies and Web 2.0. Beth Chaney, PhD, CHES, University of Florida; Melissa Grim, PhD, Radford University The rapid development of information and communication technologies has transformed the higher education learning environment. Through Web 2.0, interactive and instructional technology applications provide opportunities for teachers of health promotion planning, implementation and evaluation to better engage students, meet learning needs, and simulate real-life situations for students to apply best-practice strategies. This presentation will demonstrate how the concepts in the book can be enhanced and supported by using Web 2.0 technology. Participants will learn how to utilize social network platforms, podcasting, RSS, and image and videosharing capabilities to enhance classroom instruction. Adapting Distance Learning Technology: Lessons Learned in the Third year of a University’s Public Health Education Distance Program. Frank Strona, MPH, San Jose State University; Robert Rinck, MPH, San Jose State University; Daniel Perales, DrPH, MPH, San Jose State University The San Jose State University Master of Public Health Program utilizes the asynchronous Blackboard and the synchronous (live) Elluminate learning platforms to provide online instruction to its distance learning students. An early challenge encountered by the MPH program was the training of faculty to help them transition from class-room instruction, in order to develop effective and efficient uses of the distance technology. In addition, as evidenced from a survey of our distance students, the distance instruction learning platforms require a greater degree of visual “look and feel” continuity across distance courses than regular on-campus courses. This continuity can be especially challenging to faculty without previous distance learning experience. Furthermore, some mature students, with modest computer technology knowledge, also require additional training and support in order to enhance the interactive activities that occur during the live (Elluminate) online class sessions. This presentation will describe: 1) how to structure and staff a distance learning program for technology support on a limited budget, 2) how to use MOUs between the instructor and the program to improve course training and enhance implementation, 3) multiple approaches to training students and faculty on distance technology, and 4) how to assess the effectiveness of the technology training and support. Selected and edited short recordings of live class sessions and training will be shown to illustrate how technology issues are addressed by the technology staff. How Students in a Community Health Social Marketing Course Can Assist Communities to Create Change. Rosy Contreras, BSc, San Jose State University; Amado Burgos, BSc, San Jose State University; Laura Burata, BSc, San Jose State University; Rhiannon Labrie, BSc, San Jose State University; Raymond Chung, BSc, San Jose State University; Daniel Perales, DrPH, MPH, San Jose State University The Institute of Medicine’s 2002 report, “Who Will Keep the Public Healthy”, notes that communication is one of the eight new content areas that must be addressed by public health schools and programs. The San Jose State University Department of Health Science addresses health communication through a social marketing course and a health communications and technology course. The social marketing course is preceded or taken in conjunction with the technology course in which students learn how to use internet technology, still images, and video technology to create communications messages. In the social marketing course, students are formed into teams of five and instructed on using social marketing’s 4-P’s (product, price, place, and promotion). They are required to develop a social marketing campaign that can address a community health issue. These campaigns are designed to deliver messages to a priority population that focus on what they need to know, what they need to believe, and what they need to do to create healthy behaviors and environments. Students are also teamed with a community based organization or public health agency that seeks assistance in the development of social marketing materials that can reach their audiences. Examples of these campaigns include students developing flyers and posters for school based clinics in San Jose, California who wanted to promote their services among low-income families and enroll children and adolescents who need health care; assisting a public health agency to develop a social marketing campaign to reach Asian Pacific Islander men who have sex with men to help prevent the spread of HIV; developing video and print materials for the Mothers’ Milk Bank of Santa Clara County in order to encourage mothers to donate their breast milk; and promoting the use of electronic benefit transfer EBT cards (i.e., food stamps) at farmers’ markets by low-income Latinos. This presentation will showcase some of the astonishing social marketing still images and short videos that were developed by students but will focus on the EBT farmers’ market social marketing campaign. The materials developed for this latter campaign so impressed the Santa Clara County Social Services Agency that they decided to support the printing of posters and fliers developed by the students for distribution to the county’s farmers’ markets and especially their food assistance offices. The materials will also be used in 11 major farmers’ markets throughout the San Francisco Bay Area. current session a5 Room: Colorado G-H diversity in action: addressing the needs of immigrants and special populations Immigration Policies, Integration and Social Capital: An International Comparison of Public Health Outcomes. Alberto Cardelle, PhD, MPH, East Stroudsburg University This last decade has been in part defined by the issue of immigration. Immigrants have been disproportionately affected by poor health outcomes and both cultural and political barriers have made them a challenging group with whom to address disparities. Therefore, strategies that facilitate the integration of immigrants and strengthen their social s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 19 ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ friday | november 5 capital are a salient area of public policy for public health practitioners. This paper contributes to the understanding of how to broaden the scope of work with immigrant communities by using an international comparison to determine the potential positive impact of social capital on public health outcomes. The study integrates a social capital framework along with an acculturation framework and a policy analysis framework to identify policies that facilitate the integration process of immigrants and therefore their social capital and health status. This study builds upon the literature on integration and social capital and develops a different avenue of investigation. Few studies in the existing literature look at the interwoven relationship that may exist between the different levels of integration and the environment created by policies, communities and institutions. This study proposes to look at the relation between immigrant integration and policies in a cohort of 30 immigrant families in Pennsylvania and Galicia, Spain (two areas with similar immigration patterns). Each family experience will be developed into a case study and the analyzed by exploring policies in each case and by identifying broad similarities and differences between cases. The analysis identifies the key factors in each case that facilitated or hindered the integration of the immigrant family across the socio-ecological model. This makes this study an even more unique undertaking because few studies have looked at acculturation and immigration policies from an international perspective, and using a case study approach. The paper hypothesizes that in a country such as Spain with a strong social safety net program immigrant families have a stronger social capital and higher level of self-reported health status than their counterparts in the United States. The initial results indicate that immigrants in Spain report a much stronger sense of belonging to a community, are much more likely to belong to groups, and to feel connected than immigrants in Pennsylvania. The recommendations seem to indicate that public health interventions need to work beyond the health education discipline and look to influence public policies specifically those aimed at immigration Challenges Faced by Immigrant Pregnant Women to Get Quality Maternal Health Care. Kamrun Mustafa, PhD, Southern Illinois University Carbondale; Mark Kittleson, PhD, FAAHB, Southern Illinois University Carbondale This paper presents an account of the experience of Bangladeshi women who have immigrated to the US and have become mothers for the first time within a year from the date of interview. The purpose of the study was to explore their pregnancy related experiences following their immigration into a totally different culture. Ten immigrant women from the three boroughs of New York City were interviewed for the purpose. Findings of the interviews were then subjected to a qualitative analysis based on the theoretical framework of PEN-3 model developed by Collins Ahihirenbuwa in 1995. The findings highlight the untold stories of these immigrant women, who came to the US with a big dream in mind, as they encountered multifarious challenges of resettlement, language, cultural and other barriers to quality healthcare access, physical, mental and emotional problems and faced unequal and discriminatory treatment from their healthcare providers. The study also focused on the intrapersonal, interpersonal and societal life of these women and their efforts to survive and cope with the realities on the ground. This presentation will help health educators better assess the needs of the marginalized segments of population, initiate culturally appropriate programs, and develop curriculum for health care professionals, who are working with immigrants and other ethnic populations, which in turn will contribute to reduce maternal and infant mortality and morbidity. 20 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 Relationships Between Risky Health Behaviors and Behavioral Motivational Systems in Hispanic Populations. Marieke Jackson, BA, Health Sciences/NMSU; Rebecca Palacios, PhD, Health Sciences/NMSU introduction: The Behavioral Inhibition System (BIS) and Behavioral Activation System (BAS) subscales (Carver and White, 1994) have been used to predict a variety of human behaviors. Previous studies have shown that the BAS subscales are most strongly related to risky behaviors (Voight et al, 2009; Franken and Muris, 2005). For example, Voight et al (2009) found a strong association between BAS tendencies and unhealthy sexual, alcohol, drug, safety, and tobacco behaviors. The relationship between motivational tendencies and risk behaviors has not been examined in the Hispanic subpopulation. The present study examined substance use, sexual habits, stress levels, physical activity and body composition in relation to motivational tendencies among young Mexican American college students. It was hypothesized that similar to the general population; BAS subscales would predict engagement in risky behavior among Hispanic college students. methods: Participants were 355 Hispanic college students attending the University of Texas at El Paso. Students completed measures of substance use (alcohol, marijuana), crimes committed, sexual sensation seeking and victimization, stress, physical activity, height, weight, and motivational tendencies prior to their participation in an alcohol risk-reduction program. results: A standard multiple regression was performed between individual risk behaviors as the dependent variable and BIS/BAS scales as the independent variables. Illegal risk behaviors including underage drinking, marijuana use, and self-reported crime were all predicted by sensation seeking tendencies (all p values < .01). BMI and physical activity were predicted by punishment (p values < .05 for physical activity) and reward sensitivity (all p values < .05). Risky sexual behaviors and sexual victimization were predicted by drive, sensation seeking, and punishment tendencies (all p values < .01). Finally, punishment sensitivity predicted stress ratings (p value <.01). discussion: The present study on Hispanics found a similar relationship between sensation seeking tendencies and risky behaviors as in previous research. Unlike previous research however, this study on Hispanics also demonstrated a relationship between BIS tendencies and physical activity and negative behavioral outcomes (e.g., stress and victimization). Lations Reduciendo el Disabetes en Southeast Georgia: A Best Practices Approach. Mondi Mason, PhD, MPH, Georgia Southern University; Lisa Anderson, BS, Southeast Georgia Communities Project; Andrea Hinojosa, Southeast Georgia Communities Project; Corina Florez, Southeast Georgia Communities Project; Lisa Florez, Southeast Georgia Communities Project; Sandra Herrera, Southeast Georgia Communities Project Abstract: background: Diabetes is at epidemic levels among Latinos. If left untreated or uncontrolled, diabetes can lead to cardiovascular disease, kidney disease, blindness, and lower-limb amputations. Diabetes selfmanagement is a “best practice” for helping individuals live with diabetes and have successful health outcomes. theory and intervention: The Latinos Reduciendo el Diabetes (LaRED) is a community-based program created and implemented by Southeast Georgia Communities Project, an organization dedicated to the healthy and empowerment of Latino and farm worker communities. The primary goal of LaRED is to reduce the morbidity and mortality related ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ friday | november 5 to diabetes among Latino immigrants in rural southeast Georgia. LaRED utilizes bilingual, bicultural outreach workers who provide culturally and linguistically appropriate non-medical case management, diabetes education, and support services. Over the last 3 years, they have provided these services to over 200 clients. objectives: The program objectives include the provision of regular home visits by a diabetes educator and registered nurse, tailored one-onone and group educational opportunities, and support services such as interpretation during healthcare provider visits. evaluation: Though a variety of strategies such as collection of HgA1c data, outreach worker administered pre/post knowledge assessments, telephone interviews, and observational data have been developed to reliably collect data, challenges have persisted when working with lowincome clients who have limited literacy skills. results: To date, over 80% of the clients have demonstrated improvements in self-management of their health condition (e.g., taking their medication, regularly eating meals), with 58.3% reducing their HgA1c levels. Clients have also reported other changes in health behaviors (e.g., eating more fruits and vegetables, drinking more water). Purpose: The purpose of this presentation is to 1) describe the intensive case management and education strategies being implemented in the program, 2) highlight the results from the program, and 3) discuss challenges and lessons learned related to implementation and evaluation. concurrent sessions b fri / nov 5 / 1:15 am – 2:30 pm concurrent session b1 Room: Nat Hill reach and recovery: strategies and interventions for high risk adolescents Mental Health and Substance Abuse Prevention for Male Adolescence Detainees. Kisha Holden, PhD, Associate Director, Community Voices: Healthcare for the Underserved, Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry and Behvaioral Sciences, Satcher Health Leadership Institute, Morehouse School of Medicine; William Moore, MPH Candidate, Graduate Research Assistant, Community Voices: Healthcare for the Underserved, Satcher Health Leadership Institute, Morehouse School of Medicine; Tyrone Bell, MPH, Graduate Research Assistant, Community Voices: Healthcare for the Underserved, Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry and Behvaioral Sciences, Satcher Health Leadership Institute, Morehouse School of Medicine; Carlos Mahaffery, PharmD, MPH Candidate, Graduate Research Assistant, Community Voices: Healthcare for the Underserved, Satcher Health Leadership Institute, Morehouse School of Medicine Each year tens of thousands of adolescents enter juvenile detention centers, systems of juvenile correction and treatment programs in the United States. Georgia ranks 10th in the nation with regard to the number of juveniles detained, incarcerated, or placed in residential facilities. The majority of these individuals are African American males. This program seeks to test the feasibility of an 9 session culturally tailored psychoeducational intervention for 50 African American males’ ages 15-17 years old that reside in a youth detention center in the Georgia area. The program is designed to improve participant’s psychological well-being, decrease depressive symptoms, positively modify attitudes and decisionmaking skills relative to alcohol and drug-use, and increase self-efficacy to avoid violent conflicts with the ultimate goal of reducing recidivism. The intervention will be evaluated using a longitudinal design measuring participant’s pre- and post-intervention outcomes. Analyses will be carried out through use of SPSS 17.0. In addition to descriptive statistics, repeated measures t-test for non-independent samples will be used to determine differences between pre and post intervention findings. Preliminary findings indicate that the intervention is useful for the target population; however, data analyses are currently underway and will be available at the time of presentation. Results will be discussed in terms of clinical application for mental and public health professionals working in juvenile and /or criminal justice settings; and findings will add to the depth of research in this area of study. Building Health Equity on the U.S./Mexico Border: Innovative Strategies to Reduce Alcohol Consumption and Related Consequences in Adolescents. Sharon Thompson, PhD, MPH, CHES, Department of Public Health Sciences, The University of Texas at El Paso; Holly Mata, MS, LSC, College of Health Sciences, The University of Texas at El Paso; Joe Tomaka, PhD, College of Health Sciences, The University of Texas at El Paso Recent studies have identified risk and protective factors related to alcohol consumption and related problems among youth in a large metropolitan community on the U.S./Mexico border. Awareness of the heterogeneity of Hispanic culture and the unique cultural convergence characteristic of the border region coupled with an asset-building and culturally relevant theoretical foundation may improve efforts to reduce risky alcohol consumption among youth in the border region. Three of the ten poorest counties in the United States are on the Texas/Mexico border. Of particular concern are educational inequalities which are salient in this region. In this regard, innovative partnerships between academic institutions and communities may facilitate both educational retention at the secondary level, and increase access to relevant health promotion programs. Building health equity by reducing risky alcohol consumption and related consequences among border youth is the focus of this presentation. The need for alcohol risk reduction programs for secondary school students in the border region based, in part, on successful implementation of such a program in the same population at the university level is highlighted. Using data from the college level intervention combined with alcohol use data from the local high schools, an innovative, outcome-based program to reduce risky alcohol consumption rates among adolescents living in the U.S./Mexico border region is explored. Changes in drinking outcome measures were examined from assessment to six month follow-up. Results indicated that alcohol consumption and alcohol-related problems declined significantly. In accordance with the spirit of motivational interviewing, communications are non-judgmental, non-critical, and non-confrontational in nature. This type of intervention is designed to encourage youth to make positive choices and increase readiness to change rather than chastise them for poor choices. Although any alcohol use among adolescents is problematic, the high rates of use and consequences in the border region mandate the provision of innovative strategies including harm reduction approaches, as opposed to abstinence-based programs exclusively, to reduce the burden of alcohol problems among middle and secondary school students. “Communitizing” health education helps build partnerships, increases perceived competency among health education students, and results in increased knowledge and positive behavioral intentions among priority populations. Accordingly, translational approaches that build on the success of the alcohol risk reduction program highlighted in this paper by extending the program to younger cohorts are an innovative response to a chronic and unrelenting public health issue. s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 21 ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ friday | november 5 Application of ADAPT-ITT: Adapting an Evidence-based HIV Prevention Intervention for Incarcerated African American Adolescent Females. Teaniese Latham, MPH, University of Georgia; Jessica Sales, PhD, Emory University; Lorin Boyce, MA, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University; Tiffaney Renfro, MSW, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University; Gina Wingood, ScD, MPH, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University; Ralph DiClemente, PhD, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University background: African-American adolescent females are disproportionately impacted by the HIV epidemic. Adolescent female detainees are currently the fastest growing population of incarcerated adolescents. The threat for HIV risk is compounded by recidivism; juveniles establish a cycle of incarceration, freedom, and incarceration which increases their risk. Currently, there are no evidence-based interventions (EBI) for this vulnerable subgroup. Thus, interventions specifically tailored for this subgroup are urgently needed. Effective interventions that reduce HIV risk behaviors remain one of the most powerful tools in curbing the HIV epidemic. Theoretical Basis: Theory of Gender and Power; Social Cognitive Theory Methods: The selected intervention (Horizons) was adapted using a coordinated and systematically guided adaptation process based on the ADAPT – ITT framework. intervention: The purpose of the project was to adapt an evidencebased HIV prevention intervention for African-American adolescent females and to optimize its appropriateness and efficacy for AfricanAmerican adolescent females detained at a youth detention center. Horizons was adapted using a coordinated and systematically guided adaptation process based on the ADAPT – ITT framework. partnerships: Georgia Department of Juvenile Justice, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Implications for Practice: Using this prescriptive method for adapting Horizons for incarcerated young girls proved to be a time and cost effective method. Moreover, using the ADAPT-ITT process helped maintain fidelity to the core elements of the intervention while making relevant and acceptable changes for this specialized population. Empowering Our Spirit: Adapting Evidence-Based Practices And Utilizing Community Paraprofessionals to Prevent Apache Youth Suicide Attempts. Authors: Kristin Lake, MPH, Johns Hopkins University Center for American Indian Health; Lauren Tingey, MPH, MSW; Allison Barlow, MA, MPH; Francene Larzelere-Hinton, BS; Lavita Tessay; Mary Cwik, PhD background: Suicide attempts are a major source of morbidity among young people, especially American Indian (AI) youth. The White Mountain Apache Tribe (WMAT) has suffered from youth suicide death rates significantly higher than U.S. All Races and AI/AN rates, and experienced an annual attempt incidence rate of 3.5% in 2007, 70% of which occurred among youth. Despite clear need for psychiatric services, only 21% of Apache youth attempters received treatment. Theoretical Basis: The WMAT partnered with Hopkins to employ community-based participatory (CBPR) research methods to inform intervention development for Apache youth who have attempted suicide. Preliminary data indicate Apache youth attempters have high alcohol/drug use, family and close friends who have attempted or died from suicide, and high drop-out rates. Taking into account local data and protective factors identified by focus groups with community members, Tribal partners selected two evidence-based interventions rooted in Cognitive-Behavioral Theory and designed to modify youth’s suicidal thoughts and behaviors, coping and emotion-regulation skills. Intervention: Selected interventions were 22 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 adapted with community input and included two significant changes: the use of Apache paraprofessionals (“Natural Helpers”) to deliver interventions in the youth’s home and inclusion of a family member in the intervention administration. In the first intervention, “New Hope,” Natural Helpers meet with youth and family members soon after hospital discharge to watch a locally-produced video and complete a short workbook. The video demonstrates the impact of an attempt and includes Apache elders emphasizing that life is sacred. Natural Helpers discuss the video with the youth and family member, develop a safety plan, use problemsolving and motivational techniques to reinforce positive aspects of treatment, and screen the youth for suicide severity. The second intervention, “Re-Embracing Life,” is a 9-session life skills curriculum intended to supplement outpatient mental health treatment and delivered over a three month period. Curriculum content includes coping skills, conflict management, communication skills, and safety planning. evaluation measures and results: A pilot trial of both interventions is currently underway with 30 youth and families. Evaluation measures include multiple existing scales and locally-adapted assessments measuring changes in self-reported depression, treatment-seeking and coping skills behaviors, and attitudes and knowledge of treatment. New Hope and Re-Embracing Life are adapted evidence-based interventions developed to reduce future suicidal behaviors among Apache youth. Unique aspects of these interventions, particularly the empowerment and capacity development of Apache paraprofessionals, are potential solutions to challenges faced by AI tribes and other rural and disadvantaged communities. concurrent sessions b2 Room: Colorado I-J challenges in health education: building professional identity How We Got Here: A Brief History of the Health Education Credentialing Process. Michele Pettit, PhD, MPH, CHES, Health Education and Health Promotion, University of Wisconsin-La Crosse Professional preparation, continuing education, and credentialing represent cornerstones of the health education profession. The latter process represents the focus of this session. Specifically, the purpose of this session is to provide a historical account and current scope of the health education credentialing process. Key leaders (e.g., Helen Cleary, Peter Cortese, Elena Sliepcevich, etc.) and events involved in shaping the health education credentialing process will be highlighted. The First Bethesda Conference (1978), Role Specification for Entry-Level Health Educators, National Conference for Institutions Preparing Health Educators (1981), and Second Bethesda Conference (1986) represent a few of the key events that will be highlighted. Historical underpinnings associated with development of the National Commission for Health Education Credentialing, Inc. (1988) and Certified Health Education Specialist (CHES) credential will be presented. Moreover, reasons for initially pursuing a competency-based certification for health educators in lieu of other credentialing options (e.g., licensure) will be discussed. This session will conclude with an overview of recent contributions to the health education credentialing process namely, the Competencies Update Project and ensuing emergence of the Master Certified Health Education Specialist (MCHES) credential. Discussions regarding the future direction of the health education credentialing movement will follow. ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ friday | november 5 Outcomes of the National Health Educator Job Analysis: Implications for Healthy People. Eva Doyle, PhD, MSEd, CHES, Baylor University; Linda Lysoby, MS, CHES, CAE, National Commission for Health Education Credentialing, Inc; Melissa Rehrig, MPH, CHES, National Commission for Health Education Credentialing, Inc background: Since the initial role delineation of health educators in 1988, the health education profession has continued to evolve. Over the course of the years in addition to the development of the responsibilities and competencies for the entry-level health education specialist, a certification process has been put in place, advanced-level responsibilities and competencies have been developed, and two competency update projects has been completed. theoretical basis: The theory-based competencies that frame the preparation, professional development, and work of health education specialists can contribute to the achievement of the Healthy People 2010 objectives 1-7, 23-8, and 23-9 through health professional training. Competencies are an essential component of outcomes-based education for many health-related professions and are critical in credentialing. Health education was the first population-based profession to develop competencies, which have been used in measuring quality assurance systems for more than 20 years. Yet, competencies for any profession must not be fixed, but rather re-verified in contemporary practice and updated over time. methods: To meet recommendations from the National Organization for Competency Assurance (NOCA), the Health Educator Job Analysis Study (HEJA) was completed to validate the contemporary practice of entry- and advanced-level health education specialist. A systematic model of practice was utilized to develop and empirically validate the knowledge base required of health education specialists. A stratified random sample of approximately 4500 health education specialist from various professional work settings were surveyed online in the spring of 2009. interventions/partnerships: Experts from the Professional Examination Services (PES) conducted the analysis, with input from the American Association for Health Education (AAHE), National Commission for Health Education Credentialing (NCHEC), and Society for Public Health Education (SOPHE). Sixty-two (62) volunteer health educators were selected by a steering committee to serve in various capacities throughout the project. The volunteers represented an array of work-settings, educational and demographic backgrounds, and varying levels of experience. Implications of research results for enhanced practice – This presentation will highlight findings and recommendations from the HEJA related to the updated competencies and sub-competencies of both the entry – and advanced-level health education specialists. Also, presenters will discuss the implications to professional preparation programs that prepare the future health profession workforce and details of the advance-level certification, MCHES. The relevance and application of HEJA outcomes to Healthy People initiatives and goal achievement will be discussed. Exam Item Writing for the Health Education Specialist: “Yes This Will be on the Test.” Jacquie Rainey, DrPH, Professor and Associate Dean, College of Health and Behavioral Sciences University of Central Arkansas; Sharon Thompson, MPH, PhD, CHES, University of Texas at El Paso; David Brown, EdD, CHES, Jackson State University; Linda Lysoby, MS, CHES, CAE, National Commission for Health Education Credentialing, Inc. Learning to write valid and reliable exam questions is a vital skill for the health education specialist practicing in any setting (academic, community, worksite, school, and medical). Test items assist the health educator to evaluate and research health-related knowledge. The National Commission for Health Education Credentialing (NCHEC) was established to administer a credentialing system, including certification of health education specialists as a mechanism for individual quality assurance. The completion of the National Health Educator Job Analysis (HEJA) has necessitated the development of a new Certified Health Education Specialist (CHES) examination based on the resultant responsibilities, competencies, and sub-competencies. Directors on NCHEC’s Division Board for Certification of Health Education Specialists (DBCHES) who are currently developing exam items for the revised CHES and newly created MCHES examinations will provide an intensive test item writing session to assist participants develop these important skills. The purpose of this presentation it to increase the skills of the participants in test item development, construction, and evaluation grounded in sound learning theory. Participants will learn the guidelines used to write exam questions and what constitutes a “good” question. Specific information will be provided concerning the process by which test items are validated and placed into the appropriate responsibility and competency for the CHES and MCHES. The exam blueprint containing the new rubric and percentage of each responsibility and competency will be explained. These newly acquired skills can be generalized to a variety of health education programming to enhance the rigor of research and evaluation. Parallels between the Professionalization of Health Education and the Medical Profession’s Historic Quest for Licensure. Kathy DeBarr, MS, PhD, Associate Professor, Department of Public Health, University of Illinois at Springfield This presentation chronicles the history of physicians’ struggles to professionalize the field of medicine and draws parallels between this history and efforts put forth by health educators to gain the populace’s recognition of health education as a profession. Health education is in many ways a nascent profession, much like the practice of medicine prior to medical licensure. From the Colonial period through the 1850’s medicine in the United States was practiced by lay persons, planters, clergy persons, apprentice trained physicians, barber surgeons, apothecaries, and “regular” or university trained physicians (Starr, 1982). In other words, almost anyone could practice medicine. Similarly, today virtually anyone can proclaim himself/herself to be a health educator. This phenomenon occurs despite establishment of the Certified Health Education Specialist (CHES) credential and the forthcoming 2011 advanced level credential Master Certified Health Education Specialist (MCHES). Twenty years after establishing the CHES, Arkansas (Arkansas Health Educator Practice Act) and New Jersey (N.J. Dept. Health and Senior Services) require the credential to practice as a health educator. Perhaps the time has come, as it did for the medical profession, to consider licensure as a viable alternative. What better way can there be to achieve the Mile High Expectations and educational goals of Healthy People 2020 and beyond? s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 23 ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ friday | november 5 current sessions b3 Social Determinants of Health. Room: Colorado E-F community & population health: challenges for a new decade Changing Expectations: Advancing the Community Role in Translational Research. Alexandra Lightfoot, EdM, EdD, UNC Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention; Christina Hardy, MPH, UNC Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention background: Despite strides in medical advances and treatment, few of the Healthy People 2010 objectives have been realized. To address 2020’s goals of achieving health equity, eliminating disparities, and improving the health of all population groups calls for innovative multi sector strategies. This session highlights an initiative to enhance equity and effectiveness in translational research and transform the way communities and academic investigators work together to investigate persistent health challenges and design and evaluate effective solutions. theoretical basis There is a growing recognition that translational research benefits from community involvement at the outset. Community-based participatory research (CBPR) has shown substantial promise for building new and creative partnership approaches to tackle some of the most intractable public health problems at all levels of the socioecologic model. The last decade has seen growing support for CBPR and increased demand for skills, knowledge, training and strategies to enhance community members’ equitable participation in research addressing the needs of their communities. Objectives The NC Translational and Clinical Sciences Institute (TraCS) and the UNC Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention (HPDP) received ARRA funding to launch Community Leadership and Reciprocal Development (CLRD): Advancing Community-Engaged Research at Two CTSA Institutions in collaboration with Vanderbilt’s Institute for Clinical and Translational Research (VICTR). The goal of the pilot is to expand and accelerate both institutions’ capacity to advance translational research, by 1) drawing on the expertise of community partners working with our respective institutions, and, 2) initiating a cross-institution partnership to share expertise, develop resources, and disseminate new knowledge and approaches. intervention This session will examine three aspects of UNC’s CLRD model: 1) creation of a new position at the university for a community partner experienced in CBPR, a “Community Research Fellow,” who coleads project activities; 2) recruitment of a pool of “community experts,” seasoned community leaders with CBPR expertise, who provide training and technical assistance to advance the adoption and implementation of CBPR among community-academic partnership teams; and 3) facilitated guidance sessions, or charrettes, for partnerships who express interest in using CBPR approaches. evaluation measures/results: We are using Glasgow’s RE-AIM framework to evaluate the translatability and potential impact of our efforts to build capacity for CBPR while developing robust and fairlycompensated consultancies for community partners. Early indications suggest that our model provides a valuable resource in the development of effective, rigorous and mutually beneficial research approaches for communities and academic investigators. 24 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 Sally Lin, PhD; Dana Brimmer, PhD, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Kerri Timmerman, MPH, Senior Research Assistant at the Chronic Diseases Branch, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; William Reeves, MD, Senior Advisor in the Public Health Surveillance Program Office at CDC Abstract: background: Social determinants of health are increasingly recognized as important factors in public health research; particularly sense of community (SOC) in community-based participatory research. However, few studies have examined the associations between SOC and barriers to healthcare utilization (HU), which is pivotal in communitybased unwellness prevention. Theoretical Framework: Healthcare access and utilization are functions of the need for good health and health-related socio-demographic factors. We used the conceptual framework of McMillan & Chavis to measure sense of community regarding its impact on how communities function. hypothesis: We hypothesized that people with lower SOC will be more likely to report barriers to HU. methods: The sample consisted of 750 participants in a populationbased study on unwellness in Georgia between November 2007 and August 2009. A self-administered questionnaire included healthcare and SOC measures: Membership, Influence, Reinforcement of Needs, and Shared Emotional Connection. Multiple logistic analysis was used to estimate the relationship between SOC and barriers to HU, controlling for other socio-demographic influences, including insurance coverage and self-reported health status. The significance level was set at 0.05. results: Most of the 750 participants were women (75%), White (75%), married (67%), urban/rural residents (83%) and their mean age was 47.6. Thirty-four percent reported barriers to HU. Participants who had barriers to HU had significantly lower SOC scores than those who did not. Higher SOC scores were associated with increased age and marriage, but were not statistically significantly associated with sex, race, and residential area. All SOC domains but Reinforcement of Needs were positively associated with years of residence. When examining the association with unhealthy days, Influence and Reinforcement of Needs were negatively associated with physically unhealthy and poor or fair health. In addition to these two SOC subscales, Membership was also associated with mentally unhealthy days and days for limited usual activities. After adjusting age, marital status, insurance coverage and unhealthy days, Membership remained a significant protective factor for having barriers to healthcare utilization (OR= 0.79, 95% CI= 0.66 – 0.92). conclusions: Higher Membership reduces the risk of having barriers to HU. Activities to increase sense of community in younger, non-married, and new residents are potential interventions in promoting a healthier community. Implications for Practice: Community quality needs to be considered in public health efforts to reduce barriers to healthcare utilization and preventive healthcare in unwell community-dwellings. Health Disparities Curriculum: Involving Students in Public Health Advocacy (High School Students). Nell Curran, BA, Stanford University, Youth Science Program/San Jose State University Healthy People 2010 includes the elimination of health disparities as one of two major goals for the decade. In response to this public health priority, the needs of the local community, and requests from teachers and students, the Stanford Medical Youth Science Program partnered with Overfelt High School in East San Jose, CA to develop an innovative ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ friday | november 5 Health Disparities Curriculum. Adapted from an evaluated heart-disease curriculum, this new and highly participatory curriculum is designed to educate students that the health of an individual is embedded within a broader social context; show students how the health of a community is shaped by resources (goods and services) and policies, which when distributed unequally can create health disparities; and empower students to address health disparities by advocating for change in their communities. The ten curriculum lessons are divided into three units: 1) introduction to public health and health disparities 2) community inventory (asset mapping) and 3) public health advocacy. The curriculum is rooted in educational theory, aligns with state education standards, and can be implemented by instructors with minimal training. Lessons may be taught independently or comprehensively and are adaptable to multiple settings (e.g. intact classrooms or after school clubs). Activities are low cost and not reliant on technology. Using baseline and post-intervention surveys as well as focus groups, the curriculum is being evaluated with 60 low-income, predominately Latino high school sophomores. Dissemination plans include expanding the curriculum within the existing partner school and ten schools in the district as well as posting it to the program’s website. The Stanford Medical Youth Science Program’s Health Disparities Curriculum has great potential to leverage the power of high school students to enact change within communities thus reducing health disparities. The Adaption and Implementation of Evidence-Based Asthma Interventions to Address Asthma Morbidity in Post Katrina New Orleans. Eleanor Thornton, MS, CHES, AE-C, President and CEO, Visionary Consulting Partners, LLC. background: Children residing in post-Katrina New Orleans experienced an overwhelming disruption of quality of life, psychosocial stressors, limited access to care and exposure to numerous environmental hazards. These factors greatly elevated their risk for asthma morbidity and required an aggressive multi-prong approach utilizing evidenced-based asthma interventions and engaging public-private partners including federal and local government agencies, academic institutions, and a private foundation. The challenges and uniqueness of the community environment required collaborative, flexible and realistic strategies modeled after evidenced based programs to effectively address the needs of the population. The objective of this study was to implement and evaluate a novel asthma counselor intervention in a post-natural disaster setting. methods: 182 children 4-12 years of age with moderate-severe asthma were enrolled in an observational study, Head-Off Environmental Asthma in Louisiana study (HEAL) and were followed for one year in a hybrid asthma counselor intervention. Key components proven effective in reducing asthma morbidity in children from the evidenced based National Cooperative Inner-City Asthma Study and the Inner City Asthma environmental intervention were combined, adapted and implemented. The Intervention was based on the child’s clinical and environmental risk profile and included a minimum of two tailored individualized asthma counseling sessions with a home visit, a minimum of 2 telephone contacts and environmental supplies to assist with remediation of environmental exposures. The multidisciplinary intervention team was comprised of and conducted by nontraditional asthma counselors such as certified health education specialists with the assistance of community health workers that were trained in asthma management and identification of barriers and strategies to address issues impeding appropriate asthma management. implication of research results for enhanced practice: Preliminary analysis of the intervention suggests a strong effect. The post Katrina environment presented an ideal environment to test the hybrid asthma counseling intervention. The intervention can serve as an excellent resource or roadmap for replication in communities/systems facing similar emergent needs in reducing asthma morbidity. current sessions b4 Room: Colorado G-H a health educator’s call to action: emergency preparedness and response CDC’s Challenges and Successes in Providing Public Health Information During the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill. Daniel L. Holcomb, ATSDR, Senior Environmental Health Scientist, Emergency Response Coordinator, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention This presentation will describe the challenges and lessons learned from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) response to the Deepwater Horizon oil rig explosion and subsequent oil spill. The author will describe how the CDC coordinated with other federal and private agencies to assist local and state public health officials in delivering vital public information during this technological disaster. The author will also describe the various methods of communication that CDC employed during this response. Lessons learned through experience regarding communicating in disasters will be covered in this presentation. Pandemic Preparedness and Response: The New Jersey Experience. Suzanne Miro, MPH, CHES, New Jersey Department of Health & Senior Services This presentation will give a brief overview of pandemic preparedness efforts conducted in New Jersey prior to the emergence of the 2009-2010 H1N1 pandemic including public health planning and public education. As the H1N1 event unfolded, attention turned to mass distribution of actionable information to the public as well as health care providers and public health officials. Given the evolving nature of the pandemic, the communications response was fought with challenges and lessons learned. SNAPS: Community Demographic Profiles in a Snap Through an Interactive Situational Awareness Tool. Gail Williams, MPH, CHES, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/ Division of Emergency Operations SNAPS is an interactive online tool linked to a public satellite-based mapping tool (Bing) overlaid with census information. SNAPS was developed to allow the Community Health Outreach and Education team of the CDC’s Division of Emergency Operations (DEO)branch to quickly collect important demographic and resource information of affected communities. When emergency strikes in the United States, SNAPS information is used to determine communication needs for area residents as well as potential sources of emergency resources such as hospitals and shelters, where vulnerable populations such as the elderly or non-English speaking residents may be located and potential evacuation locations such as colleges or universities. SNAPS combines new electronic technology with census data in order to access quick snapshots of demographic makeup. SNAPS format allows for quick assembly of reports detailing specific community assets. Initially developed by CDC DEO Community Outreach and Education Team for use during emergency activations, it quickly became clear that SNAPS could greatly benefit those in the general public not just for emergency assessment but for initial community needs assessments and asset mapping. Appropriate for those in emergency preparedness as well as general health educators, this session will introduce participants to the SNAPS tool, and demonstrate its applicability in emergency and community needs assessments. s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 25 ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ friday| |nov november 5 friday 6 current sessions b5 Room: Denver 5-6 healthy faculty 2020 and beyond: commitment to health for all Consideration of Some Great Contributors to Philosophy of Education as Foundation for Developing a Personal Practice Theory and Philosophy of Education. Stephen F. Gambescia, PhD, MEd, MBA, MHum, CHES, Drexel University This presentation explains a process educators at all levels can use to create or update their philosophy of education statement. The presenter gives a first-hand account of a process that involves a systematic, disciplined, intellectually liberating, and reflective approach to articulating one’s philosophy of education statement by considering the writings of select intellectual giants who have acted upon human experience, thought, and practice in education. The project should not be approached as a standard “research paper” but an attempt to consider both the corpus of reading and research over one’s life time, coupled with one’s knowledge and experience gained to date in the area of teaching and learning. The resultant updated statement should serve to sharpen a faculty member’s future role as an educator and educational leader, as well as contribute to his/her journey in life-long learning. Examples of how to approach the self study will be given and the presenter shares his updated philosophy of education statement. On Becoming a Teacher…How to Shift to a Student Centered Classroom. Bojana Beric, MD, PhD, CHES, Monmouth University Who is in charge of knowledge and learning in the classroom: the teacher or a student? Who should be in charge of knowledge and learning in the classroom: the teacher or a student? Many questions are raised daily in minds of caring teachers and curious students about the teaching/learning process in schools. The famous students’ questions are asked daily: Why do I need this information? When am I going to use this knowledge? Everyone who went to school raised this question at least once in some courses. Information is power, especially in health. Then, who decides what information is needed? The teacher may be given initial power, by default and tradition, and then it is her duty to let go of that power and carefully and parentally guide acquisition of that power by her students. The Health for All movement calls for Education for All, without an exception; therefore, a health education classroom structure needs to allow for redistribution of power in classes that teach about health, the basic human right of all. Subsequently, a health education teacher is the one who should design the classroom structure, both physical and social to stimulate learning and allow for all minds in that classroom to become powerful teachers and inquiring students, alternating roles comfortably, and as needed. The presentation provides one teacher’s journey to a democratic teaching/learning style destination and the circumstances, experiences and conscious “awakening” on that road will be shared. Staying Motivated During the Ups and Downs of a Research Career. Marc A. Zimmerman, PhD, University of Michigan Faculty in any institution of higher education at some level are measured against their ability to excel in the areas of teaching, scholarly work, research and service. Of these, the ability to provide original research that makes a “significant contribution” [to the discipline] seems to be the most elusive. Faculty researchers in health education are introduced quickly to the many master’s that they need to serve, balancing their own interests 26 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 with the proclivities of their department members [and subsequently tenure committees], current trends of granting agencies, temperaments of journal editors and peer reviewers, and the real needs of the people in the communities that they serve. This presentation gives a personal account and sage advice for staying motivated during the ups and downs of a research career. In a liberating style the presenter distinguishes the difference between being “right” and being “effective” in an academic environment and the various strategies that can be used to chart a successful and rewarding course in conducting research in the academy. concurrent sessions c fri / nov 5 / 3:00 pm – 4:15 pm current sessions c1 Room: Colorado I-J quality assurance: a recipe for excellence Strengthening Quality Assurance: A Decade of Progress. David Birch, PhD, CHES, Department of Health Education and Promotion, East Carolina University; Randall R. Cottrell, D.Ed, CHES, Health Promotion & Education Program, University of Cincinnati Over several decades, a multicomponent system has evolved to support quality assurance in professional preparation and individual professional practice. Components of this system include the National Commission for Health Education Credentialing (NCHEC), which certifies individual health education specialists; the Council for Education for Public Health (CEPH), which accredits graduate study in public health including a concentration in community health education; the American Association for Health Education (AAHE)/Society for Public Health (SOPHE) Baccalaureate Program Approval Committee (SABPAC), which provides an approval process for undergraduate programs in community health education; and the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE), which collaborates with AAHE in the accreditation of undergraduate school health education programs. Even with these processes in place, concerns existed relative to their coordination and perceived value. Beginning in 2001, three national task forces were sequentially appointed to develop and implement a detailed plan for a coordinated, quality assurance system for undergraduate and graduate programs in health education. The purpose of this session is to summarize the accomplishments of the decade-long movement, identify challenges, and present future strategies designed to move the profession toward a coordinated, quality assurance system valued by higher education faculty and institutions, practitioners, and employers of health educators. Master Certified Health Education Specialist (MCHES): New Heights in Credentialing in Health Education. Linda Lysoby, MS, CHES, CAE, National Commission for Health Education Credentialing, Inc.; Dixie Dennis, PhD, CHES, Austin Peay State University; Melissa Rehrig, MPH, CHES, National Commission for Health Education Credentialing, Inc. Achieving the Healthy People Goals require a trained and competent health education workforce. The nationally recognized Certified Health Education Specialist (CHES) credential, in existence for 20 years and held by over 8,500 current active individuals, is one measure of professional competence of the health education workforce. For the first time in 2011, the National Commission for Health Education Credentialing ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ friday | november 5 (NCHEC) will be granting an advanced-level credential, the Master Certified Health Education Specialist (MCHES). This certification was formulated based on the intensive research of the Health Educator Job Analysis 2010 (HEJA 2010) project. The HEJA, sponsored by the Society for Public Health Education (SOPHE), American Association for Health Education (AAHE), and NCHEC, validated the contemporary practice of entry-and advanced-level health education specialists. Additionally, the introduction of an advanced level credential is in line with the recommendations of the Health Education Accreditation Task Force. Through this session, attendees will learn how the findings of the Health Education Job Analysis relate to the creation of an advanced-level health education credential. The presenter will outline the Master Certified Health Education Specialist (MCHES) certification including eligibility criteria for both CHES and non-CHES health educators, projected fees, exam scope, and continuing education contact hours (CECH) requirements. The process for the time-limited Experience Documentation Opportunity (EDO) for those with 5 years of active CHES status also will be explained. Shift the Paradigm: Utilizing Innovative Policy Strategies for Improvements in Chronic Disease. A Partner in Quality Assurance: The Role of the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE) in the Accreditation of School Health Education Programs. This session will include stories from communities engaged in varying stages of PSE initiatives. The presenters will describe their community successes and challenges regarding development and management of coalitions, processes for identifying priority populations and policies, implementing strategies that support policy change, advocacy efforts, successful policy implementation and outcomes. Margaret D. Crutchfield, PhD, National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education Since 1988, the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE) has worked in collaboration with the American Association for Health Education (AAHE) to accredit undergraduate school health education programs. In 2003, the National Task Force on Accreditation in Health Education recommended that NCATE continue to provide the accrediting mechanism for school health education programs. Since that recommendation, the Teacher Education Accreditation Council (TEAC) has also established a presence as an accrediting body in teacher education. In this session, an overview of the NCATE/AAHE accrediting process for school health education will be presented along with current and future issues related to school health education accreditation. In addition, the status of NCATE/TEAC merger discussions will be described during the session including the potential impact of this possible merger on the accreditation of school health education programs. Quality Assurance in Professional Preparation: A CEPH Update. Laura Rasar King, MPH, CHES, Council on Education for Public Health The Council on Education for Public Health (CEPH), the federally-recognized accrediting agency for public health, has historically has focused on graduate-level professional preparation in public health. For the last several years, however, CEPH has been considering quality assurance issues at the undergraduate level of training. Undergraduate programs in community health education were among the first baccalaureate degree programs in public health to be developed, and community health educators were among the first public health professionals to be prepared and practice at the baccalaureate degree level. Discussions about quality assurance in community health education are an important component of the broader discussions about the wide variety of undergraduate public health degrees that exist. Updates on CEPH’s proposals in this area will be provided. current sessions c2 Room: Colorado G-H shift the paradigm: utilizing innovative policy strategies for improvements in chronic disease Carra Moroni, MEd, RD, LD, Texas Department of State Health Services; Karma E. Edwards, MSPH, NSCA-CPT,Gaston County Health Department, Celeste Schoenthaler, MPH, Director of Youth and Young Adult Initiatives, Colorado Department of Health and Environment Policy, systems, and environmental (PSE) change strategies are being utilized by organizations, communities and coalitions to increase the effectiveness, reach and sustainability of positive population-based lifestyle changes that improve risk factors associated with chronic diseases. To frame the context for the session, an introduction will describe PSE change strategies, present the value of different levels of policy change and illustrate the long-term benefits and measurable impact of policy engagement. To effectively combat the rising rates of chronic disease, there needs to be a collective shift from thinking in terms of “programs” to strategically pursuing policies that will have a greater impact on obesity, diabetes, heart disease, and other chronic diseases. current sessions c3 Room: Nat Hill promising directions in nutrition and wellness promotion Fruit and Vegetable Consumption Among Immigrant and Non-immigrant Women Served by WIC in South Central Kentucky. Pragati Gole, MD, Western Kentucky University; SK Varun Malayala, MBBS, Department of Public Health, Western Kentucky University background: The recent influx of immigrants from Burma, Bosnia, Mexico, El Salvador and other countries to the United States has created awareness among public health professionals to understand the dietary preferences of these groups. Research has not focused on dietary intake of immigrant populations. Purpose: The purpose of this study was to assess dietary patterns of immigrants and non-immigrants served by the WIC (Women, Infant, and Children) program and residing in South Central Kentucky. The study proposed to identify intake of fruits and vegetables during pregnancy, perceptions of fruits and vegetable intake during pregnancy, consumption preferences, and barriers and promoting factors regarding fruit and vegetable consumption. methods: The study utilized a cross-sectional research design. Post partum women attending the WIC clinic completed a 17-item selfadministered survey. This questionnaire incorporated constructs from the Social Cognitive Theory and the Theory of Planned Behavior. It was first developed in English and then translated into Burmese, Spanish and Bosnian. The survey was administered following approval from the Institutional Review Board. Respondents included women from the United States (n=100), Burma (n=30), Mexico and South America (n=33), Bosnia (n=10), and from other countries (n=7). results: Most respondents ate 1 or 2 cups of fruits and vegetables per day during their pregnancy and felt that this amount was adequate. Burmese women perceived high cost (70%) and unavailability (33.3%) as the major barriers preventing them from eating fruits and vegetables. s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 27 ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ friday | november 5 American (48%), Spanish (42.4%) and Bosnian (40%) women felt that lack of time was the major hindering factor. Burmese (87%) and Spanish speaking women (76%) ate fruits and vegetables because they were healthy; Bosnian (90%) and American (83%) women because they liked their taste. Most immigrant women wanted to receive educational materials on eating more fruits and vegetables. conclusions: Healthy People 2010 recommends eating at least 2 cups of fruits and 3 cups of vegetables per day. Results indicate that most women ate too few fruits and vegetables during their pregnancy. This presentation will provide information on how to tailor an intervention and develop materials to better meet the needs of immigrant and nonimmigrant WIC women. Elementary School Student Health Beliefs and Perceptions of a School Based Nutrition Intervention. Kristina Davis, MS, MPH, ODPHP introduction: The prevalence of obesity in Chicago children is currently more than twice the national average. In line with Healthy People 2010 objective 19-3, the Organic School Project aimed to reduce the proportion of overweight and obese children through diet and health education. methods: Post intervention focus groups were conducted to assess program effectiveness through understanding of students’ perceptions. Sixty-nine students were selected using convenience sampling from three cohorts (K-2nd grade, 3rd-5th grade, and 6th-8th grade) at a Chicago elementary school. Students discussed food choices, diet changes, nutrition and health knowledge, perceived benefits of participation, and the program’s influence on student health information. Transcripts were qualitatively analyzed manually coding for content. Results: Children felt very strongly for or against certain menu items based on sensory perceptions. Common trends included preferring fresh to cut fruit and enjoying sloppy joe sandwiches and cheese pizza. Students often considered food to be healthy if it was identified as organic regardless of any other attributes. Students based their food choices predominantly on taste and familiarity. While students share information learned in school at home, the changes at school did not appear to change nutrition at home. Students felt that there should be a larger variety of options available at meals. The importance of health was associated with the ability to run and play and the risk of premature death from obesity complications. conclusion: Few qualitative studies have been published regarding elementary student’s perception of participation in nutrition education programs. Focus groups are an effective way to gain information on how children perceive the programs they participate in and elucidate barriers to prevention and intervention effectiveness that may not be visible using traditional quantitative methods. Digital Photographic Food Diaries for Weight Loss. Lydia Burak, PhD, CHES, Bridgewater State; Teresa King, PhD, Bridgewater State Research has shown that self-monitoring of food intake is one of the most effective weight management interventions. However, the typical food diaries used to self-monitor have limitations, the primary limitation being the accuracy of the reporting by the individual. The purpose of our study was to determine if digital photography could increase the effectiveness of self-monitoring. The study was underpinned by the self monitoring construct of social learning theory as well as by social support theory. Participants were recruited from the faculty, staff, and student population of a midsized public educational institution. Eligibility requirements included a BMI of greater than 25, daily access to a computer 28 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 with internet, and the ability to attend weekly sessions. Participants (n=25) were randomized to one of two conditions: 1) weekly support/education sessions plus written food diaries or 2) weekly support/education sessions plus digital photographic food diaries. The written diary group was required to record in a written food diary all the food they ate each day. At the end of each day, the participants examined the diaries/logs, and then wrote a brief reflection. They turned in the diaries and reflections to the researchers for feedback. The photo group was required to photograph all the food they ate each day. At the end of each day, they uploaded the pictures onto a computer blog, examined the food photos, and then wrote a brief reflection. They e-mailed the photo blogs to the researchers for feedback. It was hypothesized that individuals randomized to the photographic diary group would develop more accurate perceptions of eating habits and achieve greater weight loss. After ten weeks, both groups lost weight; the average weight loss was 4.86 lbs. As hypothesized, the digital photo group lost more weight (mean= 8.12, SD = 6.0, range = -3 to 17.5 lbs.) than the paper-pencil group (mean = 2.5, SD = 4.1, range = -8 to 8 lbs.). The results of this study are clearly limited by a small number of participants and attrition, however, the results suggest that taking photographs of food before consuming it may indeed lead to more mindful eating, which may in turn lead to weight loss. Using a CBPR Approach to Explore Health Literacy and Type-2 Diabetes Prevention Needs in African American and Hispanic Adolescents. Melissa Valerio, PhD, MPH, University of Michigan; Edith Parker, DrPH, University of Michigan School of Public Health; Gloria Palmisano, MA, Community Health and Social Services (CHASS) Center, Inc.; Angela Reyes, MPH, Detroit Hispanic Development Corporation; Zachary Rowe, BA, Friends of Parkside background: African American and Latino adolescents are at high risk for type 2 diabetes. Preventive behaviors have been proven to delay/ prevent onset of diabetes, however, many do not adopt these behaviors due to psychosocial factors and their level of health literacy. Inadequate health literacy reduces the ability of adolescents to understand their risk for diabetes. hypothesis: African American and Latino adolescents will have inadequate health literacy and will be at-risk for development of type 2 diabetes. methods: Following a Community Based Participatory Research (CBPR) approach the eight partner organizations served on the project’s steering committee and were directly involved in the development, recruitment, retention, delivery and assessment of the Youth Health Promotion Challenge (YHPC). The steering committee used data from twelve key informant interviews to inform the design of the YHPC program. The intervention was designed to address health literacy and diabetes prevention in adolescents. A pre/post randomized pilot study design was used to assess the health literacy and diabetes related needs of the adolescents. results: Forty-six African Americans and Latinos aged 14-17 years with a family history of diabetes were enrolled. Surveys assessed health literacy, weight, height, blood glucose, television viewing time and computer use in the adolescent population. At baseline, 41% of adolescents were reading below grade level and had inadequate health literacy as measured by the REALM-Teen. Thirty-eight percent of participants had a blood glucose reading >100 mg/dl and 61% of adolescents had a BMI-for-age and sex percentile of 85% or greater. Thirty-two percent of the participants watched 3 or more hours of television per day and 41% used a computer for 3 or more hours per day. conclusions: The population of African American and Latino youths ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ friday | november 5 had inadequate health literacy and was at-risk for type 2 diabetes. Implications for Practice: Partnerships using a CBPR approach in the design of an intervention to address health literacy and diabetes prevention in adolescents may result in a better understanding of the population’s needs and more effective interventions. A CBPR approach may result in the design of more appropriate strategies for addressing health disparities and shows promise for achievement of HP 2020 objectives in health literacy. current sessions c4 Room: Denver 5-6 college health: emerging trends among the millennial generation Safe Medication Use among Hispanic College Students: Knowledge, Attitudes, and Behaviors. Tania Quiroz, DrPH Candidate, BIS, MA, UT Houston School of Public Health; Francisco Soto Mas, PhD, MPH, Director of the UTEP Translational Hispanic Health Research; Amanda Loya, PharmD, Clinical Assistant Professor of Pharmacy, UTEP/UT Austin; Sharon Thompson, PhD, MPH, CHES, University of Texas at El Paso; Arturo Olivarez, PhD, University of Texas at El Paso background: College students are at increased risk of medication errors. Research suggests that young adults are active users of overthe- counter (OTC) medications and other products that may increase the risk for negative health outcomes. Therefore, it is very important to analyze young adults’ attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors about medication use among college students in order to provide them with the necessary information. Due to language and cultural factors, the issue is particularly relevant in U.S.-Mexico border communities. theoretical framework: Attitude is a variable that guides or influences behavior. Knowing a person’s attitudes may facilitate predicting and modifying his/her behavior. HYPOTHESIS: What are the overall mean differences on knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors regarding medication, herbal products or dietary supplement use across key demographic variables among Hispanic college students? Is there a relationship between specific demographic variables and the sub-dimensions in the medication use scale? METHODOLOGY: A causal-comparative research design was used. Participants consisted of male and female Hispanic college students attending a university in a U.S.-Mexico border community. A 51-item survey was designed to analyze knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors regarding medication, herbal products, and dietary supplement use. results: Results indicated: that there was a significant mean difference in attitudes towards medication use based on age place of birth, language, and major. There were significant mean differences in attitudes towards herbal products and dietary supplement use based on age, gender, and major. There was also a significant mean difference in behavior based on language and major. Results also indicated that there was a significant effect for place of birth (F (1,441) = 23.454, p<.001) and language (F (2,440) = 24.543, p<0.002) on attitudes toward medication use. an outlook to the future: Results can be used to inform the development of appropriate educational materials about safe medication use to educate Hispanic college students in U.S.-Mexico border communities. innovative component: The use of effective instruments to evaluate knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors regarding medication, herbal products, and dietary supplement use among Hispanic college students. College Health: Differences in Breast Cancer and Breast-Self Examination Knowledge and Attitudes Among College Women. Cynthia Kratzke, PhD, CHES, Department of Health Science, New Mexico State University objective: This study examined the breast cancer prevention and breast self exam (BSE) knowledge, attitudes, mother-daughter advice, and health information-seeking behaviors for Hispanic and non-Hispanic college women. background: Since little is known about college women’s knowledge and attitudes about breast cancer prevention, we explored if there are differences in knowledge and attitudes between Hispanic and non-Hispanic college women for breast cancer prevention. The American Cancer Society recently recommended women starting in their early 20s learn about the benefits and limitations of BSE as an optional method. A recent study shows Hispanic women are being diagnosed with breast cancer at later stages through self-detection. We coordinated a campus Breast Cancer Awareness Lunch and Learn pilot project during October 2009, the national Breast Cancer Awareness Month, to promote women’s health. methods: A convenience sample of college women (N=21) ranging in age from 18 to 32 completed a 32-item paper-and-pencil survey developed using the Health Belief Model as the theoretical framework. One open ended question was included for their description of the types of breast cancer risk reduction advice received from their mothers. The women were asked to participate in the survey as they visited the breast cancer information table at the university student center two days in October. The information table included display boards and handouts to address breast cancer. We also targeted educating minority groups with our selected materials. results: The majority of Hispanic and non-Hispanic college women were not very knowledgeable about breast cancer awareness. Differences in knowledge, attitudes, and types of Internet use for breast cancer information will be presented using bivariate analyses. Hispanic college women were less likely to get advice from their mothers about reducing breast cancer risks compared to White college women (25% vs. 55%). The types of advice included BSE, healthy eating, clinical breast exams, and exercise. Overall, 89% of the White college women and 50% of the Hispanic college women knew someone with breast cancer. College women looked for online breast cancer information (43%) and searched for information for family or friends (19%). conclusions: Results may be useful for health educators to plan a project emphasizing a need for a campus breast cancer awareness and BSE education. As minority groups increase in size, health educators must learn how to attract and educate young minority groups using culturally sensitive materials. How to Achieve a Healthy Campus in 2020. Melinda Ickes, MEd, PhD, University of Kentucky, Department of Kinesiology and Health Promotion background: According to Healthy Campus 2010, one of the priorities for college campuses was an emphasis on promoting healthy behaviors, including prevention of obesity, as the prevalence rate of obesity in college students has doubled over the past 10 years. Purpose: The purpose of this study was to assess the nutrition and physical activity behaviors of college students to help identify strategies that will lead to healthier college campuses and students through 2020. Methods: Approximately 400 college students at a large Midwestern University were invited to participate through a random selection of general education courses. The student health survey consisted of the following sections and cors o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 29 ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ friday | november 5 responding items: nutrition practices (42-items); nutrition attitudes (17-items); dieting behaviors (9-items); physical activity practices (6-items); physical activity attitudes (22-items); peer/family involvement (10-items); demographics (10-items). Face and content validity were established by distributing the survey to a panel of three experts in survey research and health behavior. results: Students reported higher levels of consumption on a “typical day” compared to what they had “yesterday.” Mean values did not meet the recommended daily values for any of the food groups. Almost 60% of students reported being “healthier” in comparison to other college students. Students reported having family or friends who ate healthy with them would be of more help than encouragement (alone) to eat healthy. Students selected having healthy foods available on campus (70.8%) and at home (73.1%), knowing how to prepare healthy foods (71%), and being able to afford healthy foods (72%) as those strategies which would help them to eat healthy. On average, students reported participating in vigorous physical activity 3.2 days/week and moderate physical activity 2.9 days/week. A majority of the students indicated they were motivated to be physically active (71.6%) and liked being physically active (88.9%). Conversely, students reported watching television 2.3 hours/day and spent 3.0 hours/day on the computer, indicating high levels of sedentary activity. A small percentage of students indicated they would rather watch television than be physically active (13.1%). conclusions and implications for practice: A better understanding of demographic and behavioral characteristics of college students who are most likely to make poor nutrition and/or physical activity choices may aid the design of future programs and campus initiatives to promote these healthy behaviors. With the existing educational infrastructure on college campuses, it creates an opportunity to impact these health-related behaviors some students continue to struggle with. An Exploration/Assessment of Health Promotion Lifestyle Factors and Degree of Stress Experienced by College Student. Billie Lindsey, EdD, CHES, Western Washington University; Ying Li, PhD, CHES, Western Washington University background: Healthy People 2020 will continue its emphasis on objectives related to mental health issues, particularly depression. During the call for public comments, professionals encouraged the inclusion of adolescents and young adults in the mental health objectives. On college campuses, there has been increased attention given to mental health issues, including stress and depression. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report that frequent distress is a key indicator for depression. purpose: This study was undertaken to gain a better understanding of the relationship of college student stress and the practice of various health behaviors that may serve as protective factors for students experiencing stress. methods: In Fall 2008, 319 students from a mid-size university participated in a cross-sectional survey utilizing the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) and the Health Promotion Lifestyle Profile II (HPLP II). The data were entered into SPSS 16.0 and analyzed using descriptive and inferential statistics. Results: This study identified a group of health-related behaviors and ways of thinking that may protect students from stress. Also, a dose response was suggested. Specifically, lower stressed students (PSS M =16.96 SD =4.05) were more likely than higher stressed students (PSS M = 28.95, SD =4.21) to routinely practice 19 of 52 health-promoting behaviors or ways of thinking. For example, respectively, 62.2% vs. 35.5% believe their life has purpose (p =.000); 58.2% vs. 32.7% look forward to the future (p=.000); and 58.7% vs. 33.9% (p =.000) take some time each day for relaxation. With the exception of one dietary behavior, 30 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 there were no differences between lower and higher stressed students in terms of the frequency of behaviors related to physical activity and exercise, dietary practices, and health responsibilities, such as seeking medical advice. implications: These findings add to our understanding of specific traits and behaviors, particularly in the psycho-social dimensions of health, which may contribute to stress prevention. Most of the 19 factors were related to positive thinking, interpersonal relationships, and possessing a future-oriented perspective. Although physical activity, healthy diets, and contact with healthcare professionals should not be discounted, the study points to the importance of other health dimensions that may serve as protective factors. As such, they become instructive for health professionals, including clinicians, counselors, and health educators. Furthermore, these factors may be used in the development of interventions to meet the mental health objectives of Healthy People 2020. current sessions c5 Room: Colorado E-F novel uses of electronic media: adapting to diverse audiences CDC Fruit & Vegetable Access Online Toolkit for State Coordinators: Addressing Disparities and Increasing Availability. Jennifer James, MPH, Account Director, Ogilvy Public Relations; Frances Heilig, MPA, Senior Vice President, Ogilvy Public Relations background: Fruit and vegetable consumption rates have not improved significantly in 20 years among Americans, and in particular among those with limited incomes. Cost and access remain significant barriers to produce consumption by limited-income populations. theoretical basis: In 2008, working with Ogilvy Public Relations, the CDC Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity convened a strategy team of federal, state, non-profit, and private partners with specialized skills and knowledge in health promotion, specifically related to nutrition. Working with the CDCynergy tool, we selected limitedincome moms and their children as our priority audience and developed the following: A literature review focusing on our audience’s consumption and access to produce · An audience profile based on the literature · A situation analysis describing the environment surrounding our audience, including major factors that influence consumption, strategies that have worked to change behaviors of the audience, and gaps in what we know works to change behavior. objectives: Develop a communications resource for state fruit and vegetable coordinators to increase produce consumption of limitedincome moms and their children. Create a resource that can serve as a model for other programs seeking to utilize policy and environmental approaches to reach limited income populations. intervention: Based on research, and using social marketing principles and methodology, we developed an online resource presenting three different implementation strategies focused on policy and environmental change that research shows are effective at influencing produce consumption among limited-income populations: Improving the Retail Food Environment – Create a healthier food retail environment in neighborhoods considered “food deserts.” Through partnerships, bring stores to underserved areas through financial incentives and improve facilities and increase produce supply at existing stores. Collaborating with Local Food Policy Councils – Partner with state or local Food Policy Councils to promote promising strategies aimed at increasing access to fruits and vegetables in limited-income communities. Establish- ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ friday | november 5 ing Farmers Markets- Working with farmers, develop farmers markets in communities that lack grocery stores and access to produce to enable individuals to purchase regionally grown produce directly from farmers at community farmers markets and stands. evaluation measures and results: We are currently in the development phase of the online resource that by summer 2010 will be part of: http://www.fruitsandveggiesmatter.gov/. Our goal is that consumption of produce will be increased by a ½ cup daily among communities that implement one or more of the strategies. Exploring the Trends and Challenges of New Cancer Health Promotion Strategies to Reduce Social Inequities in Health Among Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Populations. Carolina Casares, MD, MPH, American Cancer Society Eliminating disparities in cancer screening, diagnosis, treatment, and mortality is an essential step toward achieving health equity, increasing access and improving health outcomes for patients with cancer. The American Cancer Society (ACS) is dedicated to eliminating cancer by actively promoting best practices in health promotion, initiating alliances and partnerships for promoting sound policies and synergistic practices related to chronic disease, and exploring trends and challenges in implementing media, culturally and linguistically appropriate for diverse populations. Much of the suffering and death from cancer could be prevented by creating opportunities for organizations to effectively communicate health information and resources. The ACS wants to develop population focused and competent tools as a resource for reaching out to minorities, migrants, vulnerable and disadvantage groups and providing them with health relevant services, while paying close attention to quality. These tools must be applicable in both trans-border and trans-national locations. However, there are significant challenges in developing these tools because of inequalities in access to care, language barriers, cultural differences, and racial discrimination. One promising tool is the internet. Internet use among typically very low use Latino adults has been increasing steadily in the last few years. The ACS is in the process of piloting a culturally and linguistically adapted web portal in Spanish for the Latino community, that will help promote community cancer awareness, increase the trust and credibility of the Society among this group and motivate them to use available resources and become involved by volunteering and supporting the organization. During the session we will explore several questions regarding the heterogeneity of Latinos, such as - How can we become relevant to all groups and what kind of plan, or coordinated effort, would work for them? Improving the Cultural Competence of Cardiovascular, Cancer, and Pulmonary Disease Prevention and Early Detection Practices of Public Health, Mental/Behavioral Health and Health Care Providers through Online Training. Kathy Zavela Tyson, MPH, PhD, CHES, Director of Research Development, Professor Emeriti, Center for Research Strategies, University of Northern Colorado; Michael Bloom, MPA, CEO, North Colorado Health Alliance; Ramon Del Castillo, PhD, MPA, MSc, Metropolitan State College of Denver; Traci Mordell, BA, North Range Behvaioral Health – Latino Professional Development Program; Veronica Rivera, MS, CACIII, EMDRII, School of Education Colorado State University; Steve Del Castillo, PhD; Chris Del Castillo In Colorado, Latino/a adults have the highest rates of colorectal cancer and diabetes and risk for cardiovascular and pulmonary disease than any other ethnic/cultural group due to lifestyle risk factors. To reduce these health disparities, the North Colorado Health Alliance (NCHA) received funding from the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment Office of Health Disparities to improve prevention and early detec- tion of cancer, cardiovascular or pulmonary disease (CCPD) and patient compliance among this disparate population. NCHA contracted with North Range Behavioral Health to develop and pilot an on-line Cultural Competency Education Training curriculum. The curriculum, designed by North Range Behavioral Health professionals and consultants from Compasión Counseling and Training was based on cultural competency standards. The curriculum, focused on developing four skills or “Four Habits” to increase patient or client attendance for their visits, follow-up and medical or behavioral health compliance. The Four Habits include: (1) listening skills, (2) engaging patients/clients in sharing information about health issues, (3) involving patients/clients in developing treatment and (4) follow-up plans. The curriculum was piloted by providers and staff in behavioral health, health care and public health agencies in northern Colorado. The Center for Research Strategies, the project evaluator, developed an electronic Provider and Staff Survey to determine the impact of the curriculum on behavioral health and medical practices. The electronic link to the 25 question survey was distributed via email to 70 providers and staff who had initially enrolled in the online curriculum. A 54% response rate was obtained. Almost two-thirds of survey respondents (63%) indicated that they were part of integrated behavioral health or health care services and the majority (71%) worked with or within an integrated health care service program or team. Among the 19 who had completed the NCHA Cultural Competency Training online, almost all (95%) utilized listening skills with their patients or clients and more than half (53%) engaged patients or clients in sharing information about their health issues. To a lesser extent, they involved their patients or clients in developing treatment plans (37%) or follow-up plans (37%). The “Four Habits” described in the online training program can enhance provider skills that may ultimately impact patients’ behavioral health compliance. The inclusion of cultural competency training for behavioral health, health care and public health professionals who work with Latino/a populations is essential for improving practices and reducing health disparities. Identifying Demographic and Situational Factors that Influence the Use of an Electric Hematological Cancer Toolkit: A Multivariate analysis. Bruce Dotterrer, MS, University of Alaska, Institute for Circumpolar Health Studies (UAA); David Driscoll, PhD, MPH, Gabriel Garcia The purpose of this study is to identify the demographic and situational factors that influenced Toolkit users to make contact with national cancer organizations. Results from an online survey completed by users of the Toolkit (n=387) were evaluated to assess the influence of these factors. The mean age of survey participants was 52 years (SD = 15.5), 48% were college graduates, 56% were female, and 79% were white. A logistic regression was conducted to assess Toolkit usage. Logistic regression results indicate that women (OR = 2.8), and those involved with current cancer treatment (OR = 2.4) were significantly more likely to access and review web-based materials by national cancer organizations after using the Toolkit. These results suggest that the user’s stage of treatment must be considered when developing electronic site-specific cancer informational media. plenary session ii fri / nov 5 / 4:30 am – 6:00 am / Room: Colorado E-F Healthy People 2020: Mile High Expectations Shiriki Kumanyika, PhD, MPH, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine; Rear Admiral Penelope Slade-Sawyer, PT, MSW, Office of Public Health & Science, DHHS Office of the Secretary; Doug Evans, PhD, The George Washington University s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 31 ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ friday | november 5 & saturday | november 6 In 2008, the leadership was appointed of the Healthy Secretary’s Advisory Committee on National Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Objectives for 2020. For more than 24 months, the committee has worked through meetings, comment periods, and public forums around the country to gather input on the vision, mission, goals, focus areas, and criteria for selecting and prioritizing objectives. The Healthy People 2020 objectives are due to be released by the end of the year, leveraging scientific insights and lessons learned from the past decade, along with new knowledge of current data, trends, and innovations. Healthy People 2020 will reflect assessments of major risks to health and wellness, changing public health priorities, and emerging issues related to our nation’s health preparedness and prevention. This panel presentation will provide an update on the process used in developing the HP 2020 framework as well as relevant areas where health education and health promotion can have the greatest impact at the national, state, and local levels. saturday, november 6 early risers 1 sat / nov 6 / 7: 00 am - 8:15 am / Room: Matchless holistic approach to health: the mind body connection Before, I Didn’t Dream: A Promotor Based Mental Health Intervention. Pamela Gudino, MPH, Program Director, Somos Mayfair Improved maternal mental health can result in improvements in school success and emotional well-wellbeing for children, with lifelong benefits for our community. In east San Jose, California there are extremely few mental health resources for undocumented immigrant Latina women and few bilingual and bicultural therapists. In the absence of funding and political will to provide health resources for this population, promotores (community health workers) working with a non-profit organization, Somos Mayfair, piloted a model for immigrant mothers to provide group support. theoretical model: Somos Mayfair promotores incorporate Freirian principles of popular education into our leadership development and our education spaces: In our leadership development, we believe that lasting change requires understanding power and systems of oppression, including our own biases, we emphasize the importance of learning by doing and believe that leadership is rooted in “praxis” or cycles of action and reflection. In our educational work, “teachers” are facilitators or guides, rather than authorities; learning is participatory and dialogue-based, we honor and build on the existing knowledge and experience of the people we work with. support group participants and interviews with participants recruited to facilitate the open-ended support group. Quantitative data were collected using pre and post surveys to measure changes in self-esteem, efficacy, knowledge, sense of belonging, and positive attachment behaviors. 100% of the women who completed the surveys reported improvements in all areas. Analysis of the qualitative data indicates the outcomes are a result of being valued, forming relationships, and the women learning to see themselves as agents of change. The results of this pilot program suggest a model for how communities confronting ever diminishing outside funding can continue to combat health disparities. The Health-Related Quality of Life Curriculum Development Project. Cecily Luncheon, MD, DrPH, MPH, ORISE Fellow, Division of Adult and Community Health/NCCDPHP/CDC; Stephen James, MPH, CPH, Scimetrika, LLC; Rosemarie Kobau, MPH, Division of Adult and Community Health/NCCDPHP/CDC; Melanie Livet, PhD, Scimetrika, LLC; Matthew Zack, MD, MPH, Division of Adult and Community Health; Debra Lubar, MSW, Division of Adult and Community Health/NCCDPHP/CDC background: New objectives for Healthy People 2020 (HP2020) are in process to help guide public health practice for the next decade. To improve monitoring of health-related quality of life (HRQOL) for this practice, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQOL) Program and faculty from schools of public health (SPH) recently developed curricular materials on HRQOL for master-level programs (MPH). The purpose of this project was to increase the use of HRQOL program resources (e.g. datasets, HRQOL measures and publications) in SPH to foster use of HRQOL in public health practice. theoretical basis: Formative social marketing research based on Diffusion of Innovation Theory (DOI) had identified SPH as slow adopters for use of HRQOL data. DOI guided the development of HRQOL curriculum materials as a compatible innovation through which the CDC HRQOL program could introduce its resources to SPH. objectives: To introduce CDC HRQOL resources in SPH by developing curricular material that will assist faculty and students to address health issues directed by HP2020. intervention Lesson plans, case studies, and data practice queries were developed for each of the five core areas of public health (Biostatistics, Environmental Health, Epidemiology, Health Policy and Management, and Social and Behavioral Health). evaluation The HRQOL Program sought input at various SPH from faculty who functioned as content experts and stakeholder reviewers, guiding the development and the evaluation of curricular materials based on DOI attributes. objectives: We designed an intervention to increase mother’s selfesteem and self-efficacy and sense of belonging. We also addressed mother’s positive attachment behavior. A major objective of the support groups was to empower participants to lead support groups, or talking circles, on their own once the 12 week sessions ended. results Stakeholder evaluation indicated that the curriculum materials are appropriate for dissemination to SPH faculty. Dissemination will occur through 2010. interventions: Somos Mayfair promotores piloted two 12 week support groups with 20 low income immigrant Latina women to provide educational and psychosocial support to mothers reporting feelings of isolation, depression or difficulty communicating with or parenting their children. Two of the original participants were recruited to conduct an ongoing open-ended support group for the community. Evaluation measures/results We collected both quantitative and qualitative data to assess the groups’ impact. Qualitative data included letters written by Melissa Haithcox-Dennis, PhD, MA, CHES, Department of Health Education and Promotion, East Carolina University; Kathleen Welshimer, PhD, MPH, Department of Health Education, Southern Illinois University Carbondale 32 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 Social Support Experiences of HIV Positive HIV/AIDS Coalition Participants: A Grounded Theory Approach For more than twenty-five years HIV/AIDS has overwhelmed and devastated all corners of the world including the United States. In the US, grassroots organizations and governmental agencies have counteracted the negative social and economic effects of HIV by implementing ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ saturday | november 6 various strategies including local and statewide community coalitions. Although HIV/AIDS coalitions resemble other health promotion coalitions they differ in that People Living With HIV/AIDS (PLWHAs) are federally mandated or required by the funder to participate. As a result, PLWHA membership is thought to be largely due to these requirements. Other factors affecting participation, including social support, often have been overlooked. There is a dearth of research on the role that social support plays in coalition participation and its relationship to coalition success. The purpose of this study was to document PLWHAs’ perception of social support experiences and coalition success with regard to their participation in HIV/AIDS coalitions. This study used a qualitative research design guided by the grounded theory approach. 13 HIV positive, HIV/AIDS coalition participants were interviewed in New York City, NY during December 2009. Verification was achieved though continuous clarification of the researcher’s biases, the development of rich and thick description, triangulation, negative case analysis, a peer review, and an external audit. Results revealed that PLWHAs perceive that social support exists in said coalitions. Six main themes related to social support emerged from the data: (a) the acquisition of knowledge and information, (b) the desire to give back and help others, (c) the desire to participate in a “successful” effort, (d) the desire to stay connected through coalition activities, (e) the desire to give and receive social support, (f) PLWHAs strongly desired to give back to others and strived to acquire information and skills to do so. In addition, PLWHAs perceived that the most important factor related to coalition success is social support and that the provision of social support influence why they joined, continue and participate as active members and leaders. Recommendations for health education include: exploring social support as means of coalition recruitment and retention of underserved and culturally distinct groups, examining current coalition activities for ways to incorporate social support for its most vulnerable members, and including social support as a factor in the evaluation of coalition success. early risers 2 sat / nov 6 / 7:00 am - 8:15 am / Room: Molly Brown Critical Thinking: A Necessary Skill for Leadership. This workshop provides attendees with a good working knowledge of Critical Thinking Tools and Techniques; practice sessions with these tools on real business issues, and planning on how to use them in the future. The templates, called Thinksheets, in this workshop are used primarily as a teaching aid to guide future, out of class use. current sessions d sat / nov 6 / 8:30 am – 9:45 am current sessions d1 Room: Colorado E-F student fellowship presentations Adolescent Dating Violence: A National Assessment of School Counselor’s Practices. Jagdish Khubchandani, PhD (c), MD, MPH, CHES, Ball State University background: Adolescent dating violence (ADV) is a significant public health problem which affects 9%-34% adolescents in the United States according to various estimates. Schools can play an important role in preventing ADV, educating teens about healthy dating relationships and responding to incidents of ADV. Little is known about school personnel’s’ practices and perceptions regarding ADV. theoretical framework: A combination of constructs from the Health Belief Model, and Stages of Change Theory were used to create a valid and reliable instrument for assessing school counselor’s knowledge and beliefs about ADV. This study assessed school counselor’s knowledge and beliefs about ADV, the barriers to assisting victims of ADV, current practices of schools in relation to ADV. hypothesis: The study determined whether public schools have a protocol for responding to an incident of ADV. Additionally, the study assessed the school counselor’s perceptions of the role played by various school personnel in relation to assisting victims of ADV. methods: A comprehensive literature review was conducted to develop a questionnaire with adequate face validity. A panel of experts (n=12) assessed the instrument for content validity. The required sample (n=257) was determined by a priori power analyses at 90% confidence interval and 5% confidence level considering the total population of high school counselors (n=4500) in the US who were members of the American School Counselors Association. Finally, factoring in a potential non-response rate of 50%, a three wave mailing process was employed to survey a national random sample of high school counselors (n=550). Mailings included self addressed postage paid return envelope, a cover letter, questionnaire and a $1 bill as an incentive for the participants (these techniques were used to maximize the response rate). results: As of now data is being collected and we are in the last phase of data collection. However, early results indicate that the majority of school counselors reported that they do not have a protocol in their schools to respond to an incident of adolescent dating violence. Additionally, the majority of counselors reported that in the past 2 years training to assist victims of teen dating abuse has not been provided to personnel in their schools, their school does not conduct periodic student surveys that include questions on teen dating abuse behaviors, and their school does not have a committee that meets periodically to address health and safety issues which include teen dating abuse. coclusion: It would appear from the preliminary results that schools do not find adolescent dating violence a high priority. In addition, counselors found a number of barriers (other important issues, lack of space etc) to assisting students involved in ADV. implications for practice: Schools need to establish a means for assessing the status of ADV in their student population. In addition, schools need to provide in-service education for school personnel regarding prevention, assessment and interdiction of ADV. Alcohol-Related Problems and Suicidal Behavior Among College Students: Belongingness and Burdensomeness as Potential Mediators. Dorian Lamis, PhD (c), MA, University of South Carolina; Patrick Malone Suicidal behaviors and alcohol use are both prevalent on U.S. college campuses (CDC, 2007). Prior research has clearly demonstrated an association between these behaviors in individuals attending college (Lamis et al., in press). This study is intended to establish the relations among alcohol-related problems, suicidal behaviors, and two components of Joiner’s (2005) interpersonal-psychological theory of suicide in a sample of 996 college students. The interpersonal-psychological theory of suicide posits that an individual will not engage in serious suicidal behavior unless he/she has both the desire and capability to do so. The current study will focus on the suicidal desire components of the theory (i.e., thwarted belongingness and perceived burdensomeness), which Joiner proposes are distinct, but related, constructs that must be present s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 33 ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ saturday | november 6 saturday | november 6 for one to successfully commit suicide. According to Joiner, thwarted belongingness occurs when one experiences a profound feeling of disconnectedness from others and perceived burdensomeness is defined as an individual’s perception that they are a burden to others. were analyzed and combined with social and demographic characteristics to illuminate the impact that changes in transportation-related behaviors and vehicular emissions will have on overburdened communities. Correlations among all study variables were investigated and found to be significant (p < .001). The main research questions were to determine if belongingness and burdensomeness mediated the relation between alcohol-related problems and measures of suicide proneness and suicide ideation after controlling for covariates (i.e., gender, race, social desirability). To test for potential mediation of belongingness and burdensomeness, four models were estimated in Mplus v.5.1 (Muthén & Muthén, 2008), with suicide proneness and suicide ideation serving as the outcome variables and examining the two mediators separately. Asymmetric confidence intervals (CI) for indirect effects were created using the bias-corrected percentile bootstrap. Laura L. Colbert, MPH(c), Emory University Results indicated the direct effects from alcohol-related problems to the mediators to the suicide outcomes were all significant at p < .001 in the 4 models. Further, perceived burdensomeness partially mediated the relation between alcohol-related problems and suicide proneness (indirect effect: b = 0.129, 95% CI: .076 to .189),, and between alcoholrelated problems and suicide ideation (indirect effect: b = 0.020, 95% CI: .012 to .029). Similarly, belongingness partially mediated the relation between alcohol-related problems and suicide proneness (indirect effect: b = 0.079, 95% CI: .037 to .128), and between alcohol-related problems and suicide ideation (indirect effect: b = 0.009, 95% CI: .004 to .016). Moreover, as hypothesized, tests of equality constraints indicated that the mediation via perceived burdensomeness was significantly stronger than the mediation via belongingness for both suicide outcomes. Once the nature of the associations among alcohol-related problems, burdensomeness, belongingness, and suicidal behavior are better understood, more effective suicide prevention programs may be designed and implemented on college campuses. Grounds for Change: How Transportation-Related Analysis as Part of a Health Impact Assessment can be Used to Advance the Healthiest Cap and Trade Program. Tina Yuen, PharmD, MCP (c), MPH, University of California Berkeley background: Climate change is a global health problem and presents challenges not only due to its complexity and scale of impact, but also because it exacerbates existing inequities and threatens to worsen present health disparities.1, 2 In the context of exposures to traffic on busy roadways, socioeconomic and other vulnerability characteristics are associated with who lives or spends a great deal of time in proximity to major roadways and are, thus, unduly affected.3-6 California’s AB32 Climate Change Mitigation, with offsets, is expected reduce passenger vehicle greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 13% and will potentially reduce traffic related co-pollutants and other risks.7 The legislation presents an opportunity for public health practitioners to address and mitigate environmental health inequities in highly impacted areas, specifically around exposures to traffic. aim: Through a transportation-related analysis as part of a Health Impact Assessment, a framework of health and equity can be used to advance the most health-promoting Cap and Trade policy design. methods: From the economic analysis of the climate change legislation, estimated changes in fuel prices, fuel use, and vehicular miles traveled (VMT) formed the basis for how near roadway mobile emissions and air quality would be affected using the CALINE3 model in two highly impacted communities in California, Richmond and Wilmington. Health outcomes 34 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 POWERPLAY Curriculum Project. In 2005, the Georgia Department of Human Resources found that 40% of African American children and 28% of white children in middle school were overweight or at risk for being overweight. Many students are not getting adequate exercise and proper nutrition. Since health behaviors are established during adolescence, teaching prevention through physical activity and good eating habits is a crucial step in the reduction of obesity and the prevention of related chronic diseases. In order to stem this trend, children and their families should be provided with the knowledge and skills necessary to live healthier lives by increasing nutritional knowledge among participants, improving eating behaviors, and providing a structured setting for physical activity. By partnering with Emory University’s Challenge and Champions three-week summer camp, lesson plans based on the POWERPLAY curriculum will be administered to 65 middle school students. One third of the students are homeless or low-income, and many nationalities and cultures are represented within the group. Health and wellness information will be integrated into the students’ two subject classes, stand-alone sessions, lunch period, and the structured physical activity time. Covered subject matter includes nutrition information and related skills (such as nutrition label reading), structured physical activity time, goal-setting, healthy body images, and youth empowerment. By integrating health and wellness curriculum into an established, existing camp, sustainability of the curriculum is much more likely. Students who participate in future Challenge and Champions programs will also be able to benefit from the POWERPLAY curriculum. current sessions d2 Room: Mattie Silks healthy aging: living long, living well Examining the Relationship between the Health Literacy and Health-Related Outcomes in an Older Cohort-Study Population. Melissa Valerio, PhD, MPH, University of Michigan; Patricia Andreski, MA, University of Michigan Institute for Social Research background: A high percentage of older adults have inadequate health literacy. Additionally, this population has been found to have two to three chronic diseases. Hypothesis: Inadequate health literacy will be associated with poor health outcomes in the national sample of older adults. methods: Participants of the Panel Study for Income Dynamics (PSID) aged 65 and older (N=1353) were included in this analysis. The Demographic Assessment of Health Literacy (DAHL) was used to estimate health literacy of the population. Health related outcomes examined included overall health status, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, mental distress, ADL help and IADL difficulties. Univariate and multivariate analysis were completed. Multiple regression controlling for marital status, and wealth were computed to examine the relationship between inadequate health literacy and health outcomes. results: 28% of the population were between the age of 65-69, 22% were 70-74, 22% were 75-79, 15% were 80-84 and 13% were 85 years of age or older. 58% of the population was female; 8% were African American, ✯ Conference Abstracts saturday | november 6 saturday | november 6 84% Caucasian, and 5% were Hispanic; 22% had less than a high school diploma, 36% had a high school diploma and 41% had some college or greater. 15% of the population had inadequate health literacy as measured by the DAHL. Those with inadequate health literacy were significantly more likely to have poor or fair overall health (OR=2.04; CI: 1.97-2.19), diabetes (OR=1.09; CI: 1.02-1.16); mental distress (OR=1.38; CI: 1.151.64), need more assistance with ADL (OR=2.45; CI: 2.30-2.59), and have difficulties with IADL (OR=2.32; CI: 2.18-2.47). Conclusions: Inadequate health literacy as measured by the DAHL was found to be associated with poorer health outcomes in the nationally representative sample. implications for practice: To promote public health practice in older adult populations with inadequate health literacy we must incorporate HP2020 health communication objectives. Health education aimed at improving health literacy in older populations may translate into better overall health and quality of life. Do Well, Be Well con Diabetes: A Pilot Study of a Type-2 Diabetes Self-management Education Program for Hispanic/Latino Rural Older Adults. Ninfa Purcell, PhD, CHES, Assistant Professor/Health Specialists, Family Development and Resource Management The purpose of this grant-funded pilot study was to test the effectiveness of the Do Well, Be Well con Diabetes (DWBW) program, a 6-week type 2 diabetes self-management intervention. Low-literate, Spanish-speaking rural seniors (> 55 years) and their families were the intended audience. Efficacy of the program was based on Hemoglobin Alc (A1c) levels, a gold standard for blood glucose control. Two Texas counties, Starr and Hidalgo, were selected as pilot sites because these communities have the characteristics that can best be served by DWBW, including: high rates of diabetes, rural, medically underserved, a growing Hispanic elder population, and a larger proportion of Hispanic/Latinos. A prospective, quasi-experimental, repeated-measure design was employed to test the program’s effectiveness. Intervention and wait-list (control) sites were Starr and Hidalgo Counties, respectively. At baseline and three months, HbA1c, self-efficacy, acculturation, diabetes self-care behaviors, and diabetes knowledge were assessed. The diabetes knowledge scale, consisting of open-ended items, will not be reported in this preliminary study. Frequency counts show that for the intervention county the mean age was 58.6 years (N = 50) with 70% females. Almost half (47%) of the Starr County participants had never been to high school, 30% had been to high school but left before graduating. The remaining 20% had a high school diploma. Half of the participants (50%) spoke and read Spanish only. Another 30% spoke and read Spanish and English equally well. Mean pre hemoglobin A1c (A1c) was 8.34 (1.86 SD). The lowest A1c was 4.6 and the highest was 13.3. According to the American Diabetes Association, an A1c 7 or below is considered ideal for glycemic control. Positive changes were found on every measure of selfefficacy. Overall, participants averaged a 3 point gain in self-confidence (pre score 5.66; post score 8.65). Participants reported increase self-confidence regarding exercise and diet. When examining self-care behaviors, blood sugar was tested more often and feet and shoes were checked more often. Preliminary evidence from this pilot study suggests that participants completing DWBW show improvements in self-care behaviors and self-efficacy. It can be concluded that these favorable results demonstrate participants’ ability to maintain glucose control, thus reducing their risk for complications. ✯ The Impact of Health Beliefs and Demographic Characteristics on Breast Cancer Screening Practices among Women Age 55 and Older. Peggy Johnson, MPH, Texas State University background: One of every eight women in the United States will be diagnosed with breast cancer in her lifetime. Although early detection of breast cancer is the most effective method of assuring survival, many women throughout the country do not avail themselves of this advantage. Hypotheses that explain breast cancer mammography screening practices by older women can be classified as health beliefs and socioeconomic/structural issues. purpose: This study assessed whether individual health beliefs as well as demographic factors were associated with obtaining recent and regular mammography screening. In addition to health beliefs, demographic data including age, educational attainment, or rural versus urban/suburban residence were examined. methods: Data was collected from four hundred women from 31 counties in Tennessee using the Champion Revised Health Belief Model Scale. The sample for analysis included women age 55 and older from rural, urban and suburban areas within these counties. Results: Individual health beliefs and demographic characteristics were associated with a higher likelihood of having a recent and regular mammography screening. conclusions: An association of health beliefs concerning the benefits and barriers of mammography screening to regular and recent mammography screening was found in this study. Additional associations to demographic characteristics were also found. Theoretical models are needed to explain the association between health beliefs and demographic characteristics to mammography screening practices. concurrent sessions d3 Room: Colorado E-F scaling new heights in health education leadership: revisiting our past to inform our future Scaling New Heights in Health Education Leadership: Using Our Past to Inform Our Future John P. Allegrante, PhD, Professor and Deputy Provost, Teachers College, Columbia University; Emily Tyler, MPH, CHES, Greesboro, NC for Harriet Hylton Barr; David A. Sleet, PhD, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, for Martin Fishbein; David S. Sobel, MD, MPH, Kaiser Permanente Northern California, Oakland, CA, for Laura Keranen The modern history of health education includes a pantheon of individuals whose legacies of leadership have shaped both SOPHE and the profession. Among the generation of those who played key roles in health education during the last half of the 20th century and gave life to the early phase of SOPHE’s development were Laura Keranen, Harriet Hylton Barr, Norbert Reinstein, and Martin Fishbein. This session will bring together a distinguished group of contemporary leaders in health education that will assess the life and work of these important figures in the history of school and public health education and discuss the implications of the legacy each leaves for addressing the challenges of today’s health problems. s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 35 ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ saturday | november 6 concurrent sessions d4 Room: Molly Brown food for thought: examining connections between nutrition and disease prevention Reducing the Prevalence of Obesity Among Low Income Adults in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Neeti Doshi, BA, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill background: Globally, low income is one of the most cited factors associated with high incidence of obesity. Current literature emphasizes that the combination of proper nutrition and regular physical activity is a highly effective intervention in preventative medicine, perhaps even as equally effective as drug therapy. It is essential to measure and systematically identify current lifestyle habits to maximize improved health outcomes and build effective public health programs. objectives: To systematically identify nutritional habits of low-income adults in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and ascertain associations between diet, physical activity, generated income, and calculated BMI values. methods: Willing and informed participants were recruited from the Brazilian NGO Associacao Saude Crianca Renascer. Participants responded to a 36-item validated nutritional assessment and health status questionnaire in Portuguese that measured the frequency in which they ate 11 different food groups on a daily or weekly basis. All items were scored on a 4-point scale (0-3, 0=most healthy; 3=least healthy behavior) to generate a total nutrition score with a range between 0 (best dietary habits) to 33 (poor dietary habits). BMI [kg/m2] was calculated using standard height and weight measures. All descriptive and statistical analyses were completed using SPSS software. results: Participants (n=72) ranged from ages 18-51 with an average age of 31.4. 83.3% reported no physical activity outside of their daily routine and less than 1/4 reported knowledge of the food pyramid or food groups. Total nutrition scores ranged from 4-30 points, with a mean of 16.75. BMI values ranged from 17.04 – 47.66 with a mean of 28.57. 42% were categorized as overweight but not obese, while 25% were obese. Univariate and regression analyses revealed significant associations between nutrition score and calculated BMI (p=.036) as well as between lack of physical activity and BMI (p=.028). However, monthly income was not significantly associated (p=.802) with BMI. conclusions: While only 22% of participants reported being overweight, in fact 77% had elevated BMI’s suggestive of obesity trends. Poor dietary and exercise habits are more indicative of the prevalence of obesity than monthly income amongst adults in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Future educational and/or interventional programs in Brazil should focus on middleaged adults who may not be aware of a risk of obesity. These efforts should include information on the food pyramid, alternative forms of exercise such as yoga and/or breathing techniques that may improve circulation and sleep quality, as well as routine dietary counseling. Partnership for Success: Food Bank and Community Coalition Team up to Provide Healthy Snacks for Low-Income Kids Sarah Morales, MS, RD, Poudre Valley Health System; Kristin Bieri, BS, Food Bank for Larimer County; Virginia Clark, MS, Poudre Valley Health System, Coalition for Activity and Nutrition to Defeat Obesity; Amy Pezzani, BS, Food Bank for Larimer County Lower income levels have been associated with poor health and nutrition, as indicated by higher incidence of obesity, lower intake of fruits and vegetables, and higher levels of physical inactivity. To address health disparities in the Northern Colorado area, in 2007, the Coali- 36 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 tion for Activity and Nutrition to Defeat Obesity (CanDo) initiated the formation of the Fort Collins Nutrition Network, a collaborative group consisting of over 30 low-income serving organizations with the goal of improving nutrition and physical activity through increased coordination, collaboration and networking opportunities. Network partners were involved in conducting a SWOT (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats) analysis, identifying target audiences and intervention areas. Through this highly participatory process, we identified the need for a healthy snack intervention, focusing on elementary aged children. CanDo partnered with the Food Bank for Larimer County to enhance the nutritional quality of snacks being served to low-income kids in a variety of community settings, using a three-phase approach to implement a Healthy Snack Initiative. In Phase One, the Food Bank modified their existing infrastructure for receiving and distributing food, allowing for incoming food and snack items to be rated, based on nutrition criteria established by the Snackwise® Nutrition Rating System. Snackwise® is a research-based nutrition rating system that calculates the nutrient density in snack foods, and items are rated as (1) Best Choice (2) Choose Occasionally, or (3) Choose Rarely. In Phase Two, program coordinators from targeted sites were trained on how to use the Food Bank healthy snack designation system and were educated on the importance of serving healthy snacks. Program coordinators were also incented to select the healthier options by using CanDo mini-grants to cover the cost of healthier choices (while they received no incentive for less-healthy options). Phase Three involves program evaluation and dissemination of results and is currently underway, to be completed by September 2010. Data is being compiled from the 2009-2010 school year and will be compared to baseline data to assess impact. Preliminary data analysis suggest that the healthy snack initiative has been effective at improving the nutritional quality of snacks offered to low-income kids, as demonstrated by a 37% increase in healthy snacks being selected. To date, over 2,000 low-income kids have been reached at 27 sites in the community. The results of a thorough process and outcome evaluation will assist in determining program impact and opportunities for improvement and transferability to other geographic areas. Nutrition Security: Approaching Food-Related Health Issues Differently Using An Ecological Analysis with Political Economy and Social Cognitive Theories . Robin Haguewood, BA, MPH Candidate, San Francisco State University background: Nutrition insecurity is defined as the combined and related problems of food insecurity, obesity and poor nutrition. Nutrition insecurity and its three components are explored through all levels of the ecological model to first describe the issue, explore causes, and then propose an intervention. Social determinants of health such as poverty and lack of access to healthy foods are discussed and incorporated into intervention recommendations. theoretical framework: Political economy theory and social cognitive theory are paired to analyze the problem and inform a multilevel approach to intervention. methods: A critical literature review of over 20 peer reviewed articles addressing food insecurity, food related health outcomes and current interventions was conducted to inform recommendations for further intervention. hypothesis: The issues of food insecurity, obesity and poor nutrition are best addressed through a multilevel intervention grounded in the ecological model aimed more heavily at policy and social change. results: Community, structural and policy level causes for nutri- ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ saturday | november 6 tion insecurity include a lack of access to healthy foods, access to only processed foods, built environments that prevent such access, policies that subsidize commodity crops, and the decline of nutrients in American crops. These results suggest that appropriate interventions include changes at the policy level (specifically in the farm bill) and a change in policy to allow the use of public lands for a local food economy that would increase community access to healthy foods. In addition, interventions should engage communities to build critical consciousness regarding the food environment. Such interventions may include community garden programs, which include education around the role of place and work to model appropriate garden techniques and nutrition. Interventions should address the current food environment and move away from placing the responsibility of nutrition on the individual. Policy level interventions aimed at the conventional American Agriculture industry are necessary to ensure quality nutrition and sufficient variety of foods needed for human health. Health educators can collaborate with nurses, dieticians, and exercise trainers to apply the themes to create a culturally competent survey and intervention designed to teach healthy eating habits, exercise, and stress management to patients enrolled in the SHAPP program. practice and policy implications: In the development of programs aimed at the issues of food insecurity, obesity and nutrition it is important to address the causes of these issues at the community and policy levels. Also important is to acknowledge that these issues are interconnected and work to collaborate between levels of front line practice and policy advocacy. Finally, effective policies will address the overarching issue of nutrition security by demanding structural change and removing the burden of food access and nutrition education from the individual. Photovoice: From Image to Community and Policy Action. Georgia Stroke & Heart Attack. Marylen Rimando, MPH, CHES, University of Georgia Department of Health Promotion and Behavior; Stephanie Mathews, MPH, CHES, University of Georgia College of Public Health background: Hypertension control is an important issue for public health practice and clinical practice. Hypertension, known as the silent killer and often asymptomatic, affects more than 73 million Americans or approximately 1 in 3 adults in their lifetime. The Georgia Stroke and Heart Attack Prevention Program (SHAPP) is an ongoing hypertension management program for mostly low-income, uninsured patients in Georgia. theoretical framework: Phenomenology, which seeks to gain an in-depth understanding of the lived experiences of SHAPP patients diagnosed with hypertension. Methods: SHAPP clinic staff conducted participant recruitment in a Georgia city. SHAPP patients included whites and African Americans, but the majority were African American women. I conducted 17 in-depth qualitative semi-structured interviews with SHAPP patients at a SHAPP clinic in Georgia. I transcribed interviews verbatim and analyzed for emergent themes to create a representative account of patients diagnosed with hypertension at a SHAPP clinic in Georgia. results: Participants reported accounts of controlled and uncontrolled hypertension. Emergent themes included patients’ compliance with medications, adherence to nurse instructions, and high patient satisfaction with the low cost and quality of medical care in the SHAPP program. Participants offered suggestions such as a walking program at a shopping mall, consultations with with a dietician and personal trainer, and more nutritious options in the vending machines. Perceived barriers to hypertension control included having no motivation to exercise, no transportation to the clinic, no positive social support, and no money to pay for medical care. conclusion: These results tremendously benefit nurses and staff at this clinic site, local health district, and other SHAPP clinic staff throughout the state. The knowledge of these results can assist this clinic’s staff in improving patient care and nurse-patient communication in the future. implications for practice: Overall, these results can contribute to the improvement of hypertension control and management among this clinic’s patients and other SHAPP clinics in the state. In conclusion, this study can assist in improving patient-provider communication and eliminating health disparities between African Americans and white. concurrent sessions d5 Room: Colorado G-H innovative approaches to health communication: a look at photovoice and digital storytelling J. Elaine Borton, MPH, Sage Health Consulting, LLC. Creative ways are needed to engage community residents and political leaders in developing policy and environmental solutions to public health issues. Photovoice is a grassroots approach blending photography with social action and serves as a tool to assess community needs, identify policy solutions and advance socio-ecological approaches to community change. This session will compare and contrast processes and results of Photovoice projects facilitated in an urban neighborhood (Park Hill, Denver), a suburban city (Commerce City, Colorado) and a rural, Nicaraguan community in Boaco. Each community’s Photovoice project focused on specific issues, then engaged policymakers and community members to identify policy priorities from themes reflected in images. Park Hill Thriving Communities focused on health disparities, healthy eating and active living. Priorities were lack of access to healthy and affordable food; unsafe street crossings and sidewalks and crime, drug and gang activity. Partnerships for Healthy Communities focused on community health, safety and image. Priorities were economic development; lack of safe, healthy places; unsafe street crossings and environmental threats. AMOS Health and Hope focused on community health. Priorities were poor hygiene, lack of childcare, abandoned elderly women and achieving dreams despite poverty and access issues. Multiple evaluation measures are integrated into the Photovoice process, assessing community desires, establishing policy priorities and monitoring implementation of policy priorities. The session will present: specific community and policy changes resulting from Photovoice, practical advice and recommendations to engage community members in policy and environmental change and strategies to assess community readiness for Photovoice. Promoting and Evaluating Community Change using Photovoice: Lessons Learned from Kaiser Permanente’s Community Health Initiative. Pamela Schwartz, MPH, Kaiser Permanente Creative methods are needed to engage both community residents and political leaders in policy and environmental solutions to public health issues. We examined the impact of a Photovoice project on policy change related to obesity prevention. Photovoice is a community-based approach to documentary photography that provides people with training on photography, ethics, critical discussion, and policy advocacy. A Photovoice project was implemented as part of the Colorado Community Health Initiative - a community-based obesity prevention effort sponsored by Kaiser Permanente. Photovoice themes that related to healthy eating and active living included a lack of access to healthy food choices s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 37 ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ saturday | november 6 in stores and schools, unsafe street crossings and sidewalks, and the need to redevelop certain areas to encourage safe recreation and active living. The involvement of policy leaders in the project combined with several dissemination activities has contributed to healthier food offerings in schools and restaurants, city planning efforts that emphasize walkability and access to healthy food, and the promotion of youth markets selling fresh produce. Photovoice is typically used as an advocacy tool to engage both community residents and political leaders in policy and environmental solutions to public health issues. We are piloting an innovative way to apply Photovoice as a qualitative evaluation method, which includes asking members of community collaboratives to participate in a second round of photographs and captions to document changes to their community environment, reflect on the potential impact of those changes and plan for future advocacy efforts. This presentation will also describe the experience of using Photovoice as an evaluation tool in three low income, largely minority communities in Northern California, presenting results (photographs and captions) and lessons learned. Using Photovoice to Explore Health Concerns in Female Asian-Indian College Students Women Cheryl Cooper, PhD, RN, The University of Texas at Tyler; Susan Yarbrough, PhD, RN, Associate professor and Assistant Dean, College of Nursing and Health Sciences The University of Texas at Tyler For the 2008/09 academic year, the number of international students attending colleges in the United States increased by 8%, to an all-time high of 671,616. India remains the leading place of origin for the eighth consecutive year. For individuals, especially young adults, leaving home can have a significant effect on health as a result of the many physical and psychological stressor associated with the immigration process (Jeemon, 2009, Sharma, 2002). As the diversity on college campuses grows, the need for culturally appropriate health education and care also increases. Little is known specifically, about young Indian woman immigrants and the issues that may affect their health and wellness after immigrating to the United States This qualitative descriptive study was conducted as part of a larger culture and health project, at a public university in east Texas,during the fall of 2009. The sample participants were 10 female Asian Indian students enrolled in full-time graduate study. The qualitative research method, photovoice was used, in conjunction with traditional focus group methodology, to explore the participants’ general health related beliefs and attitudes, their perceptions about the ways in which the immigration experience has affected their health and well being, the ways they promote personal health and deal with illness, and the major sources of stress in their daily lives. The study was conducted in two sessions, held two weeks apart. Only preliminary results are available at this time, but we plan to have completed a full data analysis in time for presentation at the November SOPHE conference. Themes that emerged from this preliminary analysis in session one include the following:health is perceived as a “life in balance”, with an emphasis on eating the “right” foods and using the appropriate remedies(often herbal) to treat and prevent illness; illness is perceived as a consequence of not doing the “right” things, and/or of disharmony or disconnection with nature; there is an emphasis on maintaining connection with family (in India), as the source of most emotional support and as health advisors; one source of stress was frustration with local health services, for example, lengthy assessments for “simple” problems. Session two themes included the following: Participant photographs reflected the centrality of religion in daily life, the connection with the natural world, the loneliness of so much empty space, as compared with their homeland, and the stress related to meeting academic expectations of professors and of family back home. 38 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 Ethical Dilemmas of Digital Storytelling as a Method for Community Health Education Research and Practice Aline Gubrium, PhD, University of Massachusetts Amherst School of Public Health and Health Sciences; Amy Hill, MA, Silence Speaks Digital Storytelling Based on a community-based participatory research (CBPR) framework, digital storytelling may be used to investigate individual, group, or sociocultural understandings of various health issues, while also increasing participant input in community health projects. Digital stories are three to five-minute visual narratives that synthesize images, video, audio recordings of voice and music, and text to create compelling stories. In this paper we briefly trace the process of producing a digital story and the various applications of digital storytelling as a method for public health education research and practice. We then present a case study of a pilot project using digital storytelling as a research method and review ethical tensions that arose over the course of project implementation. In particular, we review issues of presentation and self-representation in the digital storytelling process, related especially to performative qualities of story production and the audience for the story, the process of digital storytelling itself and how a research angle may run contrary to participatory intents of the process, and issues of privacy and consent in the production process. We then analyze the ethics of access to the digital story artifact/outcome—in relation to the release of digital stories and which audiences can/should have access to the story, how the stories are displayed, and how the release and display of the stories interfaces with issues of consent. Finally, we end by looking at the repercussions of using digital storytelling as a method of inquiry in community health education research—focusing especially on IRB concerns, publication of materials, ethical issues that may be encountered during analysis of visual materials, and conflicting agendas that may arise between research and intervention applications plenary session iii sat/ nov 6 / 10:00 am – 10:45 am / Room: Colorado E-F Elizabeth Fries Health Education Award & Lecture – Conquering Cancer in the 21st Century John Seffrin, PhD, American Cancer Society The Elizabeth Fries Health Education Award is for a health educator who has made a substantial contribution to advancing the field of health education or health promotion through research, program development, or program delivery. The award is given annually by the James F. and Sarah T. Fries Foundation in memory of their daughter, Dr. Elizabeth A. Fries who was Professor of Psychology at Virginia Commonwealth University and co-director of the Cancer Outreach Program. Elizabeth died in 2005 of complications from breast cancer chemotherapy at the age of 42. This year’s award honors John Seffrin, CEO of the American Cancer Society, the world’s largest voluntary health organization fighting cancer. Dr. Seffrin’s presentation will address the growing burden of cancer and other non-communicable diseases globally. He will discuss the role of health education in promoting cancer control in the United States and how we can apply this knowledge in low and middle income countries to avert future illness and death. Dr. Seffrin will identify several timely opportunities for health educators to participate in the prevention and control of cancer and other non-communicable diseases by prioritizing these issues on the global health agenda. ✯ Conference Abstracts ✯ saturday | november 6 plenary session iv sophe 2010 honorary fellow lecture sat/ nov 6 / 10:45 am – 11:30 am / Room: Colorado E-F HEALTH EDUCATION IMPLEMENTATION DISORDERS: DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT David S. Sobel, MD, MPH, Kaiser Permanente Northern California Implementing health education within complex organizations such as health care systems, requires more than a knowledge of theory. The barriers to successful implementation in the real world will be examined and several effective “treatments” offered including a healthy dose of reality, a prescription of behavioral medicine, and an infusion of integration. We will dissect successful health education interventions to identify the active ingredients ranging from health behavior change to transforming attitudes, beliefs and moods. plenary session v sat/ nov 6 / 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm / Room: Colorado E-F Reaching the Healthy People Summit: Elevating Health Education Prominence in US Public Health Policy and Practice Lawrence W. Green, DrPH, University of San Francisco sat/ nov 6 / 2:30-3:30 pm / Room: Colorado E-F National Prevention and Health Promotion Strategy: Listening Session Kathleen A. Ethier, PhD and Corinne M. Graffunder, DrPH, MPH, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention On March 23, 2009, President Obama signed the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, enacting comprehensive health reform legislation. In addition to expanding health insurance and preventive services, the bill created the National Prevention, Health Promotion, and Public Health Council which is to oversee the development of The National Prevention and Health Promotion Strategy. The purpose of the National Strategy is to set specific goals and objectives for improving the health of all Americans. While the Strategy will provide new focus and energy to health promotion and prevention, it will also build on existing federal initiatives, including, but not limited to Healthy People 2020. This session will provide a brief overview of the 1) National Prevention, Health Promotion, and Public Health Council, and 2) the development of a National Prevention and Health Promotion Strategy. Participants will be given an opportunity to provide feedback on the National Prevention Strategy framework and to provide comment on priorities to improvement the Nation’s prevention efforts and opportunities to engage across multiple sectors to advance prevention. Over the past several decades, health promotion and disease prevention have risen to new heights in national prominence and attention. Escalating health care costs and profound interest in personal and community health have culminated in legislative reform and investment in health promotion heretofore only imagined. Yet, as we face the dawn of a new decade of Healthy People Objectives for the Nation, are health education and health promotion poised to leverage their greatest impact and to deliver on their promise of improving the quantity and quality of healthy life? This presentation will provide a 30,000 foot perspective on how this initiative has been sustained over three decades, and some of the challenges and opportunities our discipline faces in reaching the summit and elevating health education prominence in US public health policy and practice. Respondents: Collins Airhihenbuwa, PhD, MPH, Penn State University; Patricia Mullen, MPH, DrPH, The University of Texas School of Public Health, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 39 ✯ Poster Presentations ✯ thursday – saturday | november 4-6 1. Celebrating 60 Years of SOPHE Excellence M. Elaine Auld, MPH, CHES, Society for Public Health Education; Jean Breny, PhD, MPH, Southern Connecticut State University; John P. Allegrante, PhD, SOPHE Past President and Historian, Deputy Provost and Professor, Teachers College, Columbia University Karen Spiller, Speaker, SOPHE House of Delegates; SOPHE Chapters * 3. Using Digital Storytelling Projects to Promote Health Behaviors to College Students Marylen Rimando, MPH, CHES, University of Georgia College of Public Health 4. Programs for Safer Sex Behaviors Among College Students Amar Kanekar, MBBS, MPH, CHES, CPH, PhD, East Stroudsburg University of Pennsylvania 5. M onitoring Health People 2010 Arthritis Management Objectives: Changes in Prevalence of Self-Management Education and Provider Counseling for Weight Loss Exercise Barbara Do, MSPH, APTR fellow, Centers for Disease Control &Prevention 6. A Decade of Achievement: Health Education and Promotion In A Multidisciplinary Home Visitation Program - Changing Lives One Family At A Time Annemarie Martinez, RN, Palomar Pomerado Health Maternal Infant Home Care Division and Clinical Outreach Services 7. U sing the PEN-3 Cultural Model to Understand Child Febrile Illness in Southwest Nigeria Juliet Iwelunmor, BS, Doctoral Candidate, Penn State University * 8. Reaching the Optimum Potential of Distance Learning in Health Education Through Properly Marketing Michael Stellefson, PhD, University of Florida 9. Piloting a Public Health Detailing Intervention for the Children’s Environmental Health Center of the Hudson Valley (CEHCHV) Michael Shakarjian, PhD, New York Medical College, Diane Heck, PhD, Chia-Ching Chen, EdD, CHES 10. Process Evaluation Findings from a Pilot Intervention to Improve Home Nutrition Environments in Rural Families Michelle Kegler, DrPH, MPH, Director, Emory Prevention Research Center, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University * 11. Communicating H1N1 Risk to Hispanic College Students Francisco Soto Mas, PhD, MPH, University of Texas El Paso 12. Social Determinants of a Healthy People: Will Health Educators Defend or Debunk the Rhetoric of Neoliberalism? Robert Jecklin, MPH, PhD, University of Wisconsin-La Crosse * 13. Theory of Planned Behavior Based Predictors of Sleep Intentions and Behaviors of Undergraduate College Students at a Midwestern University Adam Knowlden, MBA, MS, PhD Candidate, University of Cincinnati 14. Hispanic and Epilepsy: Exploring Health Behavior and Find the Solution Mitsue Colin, MD, MPH, Quality of Life, Program and Research Department, Epilepsy Foundation 15. The Capstone Experience: Preparing Students for the Profession and the CHES Exam Mary V. Brown, PhD, CHES, Utah Valley University soph e co n f e r e n c e Jean DuRussel-Weston, BSN, RN, MPH, CHES, University of Michigan 17. D eveloping a Culturally and Linguistically Appropriate Stroke Knowledge Assessment Tool: the Importance of Community Partnership Lesli Skolarus, MD, University of Michigan, Department of Neurology 2. Celebrating SOPHE Chapters 40 16. I mproving Patient Education Through Use of Electronic Media ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 18. EPA Air Quality Index Values of Smoke-Free Venues After Smoking Ordinances Nancy Johnson, BS, CHES, Truman State University - Campus-Community Alliances for Smoke-free Environments 19. E valuating The Jackson Road Map To Health Equity Farmers’ Market Patrons’ Satisfaction and Engagement In Positive Health Behaviors David Brown, EdD, MA, CHES, Department of Behavioral and Environmental Health, Jackson State University 20. S exual Compulsivity Among Older, Heterosexual Adults Sara Cole, PhD, MA, BS, CHES, University of Central Oklahoma 21. C ontextual and Individual Factors Associated with Consumption of Sweet Foods in Healthy Individuals Living in an Urban Setting Jean-Claude Moubarac, M.Sc., PhD candidate, Université de Montréal * 22. Training Future Health Leaders in Cultural Humility and Competency: Lessons Learned From Developing and Teaching a Multi-disciplinary Hybrid Online Course and Modules for Public Health and Health Services Students Rob Simmons, DrPH, MPH, CHES, CPH, Director MPH Program, Thomas Jefferson University, School of Population Health 23. The Global Health Care Challenges of Hansen’s Disease Elimination and Research at the USDHHS Hansen’s Disease Center and Worldwide Barbara Hernandez, PhD, CHES, Lamar University 24. American Cancer Society Health Profile and Community Resources Mapping Project Shila Burney, BS, American Cancer Society * 25. P ublishing an Undergraduate Project on the Web: Using Social Bookmarking as a Platform for Student Projects Rebecca Foco, MA, CHES, Health and Human Performance, Virginia Commonwealth University 26. H ealth Education Program to Increase H1N1 Vaccination Rates Among Residents of Blunt County, Tennessee Chandra Story, MS, University of Tennessee Knoxville 27. U se of Cellular Telephones and Texting While Driving William Parker Hinson, BS, University of Florida, Gainesville 28. Adolescent Physical Activity: Does Perception of School and Neighborhood Safety Matter? Clare Lenhart, MPH, CHES, Temple University 29. D evelopment of an Instrument to Assess How Health Education Professional Preparation Programs Prepare Students to Address Health Disparities Ayanna Lyles, PhD, ATC, California University of Pennsylvania dvocacy 2.0: Using Web 2.0 to Advocate for the Profession * 30. A Don Chaney, PhD, CHES, College of Health and Human Performance, University of Florida, Gainesville ✯ Poster Presentations ✯ thursday – saturday | november 4-6 31. Female Iraq and Afghanistan War Veterans: Coming Home in Their Words 44. Feasibility of Biochemical Validation in Self-reported Smoking Behavior Among College Students 32. Assessing Intimate Partner Violence Among Iraq and Afghanistan War Veterans and Their Significant Others 45. U sing the Theory of Planned Behavior to Predict Safer Sexual Behavior in Ghanaian Immigrants in a Large Midwestern City in the U.S. Anne Demers, EdD, MPH, BA, Health Science Department, San Jose State University Anne Demers, EdD, MPH, Health Science Department at San Jose State University * 33. Internet Risk Behavior: Willingness to Engage in Unsafe Sexual Behavior Jorge Figueroa, PhD, Department of Health and Applied Human Sciences, University of North Carolina Wilmington 34. High School Youth Using Their Creative Voice To Improve Community Health Samuel Wood, BA, MFA, Kaiser Permanente Educational Theatre Programs Devan Romero, MS, DrPH, CHES, Loma Linda University School of Public Health Matthew Asare, MBA, PhD Candidate, University of Cincinnati 46. Re-examining the Language and Meanings of HIV and AIDS in South Africa Yewande Sofolahan, BS, Pennsylvania State University * 47. Pregnancy Prevention for Latina Youth Gina Harris, BA, Friends First: A Healthy Choice 48. How We Can Move Toward Reducing Injuries and Mortality from Motor Vehicle Crashes Michael Sabol, MPH, Research Analyst, Traffic Safety Policy 35. Developing Cancer Education Curricula to Reduce Cancer Disparities: Report on Process and Outcome from an Academic-Community Partnership 49. Motor Vehicle Crashes and Adverse Maternal Outcomes in North Carolina 36. Health Education in Practice: Applying the Ecological Model to Healthcare Workforce Issues 50. H ealthy Homes Pilot Project to Prevent Childhood Exposure to Indoor Environmental Hazards in Los Angeles County 37. “Sustainable Morehead”: Framing a Rural Community’s Environmental Sustainability Mission within the Community Coalition Action Theory to Improve Public Health 51. G ender Differences in Motivational Tendencies for Physical Activity Brenda Adjei, EdD, Intercultural Institute on Human Development and Aging Kari Simpson, MPH, CHES, NOVA Emily Whitney, PhD, CHES, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale 38. Environmental Health Knowledge, Attitudes, and Behaviors of Pre-service Teachers Dhitinut Ratnapradipa, PhD, CHES, Department of Health Education & Recreation, Southern Illinois University 39. Combined Use of Research-based Methods and Community Outreach Approaches to Improve Respiratory Health in Preschool Children Catherine J. Vladutiu, MPH, Department of Epidemiology, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Brittany N. Morey, MPH Candidate, University of California, Los Angeles Valerie Lozano, BS, New Mexico State University * 52. F ruit and Vegetable Consumption Among Immigrant and Non-immigrant Women Served by WIC in South Central Kentukcy Pragati Gole, MD, MPH Western Kentucky University * Denotes Poster Promenade Michael Shakarjian, PhD, New York Medical College, Peter Arno, PhD Diane Heck, PhD * 40. The Effects of Projectpower Diabetes Education Program on Adult African American’s Diabetes Knowledge, Empowerment, and Readiness to Change Sherry Grover, PhD, Ashford University 41. Reliability and Validity of the Women’s Health Survey (WHS) – a Tool Assessing American Indian (AI) Women’s Motivation to Get a Screening Mammogram Eleni Tolma, PhD, Health Promotion Sciences, University of Oklahoma Health Science Center 42. Maternal Smoking and Adverse Birth Outcomes Akila Pasupulati, MPH Candidate, Western Kentucky University * 43. Developing Picture-Based Environmental Health Education Materials for Refugees: Lessons Learned Xanthi Scrimgeour, MHEd, CHES, Principal, CommunicateHealth, Inc.; Stacy Robison, MPH, CHES, CommunicateHealth, Inc. s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 41 ✯ Poster Abstracts thursday – saturday | november 4-6 1. Celebrating 60 Years of SOPHE Excellence M. Elaine Auld, MPH, CHES, CEO of SOPHE; Jean Breny Bontempi, PhD, MPH, Chair, SOPHE 60th Anniversary Task Force, Southern Connecticut State University; and John P. Allegrante, PhD, SOPHE Past President and Historian, Teachers College, Columbia University The Society of Public Health Educators (SOPHE) was established in 1950 when Clair E. Turner and an interim commission of 17 health educators convened in a St. Louis hotel meeting room. Membership required that the individual hold a graduate degree from a school of public health accredited by SOPHE and 2 years of experience; dues were set at $5. Over the next decade, SOPHE broadened its membership criteria and grew to be home to some 375 members; chapters proliferated; the first SOPHE journal (Health Education Monographs) was published; a code of ethics was adopted; and standards were promulgated for professional preparation in the field. SOPHE moved its offices from New York to Berkeley, California and changed its name to the Society for Public Health Education to confirm its mission of serving the public. The 1980s and 1990s saw the first SOPHE Midyear Conference in Puerto Rico; exploration of unification with other health education professional groups; relocation of the National office to Washington, DC and the appointment of a full-time Executive Director; and the establishment of SOPHE’s 21st Century endowment campaign. Today, SOPHE thrives with 2,000 members, 20 chapters, 15 staff, 5 cooperative agreements, 2 bimonthly peer-reviewed journals, 2 national conferences, 11communities of practice, a dynamic website, and a continued commitment to seeking Dorothy Nyswander’s vision of “an Open and Just Society.” 2. Celebrating SOPHE Chapters. Karen Spiller, Speaker, SOPHE House of Delegates; SOPHE’s 20 Chapter presidents and delegates SOPHE’s 20 chapters represent some 2,000 health educators residing in more than 35 states and regions of the United States, western Canada, and northern Mexico. Since the first chapter (San Francisco Bay Area - now Northern California) was recognized in 1962, chapters have expanded to provide vital services through networking, continuing education, advocacy, leadership development, community service, awards, and partnerships with state/local public and private agencies. SOPHE chapters must meet certain requirements for National SOPHE recognition, but maintain their own independent governing boards, member dues, programs and benefits structure. Many attract and serve a vibrant student population and offer scholarships and mentoring programs. This poster highlights chapter accomplishments, hailed as part of National SOPHE’s Chapter Appreciation Month in September. Find out how you can become involved and grow personally and professionally by being involved in your local SOPHE chapter. 3. Using Digital Storytelling Projects to Promote Health Behaviors to College Students Marylen Rimando, MPH, CHES, University of Georgia College of Public Health background: The use of technology has been on the rise in public health research and also is commonly used among today’s college students. While many universities offer health promotion and wellness services at a university health center or counseling center, many students may lack knowledge and awareness of these services on campus and health education in general. Thus, it is imperative to integrate technology in the college classroom for the purpose of promoting health and wellness on college campuses. 42 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 ✯ thursday – friday | april 8-9 objective: To understand the purpose and components of a digital storytelling project to promote health and wellness to college students. procedure: In each of the last three semesters of an undergraduate introductory health and wellness course at the University of Georgia, a digital storytelling project has been assigned to enrolled students. Students work in small groups and choose a health promotion topic of their interest. Previous topics included obesity prevention, teen pregnancy prevention, HIV prevention, time management, promoting nutrition and exercise, prescription drug abuse prevention, binge drinking prevention, body image, promoting health and nutrition in athletes, heart disease prevention in women, breast cancer prevention, and emergency preparedness. For the project, students create a hypothetical story or tell a real-life situation to discuss the impact of their public health problem today. To help build and illustrate their story, students may use photos, diagrams, news headlines, facts, statistics, video clips, and music. Most students use either iMovie or Windows Movie Maker to create their projects. Finally, students discuss current public health programs, initiatives, or awareness campaigns to prevent their problem and promote health and wellness to college students. Students have designed their own strategies, programs, and awareness campaigns to promote their health issue on campus. results: Students produced high-quality projects which can be utilized to teach topics in a health and wellness college class. Students provided overall strong positive feedback on their experiences with the projects. Students reported enjoying the creative aspect of this project and learning how to use iMovie and Movie Maker. Students have also found statistics and facts which they were previously unaware of which they can use for their benefit in the future. This project showed college students of a variety of majors, particularly those not majoring in health promotion and public health, about the importance of prevention and wellness in their daily lives. 4. Programs for Safer Sex Behaviors Among College Students. Amar Kanekar, MBBS, MPH, CHES, CPH, PhD, East Stroudsburg University of Pennsylvania; Manoj Sharma, MBBS, PhD, University of Cincinnati background: The HIV/AIDS epidemic has grown to alarming proportions. Consistent and correct usage of condoms along with monogamous relationships are two important aspects of HIV/AIDS prevention. At the start of 2010, there were an estimated 59 million HIV/AIDS cases in 194 reporting countries and territories. Of the 35 million living with HIV infection worldwide, about 3% live in the United States. Young adults continue to be a vulnerable population affected by HIV/AIDS. In 2009, about 22,000 adolescents aged 13-24 became infected with the HIV virus. The purpose of this analysis is to present studies addressing programs for safer sex behaviors among college students. Methods: In order to collect materials for this review a detailed search of CINAHL, MEDLINE, ERIC, Academic search premier, scopus, web of science and social sciences citation index databases was carried out for the time period between 1990-and February 2010. A Boolean search strategy was used to retrieve programs related to safer sex behaviors. results: A total of 11 studies related to programs for safer sex behaviors were extracted. Information-motivation-behavioral skills model was commonly used for programs promoting safer sex .This model has been well validated over 15 years of research with diverse populations and cross – cultural settings. It has also shown promise in adults where it builds skills for risk reduction along with lower rates of unprotected intercourse and fewer sexually transmitted infections. conclusions: There was a dearth of intervention literature for safer sex promotion in college students. Knowledge-behavior gap seems to be an ✯ Poster Abstracts ✯ thursday – saturday | november 4-6 important component to be addressed when researchers plan to devise a safer sex intervention. Implications for practice: Using a theoretical framework is essential to promote increased condom usage and to develop monogamous relationships. Recommendations for conducting programs which change attitudes and behaviors of college students are elaborated. 5. Monitoring Health People 2010 Arthritis Management Objectives: Changes in Prevalence of Self-Management Education and Provider Counseling for Weight Loss Exercise Barbara Do, MSPH, APTR fellow, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention background: Three Healthy People 2010 objectives encourage selfmanagement education (CLASS) and provider counseling for weight loss (WT) and physical activity (PA) among adults with doctor-diagnosed arthritis (DrDxA). objective: To monitor the progress of these evidence-based arthritis management objectives at both the national and state levels. methods: Using identical questions in the 2002 and 2006 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) data for national estimates and 2003 and 2007 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) data for state-specific estimates, we estimated the change in overall prevalence for the CLASS, WT, and PA objectives among adults > 18 years with DrDxA. Statistical weights accounted for the complex survey design; statistical significance was determined by non-overlapping confidence intervals (CI). results: Nationally, the prevalence of overweight/obese adults with DrDxA that were counseled to lose weight increased significantly from 35.0% (95% CI: 32.8-37.2) to 41.3% (95% CI: 38.7-44.0); there was no change in the prevalence of adults with DrDxA who had ever taken a self-management education class (~11%) or had been advised to engage in physical activity (~52%). Seventeen states asked the arthritis management objectives in both 2003 and 2007; twelve of these states reported a significant increase for the WT objective (change in median from 30.9% to 42.3%), 2 reported significant increases for the PA objective (change in median from 49.4% to 54.3%), and only 1 state reported a significant increase for the CLASS objective (median ~11%). conclusions: Significant progress has been made for weight counseling among adults with DrDxA but is not being repeated for the other 2 arthritis management objectives. This discrepancy may indicate a missed opportunity to influence providers and a target for future intervention efforts. 6. A Decade of Achievement: Health Education and Promotion in a Multidisciplinary Home Visitation Program Changing Lives One Family At A Time Annemarie Martinez, RN, Palomar Pomerado Health Maternal Infant Home Care Division and Clinical Outreach Services; Cindy Linder, RN, Palomar Pomerado Health Welcome Home Baby Fist 5 Healthy Development Services Program, North Inland Region, San Diego County Health education in the context of Home Visitation Programs is a wave moving across the country as a best practice for targeting hard to reach populations and reducing health disparities. The goal of the renowned San Diego County Welcome Home Baby (WHB) Home Visitation Program is to improve the health and well-being of all children 0-5 and their families and that children enter school ready to learn. This presentation will share information about WHB’s theoretical background, funding sources, program model including screenings and treatment services, health education and promotion services, evidence-based tools, and objectives and outcomes, including how we meet and exceed Healthy People 2010 objectives. Home visiting, case management, and parent education and support services include evidence-based developmental, physical, and psycho-social screening and assessment of the mother and infant, appropriate intervention and support, and health education and promotion. The health educator (HE) provides a series of health, developmental, and safety education visits with the family. A curriculum, approved by a panel of pediatricians, covers significant and common health and developmental issues. The HE increases a family’s appreciation for the importance of early reading and literacy. HEs provide a packet of literacy materials including age-appropriate books in English and Spanish, and teach parents how to access libraries in their area. During the home visits, the HE further assesses the family’s needs and makes appropriate community referrals; the visits increase awareness and utilization of existing community resources. Welcome Home Baby multidisciplinary visits promote prevention and provide early intervention, reaching diverse populations through bilingual bicultural competence and strength-based relationship building. WHB, established in 2000, has served over 27,438 families with over 64,000 home visits. WHB collects, analyzes and reports on a significant amount of outcome data. This presentation will share outcomes related to these and other objectives: - Reduce infant emergency department visits - Reduce infant hospital admissions - Increase breastfeeding longevity (based on AAP recommendations) - 90% infants are current with immunizations through twelve months of age - 100% infants are linked with a medical home - Increase parents’ knowledge of community resources and parenting skills - Increase early, age-appropriate literacy development - Increase teen commitment to stay enrolled in high school and to return to school if dropped out - Reduce infant exposure to second hand smoke Welcome Home Baby health education and multidisciplinary services produce measurable results that are changing lives one child and one family at a time. 7. Using the PEN-3 Cultural Model to Understand Child Febrile Illness in Southwest Nigeria Juliet Iwelunmor, BS, Doctoral Candidate, Penn State University; Collins Airhihenbuwa, PhD, Penn State University It is well recognized that maternal perceptions surrounding child febrile illness is integral with patterns of treatment seeking behaviors for child malaria. However, little is known about the positive, existential (unique) or negative responses that influence decisions surrounding malaria management and control. Drawing upon data collected through in-depth interviews and using the PEN-3 cultural model, this study explores maternal responses when faced with fever in a child. The results indicate that the use of appropriate treatment coupled with the role of doctors in health care facilities were important in generating positive responses to child febrile illness. In addition, existential beliefs related to teething patterns were critical in revealing the full extent of cultural values and perceptions towards child febrile illness in this setting. Finally, the belief that febrile illness is not all that severe despite noticeable signs and symptoms was a common negative perceptions shared by some mothers in this study. The implications of the findings and the use of PEN-3 cultural model in highlighting responses that are positive, acknowledging unique responses, while discouraging response that are known to be harmful to health are discussed. s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 43 ✯ Poster Abstracts ✯ thursday – saturday | november 4-6 8. Reaching the Optimum Potential of Distance Learning in Health Education through Properly Marketing Non-traditional College-level Courses Michael Stellefson, PhD, University of Florida; Beth Chaney, PhD, CHES, University of Florida, Gainesville; Don Chaney, PhD, CHES, University of Florida, Gainesville To foster innovative degree granting programs in health education, undergraduate and graduate professional preparation in health education has gradually begun to shift towards adopting distance learning strategies. This is due, in part, to changes in enrollment behaviors among modern day college students. Enrollment in online courses across all academic departments in higher education has been growing significantly faster than rates of enrollment in traditional on-campus courses. While the benefits of distance learning are obvious to some, not all prescribe to the omnipresence of distance learning within health education, which is certainly not inconceivable to understand. In order to present a cogent case for distance learning courses to reluctant stakeholders, it is important to formatively engage in the process of “marketing” DE courses effectively in order to make apparent the inherent benefits of such unique offerings. Creating an inimitable process for effectively marketing prospective DE courses enhances a health educator’s ability to make use of educational technology and strategy. The purpose of this presentation will be to highlight some key considerations for marketing select distance education courses in health education. Specifically, 5 questions and answers will be proposed and discussed regarding: implementing feasibility analyses for course development; using course augmentation strategies in DE; and identifying important developmental aspects of proposed course offerings. Determining the “right” answers to seminal questions can provide instructors with key insights into best practices for course development, and thus provide students with a higher-quality instructional experience. Additionally, market research for distance education opportunities can have clear implications for branding your DE courses. Traditional residential universities are encountering increased competition from for-profit online institutions that offer many similar courses to those offered in traditional institutions of higher learning. Many time- and location-bound students are attracted to what they perceive as less rigorous courses. Because of this, it has become increasingly important for faculty who work at traditional residential institutions to develop readily distinguishable course identities. Creating an identity is often built through the development of distance learning-specific “visuals” that distinguish all course materials. In addition, marketing concepts such as demand, course management, and course visibility should be considered within the context of identity building as it relates to higher education coursework in health education. This presentation will present these preliminary marketing considerations as food for thought for any health educator aspiring to initiate the market research and development process necessary for effective DE course development. 9. Piloting a Public Health Detailing Intervention for the Children’s Environmental Health Center of the Hudson Valley (CEHCHV) Michael Shakarjian, PhD, New York Medical College; Hong Duck Kim, PhD, New York Medical College; Amy Ansehl, RN, BSN, FNPC, New York Medical College; Heather Archer-Dyer, MPH, New York Medical College; Allan Dozer, MD, Health Center of the Hudson Valley, New York Medical College; Robert Amler, MD, New York Medical College, Diane Heck, PhD, Chia-Ching Chen, EdD, CHES background: Children are especially vulnerable to the harmful effects of environmental contaminants because of their unique behaviors, greater 44 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 relative exposure than adults, and incomplete development of immune, neurological, and metabolic systems. Early exposures can affect their developing organs and trigger pathological responses throughout their lives. Recent findings have suggested that certain constituents of plastic, namely bisphenol A (BPA) and phthalate plasticizers and certain flame retardants may pose risks because of their endocrine disrupting and immunomodulating activities. Public Health professionals require education on which plastics to avoid. Additionally, lead and cadmium are known contaminants in certain plastic items and with chronic exposure; children are at heightened risk for behavior and learning disabilities. objective: This study was designed to achieve Health People 2020 objectives by increasing the proportion of persons appropriately counseled about health behaviors, increasing the amount of community health promotion programs, and reducing the amount of toxic pollutants released into the environment. Method: The CEHCHV, a collaboration between physicians at Maria Fareri Children’s Hospital and New York Medical College School of Health Sciences and Practice (NYMC SHSP), promotes health in children by educating clinical and public health practitioners. For their culminating experience, students at the NYMC SHSP conducted a pilot study for the CEHCHV to disseminate information regarding the hazards of certain plastics to health practitioners. Green and Kreuter’s (2005) PRECEDE-PROCEED model was adopted for planning an Environmental Public Health Detailing (EPHD) intervention. The EPHD method focuses on improving patient care by applying a well known and successful marketing strategy used by the pharmaceutical industry to strengthen provider practices regarding health promotion and disease prevention. The predisposing, reinforcing, and enabling factors were identified to investigate the behavioral variables that influence plastics use. Students developed targeted messages and detailing action kits containing resources and education materials to promote practitioners’ evidence-based practices. results: The PRECEDE-PROCEED model was useful in planning the intervention. Behavioral variables that influenced using plastics were identified. Project objectives were fully achieved as evidenced by the creation of detailing materials and presentation of EPHD sessions to greater than ninety physician practice and public health professionals during National Public Health Week. Evaluation feedback demonstrated that EPHD met expectations while revealing areas where detailer training is critical, such as effective communication of key messages and accommodation of practitioners’ time constraints. 10. Process Evaluation Findings from a Pilot Intervention to Improve Home Nutrition Environments in Rural Families Authors: Michelle Kegler, DrPH, MPH, Director, Emory Prevention Research Center, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University; Iris Alcantara, MPH, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University; April Hermstad, MPH, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University; JK Veluswamy, BS, Southwest Georgia Cancer Coalition; Denise Ballard, MEd, Southwest Georgia Cancer Coalition; Karen Glanz, PhD, MPH, Schools of Medicine and Nursing, University of Pennsylvania In collaboration with community partners in rural southwest Georgia, the Emory Prevention Research Center designed and pilot tested a nutrition intervention called Healthy Homes/Healthy Families. Local residents were trained to serve as coaches to promote healthy actions to make the home environment more supportive of healthy eating. The healthy actions focused on maintaining a healthier household food inventory, cooking family meals with healthier food preparation methods, cutting down on family meals from restaurants, and creating rules to limit eating while watching TV. The intervention consisted of a tailored home environment profile (a personalized summary of the home nutrition environment from baseline ✯ Poster Abstracts ✯ thursday – saturday | november 4-6 survey responses), goal-setting, and behavioral contracting provided in two home visits and two telephone coaching calls over a six week period. Preliminary results show positive changes in the home food environment. Process evaluation data were collected from coaching logs, follow-up phone surveys with participants, and focus groups with participating families. These data identified aspects of the intervention that worked well and possible areas for improvement. Coaching logs for each appointment documented which actions each household chose to work on, their progress in completing the actions, and facilitators and barriers to the actions. Following the intervention, participants completed a phone survey which included both closed- and open-ended questions about their views on the coaching experience. Of 70 intervention households, 63 completed all intervention activities, 4 participated in some activities, and 3 did not participate in any activities. Participants’ ratings of their coach and the intervention were overwhelmingly positive. Facilitators to the implementation of actions included local access to and availability of healthy foods or other neighborhood resources, family support/cooperation, being prepared or planning ahead, motivators such as health concerns, and specific aspects of the coaching process or intervention. Barriers to the implementation of actions included insufficient access to healthy foods, not being prepared, lack of family support, difficulty breaking habits and resistance to change, and financial limitations. The findings support the potential of a coaching approach to changing the home environment, and will be used to refine and improve methods to be employed in a larger intervention trial. 11. Communicating H1N1 Risk to Hispanic College Students Francisco Soto Mas, PhD, MPH, University of Texas El Paso background: Communication is crucial in public health emergencies, and the H1N1 pandemic put emergency communication systems to the test. Since college-age students are particularly vulnerable to the H1N1 virus, universities struggled to inform students about prevention and treatment measures. How students responded to H1N1 communication efforts is not known. The purpose of this cross-sectional survey study was to assess the knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors of Hispanic college students with regards to the H1N1 virus. theoretical framework: Health Belief Model (perceived vulnerability, severity, benefits). The connection between knowledge/perception and behavior was tested with the participating population. hypothesis: Knowledge/perception score positively correlates with preventive behavior scores. methodology: Participants included graduate and undergraduate students at a major university in South Texas. Data was collected through a 24-item survey that included the main constructs of the Health Belief Model. Descriptive statistics were conducted. results: A total of 483 students completed the surveys. Results indicate an acceptable level of knowledge, and the majority correctly answered questions related to symptoms, vaccination, and treatment. Regarding awareness and perception, 73% seemed to know where to obtain information on the H1N1 virus, 70% knew that the H1N1 virus could cause a serious disease, and 84% believed that they could avoid the virus. As expected, knowledge and perceptions did not influence intentions or behaviors: the majority indicated that they would still go to class as usual if there were confirmed cases of H1N1 among students, had no plans to get vaccinated against the H1N1 virus, and between 20% and 40% were not taking preventive precautions such as washing hands more often, covering nose and mouth with a tissue when coughing, or avoiding touching eyes, nose and mouth. an outlook for the future: Programs must be implemented not so much to inform Hispanic students, but to persuade them to act on the prevention of the H1N1 virus. To understand the components of behavior-based communication strategies for Hispanic students, additional quantitative and qualitative research is recommended. innovative component: There are no other theory-based studies exploring how to communicate potential H1N1 pandemic risk to Hispanic college students. 12. Social Determinants of a Healthy People: Will Health Educators Defend or Debunk the Rhetoric of Neoliberalism? Robert Jecklin, MPH, PhD, University of Wisconsin-La Crosse Even before the current financial crisis involving the loss of housing, jobs, income, and benefits for millions of Americans—there was evidence of growing inequality. According to historical data from the US Census Bureau, the lower three quintiles of American households held a smaller percentage of American aggregate income in 2008 than they did in 1998; the highest quintile benefitted the most from this shift capturing 50% of all income in 2008 while the lowest quintile fell to only receiving 3.4% of all US income in that year. Some international scholars criticize the United States for neoliberal rhetoric proposing less government, less regulation of labor and finance, and more stimulation of commerce by eliminating borders or barriers to the free movement of labor, capital, goods, and services; those critical scholars assert that this rhetoric is a mask for practices that promote inequalities in both quality of life and human health. Healthy People is a federal initiative that has been setting and monitoring national health objectives since 1979, a time associated with the popularization of Neoliberalism by candidate and then two-term President Ronald Reagan. Each decade since the 1980’s our understanding of being a healthy people has been characterized by goals and objectives for improving the health of our nation. As part of developing Healthy People 2020, the public was invited to make comments and propose objectives about the Social Determinants of Health. This presentation analyzes and interprets the Healthy People 2020 website with special attention to comments and proposed objectives about social determinants in order to answer several questions. What evidence of neoliberal rhetoric is present on the website? Who made comments and proposed objectives? What kinds of ideas and objectives were proposed? How do these contributions compare to what is included in the final Healthy People 2020 document? When it comes to social determinants, will Healthy People 2020 defend or debunk the rhetoric of Neoliberalism? 13. Theory of Planned Behavior Based Predictors of Sleep Intentions and Behaviors of Undergraduate College Students at a Midwestern University Adam Knowlden, MBA, MS, PhD Candidate, University of Cincinnati; Manoj Sharma, MBBS, CHES, PhD, University of Cincinnati background: Sleeping 7 to 8 hours on a daily basis is a critical component of optimum health. Epidemiological evidence has associated both deficient (<7 hr) and excessive sleep duration (>8 hr) with increased rates of morbidity and mortality. Injurious health outcomes associated with inadequate sleep duration include cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, automobile and occupational accidents, as well as learning and memory problems. The purpose of this study is to apply the Theory of Planned Behavior (TpB) to predict the sleep intentions and behaviors of full-time undergraduate college students attending a large Midwestern University. In addition to the standard TpB constructs, this study will also test sleep hygiene as a supplemental s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 45 ✯ Poster Abstracts ✯ thursday – saturday | november 4-6 independent variable for its potential to increase the model’s predictive power. The present study represents the first attempt to investigate the sleep behaviors of college students using the TpB. As well, it is one of the first to employ the recently developed Sleep Hygiene Index. methods: A cross-sectional survey design will be utilized in this investigation. A random sample of 197 full-time undergraduate students will be surveyed. In arriving at the sample size, an alpha of 0.05, a power of 0.80, and a population correlation coefficient of 0.20 were considered. A qualitative elicitation study was conducted to determine the population’s salient behavioral, normative and control beliefs. Validation of the instrument will be overseen by a panel of six experts. The instrumentation process will include Cronbach’s alpha for internal consistency, test-retest, and confirmatory factor analysis for construct validity. The maximum likelihood method will be used for confirmatory factor analysis and the criteria of Eigen value over 1 and factor loadings over 0.40 will guide confirmatory factor analysis. Stepwise multiple regression will be used to model the TpB predictors of sleep behavior. results: The results of this study will provide a theoretical framework for predicting the sleep behaviors of undergraduate college students. Findings from the SHI will aid in identifying behaviors amendable to modification in the study population. conclusions: The results of this investigation will prove beneficial in the development of interventions that promote the adoption of healthy sleep patterns among undergraduate college student populations. 14. Hispanic and Epilepsy: Exploring Health Behavior and Finding the Solution Mitsue Colin, MD, MPH, Quality of Life, Program and Research Department, Epilepsy Foundation Today more than 3 million people in the United States have epilepsy, 400,000 of whom are Hispanic. In an effort to reach out to this specific group and change their health behavior and attitude about epilepsy, the Hispanic Outreach Program was developed by the Epilepsy Foundation in collaboration with an expert group of affiliates, Professional Advisory Board members, health care professionals and the Hispanic Council. The overall goal of the program is to 1) to provide education in recognition of demonstrated signals and symptoms associated with seizures 2) to increase awareness emphasizing knowledge of epilepsy in the Hispanic community 3) to increase skill and self sufficiency of our affiliates to provide competent outreach services and support for their local Hispanic communities. Through its network of local affiliates, the Epilepsy Foundation continuously works in identifying innovative and effective approaches for targeted outreach to the Hispanics Community regarding epilepsy and seizures. Successful evaluation components and lessons learned from the Hispanic Outreach program marketing campaigns, educational outreach activities, and related program initiatives nationwide, will be shared through this presentation in order to encourage replication of efforts, especially for specific disease entities experienced within targeted, minority populations. At the end of this session, participants will be able to: 1. Understand in depth the Hispanic community’s cultural beliefs and attitudes regarding epilepsy 2. Know the basic facts about epilepsy including treatment and first aid 3. Replicate major strategies used by the Epilepsy Foundation to outreach to the Hispanic community regarding epilepsy. 46 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 15. The Capstone Experience: Preparing Students for the profession and the CHES Exam Mary V. Brown, PhD, CHES, Utah Valley University The purpose of this poster is to share with other academicians how Utah Valley University has been successful in developing a professional preparation class as part of the bachelor’s degree curriculum in community health and to review the outcomes of this relatively young program. In an effort to “scale new heights”, the Capstone experience has been added to the curriculum of the Community Health Education degree offered at Utah Valley University. In August of 2005, the Utah Board of Regents approved the Bachelor of Science degree in Community Health at Utah Valley University. In spring of 2006, three students graduated with the degree. The following year (2007), six students who had registered to take the Certified Health Education Specialist exam formed a small study group to help prepare for the exam. Eighty three percent of those students successfully passed the exam. While the pass rate was higher than the national average, we felt that there was more we could do for our students. In an effort to improve the curriculum of the community health degree, the HLTH 4700 Capstone course was developed to help participants make the transition from student to health professional. Approximately half of the three credit semester course is devoted to CHES preparation, while the other half of the course is devoted to professional development (resume writing, mock interviews, developing a professional portfolio). This appears to be a successful improvement to the program, as the 14 students who took the CHES exam in 2009 all passed with a score 10 points higher than the national average. This session is intended to share creative ideas how academicians can apply successful strategies in a Capstone experience preparing students for the CHES exam as well as for the health education profession. The curriculum for the course will be reviewed and, participants will discuss ways in which all department faculty can take ownership of the CHES preparation process. 16. Improving Patient Education Through Use of Electronic Media Jean DuRussel-Weston, BSN, RN, MPH, CHES, University of Michigan Historically, patient education at the University of Michigan Health System (UMHS), a 930 bed teaching hospital has been decentralized and overseen by a multidisciplinary committee. In 2009, a needs assessment of patient education practice and available resources was commissioned to identify areas of excellence as well as opportunities for improvement. The Patient Education (PE) Needs Assessment, implemented by School of Public Health students, includes survey and focus group data from over 1,500 physicians and clinical staff (approximately 10% of staff). Relevant findings include that 44% of respondents use current online resources from the patient education website, but are not confident in the quality of these materials with an average rating of 6.8 on a 10 point scale. Collaboration among departments is low with 72% of departments creating their own materials but only 32% sharing them with other departments and committees. 45% of respondents could not identify who was responsible for patient education. In a system as large as UMHS, it is important to maintain the balance between individual departmental autonomy and centralized institutional support and standardization. Based on the needs assessment, the Strategic Plan for improving patient education focuses on several key areas of improvement, namely improved resources, access, and collaboration. Action steps for realizing the vision of PE at UMHS involve: 1) Strengthening the Health System’s PE leadership core; 2) Expanding clinical staff ’s ownership/ involvement in PE; 3) Increasing access to standardized and credible PE materials; 4) Increasing PE resource sharing/collaboration across departments; ✯ Poster Abstracts ✯ thursday – saturday | november 4-6 5) Increasing clinical staff ’s patient education skills and knowledge of online resources. To increase system-wide communication and collaboration several unique strategies have been employed. This presentation will highlight the strategies to achieve step three and four of the strategic plan. These include development and implementation of the UMHS Clearinghouse, a shared database which provides a single access point to all patient education materials authored by UMHS staff and faculty. It links to written and audiovisual materials that can be accessed by all staff for patient education use. Another strategy is linking our six health education resource centers, which are geographically dispersed across campus into an integrated library system so that patients and staff can access information from any location. In addition, the UMHS PE website was redesigned to improve navigation, provide support for staff to obtain updated materials, access training to maximize their knowledge of current PE technology and assist staff to produce quality materials. 17. Developing a Culturally and Linguistically Appropriate Stroke Knowledge Assessment Tool: The Importance of Community Partnership Lesli Skolarus, MD, University of Michigan, Department of Neurology, Jillian Murphy, MPH, University of Michigan, Sarah Bailey, PhD, Bridges into the Future, Sophronia Fowlkes, PhD, Bridges into the Future, Marc Zimmerman, PhD, University of Michigan background: Stroke is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the United States. African Americans experience nearly twice as many strokes as European Americans. Effective acute stroke treatments are underutilized primarily because patients do not arrive to the hospital in time. Calling 911 decreases delays in getting to a hospital, resulting in increased opportunities for acute stroke treatment. theoretical framework: The Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) proposes that behavioral attitude, subjective norms, and perceived behavioral control all influence behavioral intention, the predominant determinant of behavior itself. This project explores how beliefs, attitudes, and intentions are associated with calling (or not calling) 911 during acute stroke. hypothesis: A causal chain of beliefs, attitudes, and intentions drive the decision to call 911 for acute stroke among African Americans in Flint, Michigan. Methods: We established a collaborative partnership with an African American faith-based community organization in Flint, MI - Bridges Into the Future. Flint has a population of 105,000 and is predominately African American. Over 25% of the population lives below the poverty line. Community based participatory research principles helped us identify attitudes, beliefs, and intentions of African American adults and youth with regard to calling 911 for acute stroke. We used an iterative process that included feedback from members of the focus population to pilot test and select final items of the study. results: Outcome expectations heavily influenced individual attitudes, as many believed effective acute stroke treatments do not exist. Subjective norms seem extremely important – the power of word-of-mouth was emphasized by many individuals, and beliefs about social standards and motivation to comply were often mentioned in the context of family and church. Finally, distrust of medicine, and lack of knowledge about stroke warning signs are also salient factors in the decision to call 911 for acute stroke. Members of the partnership collaborated to assimilate these behavioral constructs into a culturally sensitive needs assessment survey, which was tailored to the community based on linguistic, cultural and religious appropriateness. conclusion: Community based participatory research is an effective method to develop a needs assessment survey and behavior change theory relevant to that community. implications for practice: A behavioral intervention that is faithbased, guided by the TPB, utilizes existing social networks and is culturally relevant may increase 911 calls and consequently improve stroke outcomes for African Americans living in Flint, Michigan. 18. EPA Air Quality Index Values of Smoke-Free Venues after Smoking Ordinances Nancy Johnson, BS, CHES, Truman State University - Campus-Community Alliances for Smoke-free Environments; Justin McDermott, Truman State University; Samantha Goode, Truman State University Secondhand smoke, also known as environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) contains a variety of toxic or carcinogenic chemicals. ETS is classified as a Group A carcinogen, mixtures associated with causing cancer. Those close in distance to smokers risk inhaling substances emitted from the cigarettes which may possibly increase their risk for future health complications. Influenced by the known risk factors of second hand smoke and the studies done on smoke-free ordinances, the researchers had successfully passed legislation to enforce all bars, restaurants, parks, and public amusements in a small Midwestern town of population 17,000 to be smoke-free as of July 2007. An air quality study using air quality monitors was preformed to insure the businesses were complying with the new smoking ordinance. It was hypothesized that not all public venues were enforcing the city smoking ordinance. Between March 1, 2009 and July 20, 2009, air quality was assessed in six restaurants, three bars, and a bowling alley. Within the test group, all ten businesses allowed smoking prior to the ban. Testing occurred when business was at its peak hours for a period of one hour per business. A TSI SidePak AM510 Personal Aerosol Monitor was used to sample and record the levels of respirable suspended particles (RSPs) (particles small enough that one can breathe in) in the air at each testing site in order to test the air quality index. All ten venues tested were within the United States Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA) Good Air Quality Index value, as the average Particulate Matter (PM2.5) of all venues was 5.73 g/m3(range: 4.39 - 7.45g/m3). An air quality index of less than or equal to 15 PM2.5 g/ m3 is within the US EPA Good Air quality Index range. Averages of twenty-four people were within each venue at the time of testing. Every venue tested was following the city smoking ordinance by not allowing any smoking within their indoor space and were therefore protecting their patrons from the dangers of secondhand smoke by keeping their air quality within the EPA Good air quality index range. It is recommended that health educators participate in air quality index testing in smoking and non-smoking venues as US EPA Air Quality Index values can be used to convince leaders that secondhand smoke is a real problem within inside venues. 19. Evaluating The Jackson Road Map To Health Equity Farmers’ Market Patrons’ Satisfaction and Engagement In Positive Health Behaviors David Brown, EdD, MA, CHES, Department of Behavioral and Environmental Health, Jackson State University; Beneta Burt, MPPA, Director, Jackson Road Map To Health Equity; Modupe AinaAkinpelu, MD, MPH, Doctoral Candidate, Jackson State University Department of Behavioral and Environmental Health background: The Jackson Road Map for Health Equity maintains a farmers’ market in the metropolitan Jackson Mississippi Area. This Kellogg Foundation funded project was designed to improve the Jackson inner-city citizens’ access to and consumption of reasonably priced, high quality fresh fruits and vegetables. The farmers’ market addresses Nutris o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 47 ✯ Poster Abstracts ✯ thursday – saturday | november 4-6 tion and Weight Status objectives 6 and 7 of Healthy People 2020. Objective 6 aims to increase the contribution of fruits to people’s diet while Objective 7 aims to increase the variety and contribution of vegetables to people’s diets. theoretical framework: Community Engagement Theory (CET) speculates that effective community health promotion and education is best facilitated by community members becoming actively engaged in activities that directly promote their own and their community’s health. Following a CET model, the project was designed to improve the target community’s health through engaging community members in the Jackson Road Map for Health Equity Farmers’ Market. results/discussion: Consistent with past research (e.g., Reece & Dodge, 2004), sexual compulsivity predicted sexual risk-taking and increased partnered sex behaviors in the current sample (specifically in women). Among women, higher sexual compulsivity scores also predicted fewer inhibitory cognitions (β = -.104, p < .05) and higher levels of arousability (β = .527, p < .001). Higher arousibility mediated the relationship between sexual compulsivity and fewer inhibitory cognitions. For men, higher sexual compulsivity scores also predicted higher levels of arousability (β = .362, p < .001), but predicted more inhibitory cognitions (β = .220, p < .001). There was no significant mediation. Therefore, the increased arousal that is associated with higher sexual compulsivity may reduce women’s sexual concerns, but seems to exacerbate men’s. objectives: The current investigation was a formative evaluation study designed to assess farmers’ market consumer stakeholders’ opinions regarding the farmers’ market. Specifically, consumer input was collected relative to the perceived utility, effectiveness, personal impact and community impacts of the market. conclusions/implications: It is important to understand the experience of sexual compulsivity in the general population as unique interventions may be warranted to target groups that do not fall into the “high-risk” category. evaluation measures: A questionnaire was specially developed for use in this study. Both Likert and open-ended questions were used to assess consumers’ self-reported behaviors, beliefs, attitudes and suggestions. Data were obtained from a sample of 81 consumers. Coefficient Alpha showed that the Likert items had an internal consistency reliability of .94. 21. Contextual and Individual Factors Associated with Consumption of Sweet Foods in Healthy Individuals Living in an Urban Setting results: Data showed that the farmers’ market was well accepted by the consumers. It was having a positive influence on fruit and vegetable consumption. Data also showed that the market had a positive social value for the consumers. Several useful suggestions for market improvement were also obtained from this study. These findings are discussed in terms of proposed program improvements and in terms of Community Engagement Theory. 20. Sexual Compulsivity Among Older, Heterosexual Adults Sara Cole, PhD, MA, BS, CHES, University of Central Oklahoma; Robin Milhausen, PhD, University of Guelph; Amy Muise, University of Guelph rationale: Studies on sexual compulsivity have primarily focused on high-risk and HIV-positive populations (e.g., Reece & Dodge, 2004). Recent studies have attempted to address this gap by investigating sexual compulsivity among primarily young heterosexual college students and have indicated that sexual compulsivity is relevant in predicting risky sexual activities in groups that are not considered high-risk (e.g., Dodge, Reece, Cole, & Sandfort, 2004). Individuals scoring highly in sexual compulsivity may also be perceived as experiencing higher levels of sexual excitation. One study of a small group (N = 31) of self-identified male “sex addicts” indicated that sexual compulsivity may be related to both sexual excitation and sexual inhibition (Bancroft & Vukadinovic, 2004). research purpose. The purpose of the current analyses was to explore how sexual compulsivity relates to risky sexual behaviors, as well as sexual excitation/inhibition in an older, non-clinical, non-student sample of adults, many of whom are married and have children. Method. The sample consisted of 365 women (mean age = 33 years, SD = 8.46) and 1,466 men (mean age = 38 years, SD = 9.87). Participants completed an online survey that included the Sexual Compulsivity Scale (SCS; Kalichman & Rompa, 1995), the Sexual Excitation/Sexual Inhibition Inventory for Women and Men (SESII-WM; Milhausen et al., 2008), and several measures of sexual beahviour. Regression and mediation analyses were used to explore the cognitive and behavioural correlates of sexual compulsivity. 48 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 Jean-Claude Moubarac, M.Sc., PhD candidate, Université de Montréal; Mark Daniel, PhD, Professor and Research Chair for Social Epidemiology, School of Health Sciences, University of South Australia; Margaret Cargo, PhD, Senior Lecturer in Health Promotion, School of Health Sciences, University of South Australia; Olivier Receveur, PhD, Professor, Department of Nutrition, Université de Montréal background: One of the objectives of Healthy People 2020 is to reduce consumption of calories from added sugars. Social and physical environmental cues, as well as psychological factors, (e.g., mood, depression) have been associated with the consumption of sweet food (e.g., soft drinks, chocolate). However, the effect of multiple environmental and individual factors on food behaviour is not well understood. Mixed methods research has rarely been applied in public health to understand how the individual interacts with the surrounding environment to influence food behaviour. objectives: To examine contextual and individual factors associated with daily consumption of sweet foods in healthy individuals living in an urban setting. Methodology: An ecological conceptual framework was used to understand the context of sweet food consumption. This framework guided the collection and analysis of 42 semi-structured interviews of healthy men and women from a Middle Eastern community in Montreal. Interviews were analysed using deductive and inductive coding procedures. Qualitative results were used to inform the development of a quantitative measure investigating the context of sweet food consumption. The measure was pilot-tested on 20 individuals. The final self-report measure was administered with psychosocial measures of depression, mastery and self-moderation, a sociodemographic and food frequency questionnaire to 192 individuals (mean age 35 years) from the same community. Contextual domains were refined using exploratory factor analysis. Quantitative analysis using general linear models identified contextual and individual-level factors associated with consumption of sweet food operationalized as the amount of total sugars eaten daily from sweet foods and drinks. results: Qualitative and factor analyses led to the identification and refinement of a 42-item contextual measure with items grouped into seven domains: 1) emotions, 2) snacking, 3) energy demands, 4) social environment, 5) physical environment, 6) constraints, and 7) eating dessert. Daily consumption of sweet food was on average 76 g/day and varied by ✯ Poster Abstracts ✯ thursday – saturday | november 4-6 age but not gender or BMI. Eating dessert and Snacking were positively associated (p<0,01), while Social environment, self-moderation and age were negatively associated (p<0,05) with sweet food consumption. Depression was also positively associated with consumption (p<0,05). conclusions: This study illustrates how mixed methods can be used to explore important questions in nutritional behaviour and better understand how the individual perceives the influence of its environment on his eating behaviour. Distinguishing between contextual factors associated with daily and occasional consumption of sweet food is important to consider in the reduction of daily consumption of added sugars. 22. Training Future Health Leaders in Cultural Humility and Competency: Lessons Learned From Developing and Teaching a Multi-disciplinary Hybrid Online Course and Modules for Public Health and Health Services Students Rob Simmons, DrPH, MPH, CHES, CPH, Director MPH Program, Thomas Jefferson University, School of Population Health; Nancy Chernett, MA, MPH, Thomas Jefferson University, Center for Applied Research for Aging and Health, Elaine Yuen, PhD, Thomas Jefferson University, School of Population Health; Susan Toth-Cohen, PhD, OTR/L, Director, Occupational Therapy Doctoral Program and Associate, Jefferson School of Health Professions Thomas Jefferson University Health disparities are well documented as significant concerns that must be addressed as we rebuild our public health and health care systems to meet Healthy People 2020 goals. As we tackle the disproportionate burden of chronic and infectious diseases and access to quality health care of an increasingly diverse population, current and future public health and health care professionals must be prepared to work effectively with people from diverse ethnic, cultural and linguistic backgrounds. In striving to reach the Healthy People 2020 goal of achieving health equity and eliminating disparities to improve the health of all groups, public health and health services education must provide students with knowledge and experience to facilitate their understanding of the root causes of health disparities and strategies to advance ongoing personal and organizational cultural competence and humility to overcome conditions that perpetuate inequalities. This presentation describes the developmental process and content of a course that addresses cultural competence for public health and health care graduate students at an urban health sciences university. The hybrid online course, which includes asynchronous (on one’s own time) and synchronous (in real time) online sessions as well as four in-person sessions, begins with basic concepts of diversity, cultural humility and competency, and encourages students to understand how these principles are reflected in their personal and professional attitudes, values and behaviors. The second part of the course is tailored to the student’s community or clinical work environment with specific readings and case studies covering strategies that address health literacy and communication, CLAS standards and exemplary programs. Students reflect on their own cultural attributes and behaviors, and the role that these factors play within their professional relationships and abilities to work with those from diverse cultures. Over the 14 weeks of the course, students develop and share individual professional and organizational improvement plans; and consider lessons learned and future growth opportunities. This interdisciplinary course was taught over the past three years and has included public health, occupational therapy, medicine, and physical therapy graduate students. Student course evaluations have depicted significant cultural learning and application to their chosen field. Student reflections and feedback in their own words will be presented. To help meet the Healthy People 2020 goal of health equity and eliminative health disparities, the course is being modified for broader dissemination into online and in-person training modules tailored to specific disciplines in public health and health care. 23. The Global Health Care Challenges of Hansen’s Disease Elimination and Research at the USDHHS Hansen’s Disease Center and Worldwide Barbara Hernandez, PhD, CHES, Lamar University The purpose of the research was to record the global historical, social, and medical contributions of the USDHHS Hansen’s Disease Center at Carville and Baton Rouge, La. to Hansen’s Disease (HD) elimination worldwide using primary historical resources. Carville was the last U.S. national leprosarium and the research center is still in existence today combating Hansen’s disease, TB, HIV/AIDS, and diabetes. Notable research and events at this U.S. Public Health Service Hospital were the first “cure” for Hansen’s disease, quarantine law enforcement, and a world renowned medical, research, treatment, and rehabilitation center. The theory used for treatment therapies was the Health Belief Model. Non-experimental methods based on Garraghan’s historical analysis were used. Archival data and recent resources were retrieved from Carville’s Museum, university libraries, and personnel interviews. Resources on the historical, medical, and social events that occurred were analyzed. 88 references were analyzed and scored on a scale of 0-15 according to external criticism (5 criteria), internal criticism (2 criteria) and synthesis (3 criteria) on a code sheet. Each event was scored on a code sheet (instrumentation) and validated with 3 resources. 78 resources scoring 10 or greater were included in the study. Accepted events were rank ordered and chronologized in 10 year increments. The null hypothesis was rejected as enough resources were found to analyze and compile documented evidence of historical events at this national leprosarium and HD. These results included the discovery of the first cure and the multi-drug therapy treatment approach in worldwide use for Hansen’s Disease today. Conclusions include the current U.S. and world surveillance data reducing prevalence and reaching existing endemic areas. The unique record of the USDHHS Hansen’s Disease Center’s medical research contributions to Hansen’s disease elimination and research on other diseases is a contribution to the medical field worldwide. Implications recommended are historical research on other treatment facilities and disease eradication in endemic areas. Further research in improving access in endemic HD areas and vaccination research is recommended. Healthy People 2020 objectives addressed in the presentation are: global health (disease detection and prevalence reduction worldwide), access to health services (availability of facilities and trained personnel) and immunization and infectious diseases (vaccination research efforts for HD and other infectious diseases). s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 49 ✯ Poster Abstracts ✯ thursday – saturday | november 4-6 24. American Cancer Society Health Profile and Community Resources Mapping Project Shila Burney, BS, American Cancer Society; Kenneth Portier, PhD, American Cancer Society; Linda Blount, MPH, American Cancer Society; Carolina Casares, MD, MPH, American Cancer Society Eliminating disparities in cancer screening, diagnosis, and treatment is essential for achieving health equity, increasing access and improving health outcomes for patients with cancer. The American Cancer Society (ACS) has many community-based programs aimed at increasing cancer screening and helping the newly diagnosed overcome barriers to care. The Society also maintains a database of other volunteer and community programs that provide support to cancer patients. However significant challenges remain in reaching minority and underserved populations with these services. This project’s two goals are to provide ACS mission and education staff with the ability to map community health determinants; primarily population and environmental characteristics, as well as health care, volunteer and ACS service locations; and to train staff in using these mapping tools to identify communities that are likely to experience health disparities. The results will help focus existing Society services and foster new and innovative programs to reach these communities. Working with an academic partner, an initial web-based mapping and reporting environment has been built and populated with a large amount of publically available health determinants data as well as ACS program information. The system interface is simple and straightforward and does not require users to understand geographic information systems or do any programming. Focus groups have been formed to evaluate how the current system can be used and what changes are needed to increase utility. Critical to project success is identifying the kinds of maps, combinations of mapping elements, and final summaries staff want as they explore issues in cancer health disparities. Plans are to use this system to more effectively engage ACS mission and education staff in discussions of cancer disparities; using maps to illustrate points and identify potential new community interventions and new community partners. 25. Publishing an Undergraduate Project on the Web: Using Social Bookmarking as a Platform for Student Projects Rebecca Foco, MA, CHES, Health and Human Performance, Virginia Commonwealth University background: As colleges and universities prepare future health education practitioners it is imperative that they have all the skills and tools necessary to work effectively. The tools increasingly include the ability to develop and manage web-accessible content. Traditional pedogological methodologies employed in the classroom create student projects that are submitted to an instructor never to be seen again. This project uses open content learning as a basis for exposing students to methods of managing and presenting information for the public. Theoretical Basis The theoretical basis for this project is Technological Pedagological Content Knowledge (TPCK)—a theoretical framework that proposes a complex interplay between technological, pedagological, and content knowledge that yields superior outcomes to traditional methods of employing technology in teaching (Mishra & Koehler, 2006). TPCK is the framework used to design this project. The proposed presentation will present to instructors of health education courses with a method of sharing and evaluating resources for student-created health education materials. Objectives Undergraduate Community Health Education and Health/PE Teacher Education students will: • learn about social bookmarking sites and their application to health education • learn to think critically regarding assessing the validity and usefulness of health 50 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 websites and how they will utilize health websites in their future careers • learn the skills necessary to develop a tool that will be available for community use • begin moving from a passive student role into an active participant in the health education community and begin to see themselves as health educators. Intervention This presentation will describe a Web-based project in which students’ work is accomplished using the social bookmarking site, delicious (http://delicious.com/). Students in a School and Community Health Resources course will engage in a process of collecting and identifying web content for health resource directories related to specific health conditions. Additionally, they will write an annotated description of each site for potential consumers of the information. evaluation: The effectiveness of the project will be evaluated through a survey of the students involved in the project. The survey will have both closed and open-ended questions regarding the experience, both as an educational tool for their own learning and as a first foray into public presentation of health information. Additionally, the instructor will monitor the number of hits on the delicious site to assess the level of use of the information by viewers. 26. Health Education Program to Increase H1N1 Vaccination Rates among Residents of Blunt County, Tennessee Charles Deutsch, ScD, Harvard School of Public Health introduction: One of the objectives for Healthy People 2020 is “Increase the proportion of adults who are vaccinated annually against influenza and ever vaccinated against pneumococcal disease” (U.S Department of Health and Human Services, 2009). Immunizations reduce the impact of infectious diseases such as H1N1 flu. However, some people may be hesitant to receive vaccinations due to lack of information and myths surrounding immunization. According to the Centers for Disease Control, the H1N1 vaccination is the best method of protection from H1N1 flu (CDC, 2010). methods: Graduate students from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville Public Health Program worked in partnership with the Alcoa Community and Blount County Health Department to provide education regarding H1N1 flu and to increase H1N1 vaccination rates in Blount County. Goals of the project were to reduce the impact of infectious diseases in the community and to educate populations about the H1N1 vaccine. Using the Preceed/Procede framework, students conducted a needs assessment at a local community center. Information from the assessment was used to develop program objectives which included creation of an interactive educational display for families and a questionnaire. The educational display was placed alongside the Blount County Health Department flu clinic at a local Wal-Mart. Blount County Health Department’s flu clinic administered the H1N1 vaccine free of charge. outcomes: Outcomes were very positive. At least fifty individuals participated in the display with more than thirty people completing questionnaires. Questionnaire results indicated an increase in knowledge surrounding H1N1 flu. Several individuals received the H1N1 vaccine based on the educational display. More than 50% of shoppers indicated that they would be more likely to receive the vaccine due to the educational display. The flu clinic nurse noted a significant increase in flu clinic participants as well. summary The needs assessment informed our choice of priority population and intervention. Initially, the project was to focus on a minority group but was expanded to rural families based on results from the needs assessment. The results of our intervention indicate that education surrounding the H1N1 vaccine is efficacious in increasing vaccination rates. Results from the questionnaires can be used to expand and improve future educational campaigns. ✯ Poster Abstracts ✯ thursday – saturday | november 4-6 27. Use of Cellular Telephones and Texting While Driving purpose: This study evaluated the prevalence of self-reported neighborhood and school safety and physical activity levels, and the relationship between perceived safety and physical activity level among adolescents in a large urban city. background: The effect of mobile phone use on driving performance has been widely studied; however, current gaps exist in research linking the relationship between texting and driving. Research suggests that using a mobile telephone while driving increases risk of being involved in a Motor Vehicle Accident (MVA). A study analyzing records in MVAs reported that using a cell phone while driving is associated with roughly a quadrupling of crash risk, and 1 in 7 drivers admit to text messaging while driving. methodology: 2009 Philadelphia Youth Risk Behavior Survey data were analyzed. The weighted sample of 43,867 students included those from 9th grade (30.9%), 10th grade (27.1%), 11th grade (21.5%), and 12th grade (20.4%) attending Philadelphia public high schools. The sample was 51.5% male and 48.5% female. Race/Ethnicity of the participants was 64.8% African American, 14.2% Hispanic/ Latino, 12.7% White and 2.8% all other races. Separate research questions examined perceived neighborhood safety and impressions of safety at school. Frequency of self-reported moderate-to-vigorous physical activity lasting 60 minutes or more was also collected. William Parker Hinson, BS, University of Florida, Gainesville; Karla Ruiz, BA, BS, University of Florida, Gainesville; Louis Carrillo, BS, University of Florida, Gainesville objective: The primary aim of this exploratory study was to assess student behaviors and perceptions associated with use of cellular (mobile) telephones while driving. The secondary aim was to observe texting and driving behaviors by viewing incidence rates at intersections within a university campus. methods: Phase 1: Data were collected from a questionnaire given to students at the University of Florida. The questionnaire assessed students’ behaviors, attitudes, and frequencies regarding the use of cellular telephones while driving. Phase 2: Collections of direct observational data were gathered at various intersections on the University of Florida campus. Frequencies were tabulated for the number of drivers with a cell phone in hand, and any additional distracting behaviors were also noted. results: Phase 1: Two-hundred and ninety (n=290) students participated in the questionnaire. Respondents were between the ages of 19-44 years (µ=22.2). Analysis showed that 69.8% send between 1-40 texts per day, and 86.6% send texts while driving. Students were also asked whether they engaged in other behaviors while driving including: texting while at a stop sign (45.7%), texting in parking lots (48.4%), pulling over to text (7.5%), and using a passenger to text (56.1%). Pearson’s correlation test showed that Age was negatively correlated to electronic communication device usage (p = 0.212), whereas Miles Driven had a significant, positive correlation (p < 0.001). Phase 2: Observation of vehicles (n=1,138) revealed that 12.9% (n=147) of drivers were engaged in distracted driving. Among all drivers, 3.4% (n=39) were texting and 6.4% (n=73) were speaking on the phone. conclusion: Results show that a large percentage of students send texts while driving, while lower percentages engage in behaviors that may help reduce associated risks. On the University of Florida campus, distracted driving occurs, indicating a need for an institution-based policy among students, faculty, visitors, and employees. Future research should expand beyond the university population so results are more generalized. 28. Adolescent Physical Activity: Does Perception of School and Neighborhood Safety Matter? Clare Lenhart, MPH, CHES, Temple University; Brian Daly, PhD, Temple University background: As the public health community looks to the implementation of Healthy People 2020 objectives, concerns persist regarding the prevalence of adolescents failing to meet recommended levels of physical activity. Despite physical activity-based initiatives aimed at the individual, school, and community level, the majority of adolescents remain unacceptably inactive. Research in adult populations suggests low levels of physical activity are more common among respondents reporting concerns for safety in their immediate neighborhood. What is less clear is the association between perceptions of neighborhood and school safety and physical activity levels among ethnically diverse urban adolescents. results: 32% of adolescents meet current physical activity recommendations. Males (41.3%) are more likely than females (23.9%) to report adequate physical activity. Forty-seven percent of all respondents report feeling unsafe both at school and in their neighborhood. Adolescents who feel safe are 1.183 times more likely (CI: 1.137-1.232, p<.001) to engage in adequate physical activity relative to those feeling unsafe in their neighborhood and school. Significant differences exist when examined by selfreported ethnicity (African-American, Hispanic, Caucasian). conclusions: Many students do not participate in recommended levels of physical activity with significant differences noted between male and female students. Safety in the school and neighborhood remains a concern for nearly half of all adolescents surveyed and the odds of inadequate activity are greater among students reporting more concerns for safety. Few existing programs that focus on increasing physical activity also address safety concerns of adolescents thus leaving a significant barrier to achievement of adequate physical activity. In order to better meet the needs of diverse urban adolescents, health education specialists must consider the saliency of concerns for safety when developing physical activity interventions. 29. Development of an Instrument to Assess How Health Education Professional Preparation Programs Prepare Students to Address Health Disparities Ayanna Lyles, PhD, ATC, California University of Pennsylvania background: Eliminating health disparities is one goal of the nation as outlined by Healthy People 2020. No studies, however, have addressed how professional preparation programs are preparing entry- level health educators to address health disparities. The initial purpose of the study was to determine the essential characteristics needed in a professional preparation program for entry-level health educators to address health disparities. The second purpose was to develop an instrument that measures the degree to which undergraduate Health Education professional preparation programs prepare entry-level health educators to address health disparities. theoretical framework: Critical pedagogy can be used in Health Education Professional Preparation Programs as an educational strategy to teach health education students about health disparities. Teaching health educators to challenge injustices in the social system will help them to challenge the policies and societal structures which help maintain disparities. hypothesis: N/A. Descriptive methods were used to develop a survey. methods: Phase one of the study utilized a three-round Delphi technique to solicit consensus of an expert panel to identify essential s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 51 ✯ Poster Abstracts ✯ thursday – saturday | november 4-6 characteristics of a professional preparation program to prepare entrylevel health educators to address health disparities. Phase two involved development of a survey, the Lyles Health Disparities Assessment Tool, based on information from the Delphi technique. The tool was piloted among 187 Health Education Programs. Results: Pilot testing of the survey revealed the Cronbach’s alpha coefficient for internal consistency reliability was .752. conclusions: Forty-three percent (n=19) of program coordinators felt students get an optimal experience in learning to work with populations that experience health disparities. Seventy percent (n=31) of the Health Education Programs do not offer courses entirely devoted to health disparities. Only 20% of the program coordinators report students complete an internship in diverse communities. Many program coordinators felt faculty had a professional commitment to teaching students to address health disparities. Sixty-three percent (n=28) agreed or strongly agreed faculty were committed to practical experience, research, and participation in conferences focused on health disparities and health policy. implications for practice: Health education programs should incorporate an internship with communities that may experience health disparities. Inclusion of an internship will allow students to use theories/ models based in culture and apply these models in real situations. Faculty should be encouraged to pursue research agendas in health disparities. Support should be available for faculty to attend conferences related to the discipline. Providing training and supporting scholarly growth will allow faculty to increase knowledge and exhibit a professional responsibility to the field. 30. Advocacy 2.0: Using Web 2.0 to Advocate for the Profession Don Chaney, PhD, CHES, College of Health and Human Performance, University of Florida, Gainesville; Beth Chaney, PhD, CHES, University of Florida, Gainesville; Michael Setllefson, PhD, University of Florida, Gainesville; Monica Webb, MPH, University of Florida, Gainesville Advocacy is an integral component of public health education. The future of our profession will be determined by how the profession advocates for health education programs and practices that work to change behavior and prevent disease to audiences outside the heath education field. Web 2.0 provides such a platform for dissemination. Yet, many health educators lack training in how to effectively utilize Web 2.0 technologies in advocacy efforts. The purpose of this presentation is threefold: 1) to provide a general overview of Web 2.0 technologies; 2) to provide examples of how Web 2.0 is utilized in advocacy initiatives; and 3) discuss how Web 2.0 can be utilized to enable health educators to mobilize communities and policymakers in order to achieve specific advocacy goals. Although the use of technology and the need for advocacy is continually cited in the literature as an essential and crucial factor in the future direction of the profession, the gap between literature and practice exist. This presentation will enhance the practical understanding and application of Web 2.0 technologies, while presenting strategies to revolutionize the way we currently conduct professional advocacy initiatives. 31. Female Iraq and Afghanistan War Veterans: Coming Home in Their Words Lisa Hedden, BA, Health Science Department, San Jose State University; Anne Demers, EdD, MPH, BA, Health Science Department, San Jose State University 52 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 In the past two decades, the number of women in the military has increased significantly and their roles as soldiers have greatly expanded. Despite this increase, there is a lack of research on the effect that maledominated military culture has on female soldiers and their specific needs as they transition from military to civilian life. The literature demonstrates that social support is a strong predictor of mental health outcomes. Yet few studies, none of which are qualitative, have examined the role of social support during a female veteran’s transitional process and the subsequent effects on mental health. This study explored female Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans’ experiences with social support and their ability to transition back into civilian society. Within the framework of the social support literature, data from two focus groups and three one-to-one in-depth conversations were analyzed. Several themes emerged from the data around social support including a lack of support within the military, feeling disconnected from civilians and loved ones, and the need for genderspecific support services to assist with reintegration into communities. While focus group data revealed a desire to connect with other veterans, the majority of the participants specifically wanted to connect with female veterans. Their own military units were primarily comprised of men who had provided little support for their female counterparts. The participants wanted to distance themselves from male veterans upon returning home, but still connect with someone they could relate to on a veteran’s level. This is a culturally distinct population, with its own stresses, for which social support greatly impacts their physical and mental health outcomes. These results have significant implications for health educators such as a need for program development within public health departments and community based organizations that build in social support structures; and training for women’s health service providers to address the needs of this population. As increasing numbers of female veterans return home, essential community health services and educators will need to be prepared to effectively support them. 32. Assessing Intimate Partner Violence Among Iraq and Afghanistan War Veterans and Their Significant Others Authors: Anne Demers, EdD, MPH, Health Science Department at San Jose State University; Elena Klaw, PhD, San Jose State University; Alea Gellman, MPH Candidate, San Jose State University Returning veterans from Iraq (OIF) and Afghanistan (OEF) wars are struggling with myriad physical and mental health issues. Whether they are diagnosed with a mental health disorder, or not, research has shown that combat experience itself is related to increased risk for anxiety, depression, and anger symptomology. Veteran’s anger, in particular, is related to an increased likelihood of committing intimate partner violence (IPV). The literature reveals very little about the current prevalence of IPV among this population. Using a mixed methods approach, an electronic survey was designed and launched at two-year and four-year colleges and universities throughout California. The goal of this study was to gain a better understanding of the issue of intimate partner violence among OIF/OEF veterans and significant others of veterans. Results reveal a continuum of relationship behaviors – from healthy, to unhealthy, to abusive – and data suggest that there is more at play than the traditional explanations of power and control. Many veterans have not been screened for and/or are not receiving services for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and are self-medicating with alcohol and other substances. Veterans’ significant others are at a loss for how to negotiate safe relationships. Recommendations include incorporating military cultural competence training into more traditional curriculum, programs, and service delivery. ✯ Poster Abstracts ✯ thursday – saturday | november 4-6 33. Internet Risk Behavior: Willingness to Engage in Unsafe Sexual Behavior achieved these results by employing the principles of Positives Youth Development coupled with the creative power of young people. This session will demonstrate how Colorado youth are scaling new heights impacting the health of their peers and their community. Internet Risk Behavior: Willingness To Engage In Unsafe Sexual Behavior Type of presentation: Brief Individual Conference Theme: Key Words: risk behaviors, unprotected sex, MSM, internet, social networks Current research reports the prevalence of unprotected anal intercourse among men who have sex with men (MSM) as being between 33% and 49%. Similar estimates of unsafe sexual practices are presented for men who meet via internet social networks. The basis of these prevalence estimates tends to be surveys, interviews and other self-report measures. The limitations of self-reported data in accurately estimating risk behaviors has been investigated and explored extensively. However, particularly with sexual behaviors, it often is the only practical and ethical option. This study utilizes a modified Observer Participant model to assess the willingness of men interacting on a well known internet social networking site to agree to engage in unprotected anal intercourse. An ad was placed online in 16 cities nationwide, providing a description and anonymous image of a fictitious 26 year old male. Responders to the ad were sent an email indicating a willingness to meet and have sex, but with a pre-condition that sex would be “bareback” (unprotected). This study looks at the number of men agreeing to have unprotected sex, as well as variables that were potentially related. Attractiveness of the fictitious male, attractiveness of the respondents (when it could be determined from pictures provided in responses), and size of city where the ad was placed were analyzed. The results reflected a much higher willingness to engage in unprotected sex, when responding to a specific partner and situation than is reported in studies using self report measures. The implications of these findings for estimating potential prevalence of unprotected anal intercourse among MSM who meet online are discussed. Variables which appear to be related to willingness to agree to unprotected sex are also explored and the development of prevention strategies are discussed. 35. Developing Cancer Education Curricula to Reduce Cancer Disparities: Report on Process and Outcome From an Academiccommunity Partnership Jorge Figueroa, PhD, Department of Health and Applied Human Sciences University of North Carolina Wilmington; Nolan G. Heath, University of North Carolina Wilmington 34. High School Youth Using Their Creative Voice To Improve Community Health Brenda Adjei, EdD, Intercultural Institute on Human Development and Aging; Tatiana Lee-Amaya, BA, Long Island University U54 Comprehensive Cancer Partnerships are an NCI-funded initiative intended to create sustainable research collaborations between Minority Serving Institutions and Cancer Centers to reduce cancer disparities in minority and underserved communities. The Long Island University/ Columbia University U54 Partnership serves this purpose by supporting cancer research, training, and outreach initiatives that address cancer disparities in Brooklyn’s and Northern Manhattan’s Caribbean immigrant communities. The Partnership’s Community Outreach Program is currently collaborating with three community-based organizations to design a training program for Community Health Workers (CHW) that will prepare them to educate their clients about breast, cervical, colorectal and prostate cancer prevention and control and about participation in clinical research. This study describes the collaborative development of a training program for CHWs on colorectal and clinical trials education. Based on the Health Belief Model, data were abstracted from 22 studies on barriers faced by minority communities related to colorectal cancer screening and clinical trials participation to stimulate focus group discussion (3 focus groups, n=18 CHWs) of and ideas to enhance the feasibility and effectiveness of the curriculum. Supplemental materials will be developed to provide CHWs with the tools necessary to promote screening and education. Results from this pilot study will include the curriculum development process, formative research on barriers and related strategies, an overview of the curriculum content and materials, as well as process and outcome evaluation results (i.e. pre-post test knowledge and number of educational sessions delivered by CHWs). As well these results will be used to refine the curriculum and outreach program as well as enhance the utility of this educational program for CHWs. Samuel Wood, BA, MFA, Kaiser Permanente Educational Theatre Programs; Brian Harper, BA, Kaiser Permanente Educational Theatre Programs 36. Health Education in Practice: Applying the Ecological Model to Healthcare Workforce Issues Kaiser Permanente’s youth advocacy program, Teens Take It On, employs cutting-edge strategies to address the social and physical determinates of teens’ nutrition and physical activity choices. Additionally, the program targets specific teen populations to achieve measurable outcomes. This sixweek high school residency program empowers high school students to become advocates and peer-educators for healthy eating and active living. Students use various forms of media to identify barriers to healthy behaviors for students, to challenge the status quo and to advocate for change. This presentation will share the methods, strategies and successes of Teens Take It On, highlighting the power of the youth voice to advance and sustain CDC and IOM recommended strategies to prevent childhood obesity. During the last five years, the Teens Take It On program has successfully changed health policy in four Denver metro schools. In one school district, three school-based projects catalyzed major changes in school cafeteria offerings, which will impact 84,000 students in 148 schools. Recently, a Teens Take It On bilingual film promoting National Walk to School Day walking to was seen by over 19,000 elementary, middle and high school students in 8 school districts across the state of Colorado. Teens Take it On Admittedly, a Workforce Investment Board (WIB) is not the first thought to come to mind when considering health education. It’s more likely that one’s first thought is “what is a WIB”? A WIB is a state and federally funded organization with a main goal of preparing its local workforce to meet workplace demands by conducting research on regional trends or needs and providing career development training to job seekers as well as incumbent workers. Although an oft overlooked institution, the presentation will demonstrate how WIBs are excellent partners for creating strategic workforce solutions that address commonly aligned public health and HP 2020 goals. Contemporary health promotion looks beyond individual health education; it endeavors to include change to organizational behavior change as well as physical and social environment of communities. As a health educator, when looking to address specific HP 2020 objectives, such as those that fall under Health Communication and IT, Access to Health Services, Healthcare-associated Infections, and Educational and Community-Based programs, one cannot overlook how integral the healthcare workforce, and therefore related workforce issues, Kari Simpson, MPH, CHES, NOVA s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 53 ✯ Poster Abstracts ✯ thursday – saturday | november 4-6 is as part of the social and organizational environment. Through the lens of the Ecological Model, one can apply multilevel interventions by partnering with a WIB to address healthcare workforce issues and therefore larger public health objectives. A WIB is an institutional convener (working with colleges, universities, and vocational training organizations, federal and state governments and governmental departments, non-profit human services organizations, and local employers) and a community convener (for youth, job seekers and local residents) that allows one to intervene an interpersonal level through direct client counseling or a community level through research and application, social networking facilitation, and policy advocacy. Yet, it is rare for healthcare and health services organizations to seek out WIBs for partnering to tackle tough health-centered objectives that can be addressed by a workforce perspective. The following will use NOVA’s, the northern Santa Clara County-serving WIB, example of innovative healthcare workforce research done in collaboration with union shops, private employers, and universities; participation in employer and college advisory groups, self-client driven education and programs, client training evaluation and innovation, and direct client services of how various organizations can partner strategically better deliver services in a struggling economy and more effectively address public health goals. 37. “Sustainable Morehead”: Framing a Rural Community’s Environmental Sustainability Mission within the Community Coalition Action Theory to Improve Public Health Kristi King, PhD, University of Louisville; Brittany Trentham, BS, University of Louisville; Emily Whitney, PhD, CHES, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale background: Increasing public awareness, strengthening community capacity, and creating social and physical environments to improve public health are among several priorities of Healthy People 2020. Community coalitions with an environmental sustainability focus are excellent venues in which public health educators can partner to support physical activity, proper nutrition, and environmental education. “Sustainable Morehead” is a community coalition whose mission is “to further sustainable living in the Morehead and surrounding Appalachian region through education, demonstration projects, and activities that are based on the interrelationship of personal, social, and environmental health.” In order for public health educators to maximize their potential for collective coalition success, it is important to understand the development, maintenance, and potential for institutionalization of these grassroots organization efforts. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to examine the formation and maintenance of an environmental sustainabilityfocused community coalition in a rural community within the context of the Community Coalition Action Theory. theoretical framework: The Community Coalition Action Theory (CCAT), a type of interorganizational relations theory, served as the theoretical framework for this study. The CCAT constructs qualitatively examined were: stages of development, community context, convener group, coalition membership, operations and processes, leadership and staffing, structures, member and external resources, member engagement, assessment, intervention implementation, community change measures, community capacity, and health and social outcomes. hypothesis: Qualitative examination of “Sustainable Morehead’s” strengths and limitations will provide coalition members direction for coalition institutionalization. 54 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 methods: Data collection methods included structured and semi-structured interviews, coalition online social networking content analysis, meeting and event observation, and informal conversation. Subjects included coalition members, key stakeholders, community gatekeepers, and community members for which interventions were targeted. results: Important emergent coalition strengths identified were: 1.) the importance of group consensus on issue selection, 2.) strong and frequent participation of coalition members, 3.) clear goals and objectives, and 4.) clear intervention strategies for member engagement. The need for 1.) identifying and securing external resources and 2.) increasing community participation for targeted interventions were areas for improvement. conclusion and implications for practice: Examination and application of the Community Coalition Action Theory constructs in “Sustainable Morehead” demonstrate how community groups can partner to achieve a common mission of improving environmental sustainability. Understanding a community coalition’s mission, dynamics, and potential for institutionalization can aid a public health educator’s mission of improving public health. 38. Environmental Health Knowledge, Attitudes, and Behaviors of Pre-service Teachers Dhitinut Ratnapradipa, PhD, CHES, Department of Health Education & Recreation, Southern Illinois University; Darson Rhodes, PhD, CHES, Department of Health Education & Recreation, Southern Illinois University; Joyce Fetro, PhD, CHES, Department of Health Education & Recreation, Southern Illinois University; Stephen Brown, PhD, Southern Illinois University Since progress in improving environmental health has been mixed (depending on the environmental issue), Developing Health People 2020 proposes 21 objectives related to environmental health. Research has shown that personal health behaviors and actions established early in life often are carried through adulthood. Thus, working with children to increase environmental health literacy may improve the environmental health literacy of future adults, potentially improving the health of the Nation. Given the amount of time children spend in school, this setting could be an ideal place to address environmental health with children. According to social cognitive theory, learning takes place through observation. Consequently, the environmental behaviors and attitudes modeled by teachers would likely impact the environmental behaviors and attitudes learned by students. Based upon social cognitive theory, a research study including 101 pre-service teachers from a large Midwestern university was conducted to determine participants’ knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors regarding environmental health. Researchers hypothesized environmental health knowledge would be low (mean score less than 80%) and multiple unfavorable behaviors or attitudes would be reported. Results indicated major deficiencies in basic knowledge as well as many unfavorable environmental behaviors. On average, participants answered only 49.7% of knowledge items correctly. Fewer than half of the participants (48.5%) indicated they knew the EPA’s webpage provides information related to environmental health. Additionally, less than half (46.0%) recycle bottles or cans “often” or “almost always.” Given these results, pre-service teachers are likely ill-prepared to address environmental health literacy in their classrooms. Teacher education programs need to address this deficiency in pre-service teachers through the implementation of new courses focused on environmental health or the redesign of current courses to include environmental health content. ✯ Poster Abstracts ✯ thursday – saturday | november 4-6 39. Combined Use of Research-based Methods and Community Outreach Approaches to Improve Respiratory Health in Preschool Children Michael Shakarjian, PhD, New York Medical College; Deborah Viola, PhD, New York Medical College; Jean Hudson, MD, MPH, Orange County Commissioner of Health; Amy Ansehl, RN, BSN, FNPC, New York Medical College; Allen Dozer, MD, Health Center of the Hudson Valley, New York Medical College; Robert Amler, MD, New York Medical College, Peter Arno, PhD, Diane Heck, PhD There is a paucity of research examining the impact of ‘no idling’ ordinances on ambient air quality near schools. Vehicle exhaust is the leading source of toxic air pollution for most communities in the Lower Hudson Valley (LHV) of New York State, and a single vehicle used to commute children to school contributes 3 pounds of air pollution monthly. Studies demonstrate that initial incidents of asthma develop before age 5, suggesting that preschool years mark the critical period for development of the disease and that prevention be focused at this age group. We hypothesize that parents, educators and community leaders are not aware that automobile exhausts from delivering and retrieving children have a significant impact on the quality of outdoor and indoor ambient air at school facilities. We are analyzing the baseline levels of asthma triggering contaminants of automobile and bus exhaust (sulfur dioxides, nitrogen dioxide, ozone, and particulates) at three preschool facilities in Orange County, NY, to develop a community-based effort to incorporate a ‘no idling’ policy as part of their environmental program. This research is motivated from SPARCS data demonstrating high asthma hospitalization rates for children in the LHV. For preschoolers, these rates are higher in some counties (ex. 40.1/10,000 for Orange County) than they are in NYC, and for the region are higher than Healthy People 2020 goals (25/10,000). The objectives of this research are threefold: first, to document automobile and bus traffic and determine the levels of asthma-triggering contaminants of exhaust at three preschools. Second, we are raising awareness of the effects of car idling through advocacy. A steering committee of school representatives and community leaders are relying upon well-established local social networks to change behaviors by presenting results of the baseline exhaust assessment. The framework for action and change is based on theory developed by Everett M. Rogers that diffusion of innovations spreads via channels of communication developed by social members. Third, a no-idling resolution will be presented to the local town board for approval. A follow-up study measures changes in exhaust levels and community compliance as a result of the no-idling policies at these three sites. Our goal is to incorporate translational research components of moving population studies into the community research process in the longer term. This effort will not only contribute to the existing research, but will be available as a template for other communities to apply towards reducing vehicle exhaust. 40. The Effects of Projectpower Diabetes Education Program on Adult African American’s Diabetes Knowledge, Empowerment, and Readiness to Change Sherry Grover, PhD, Ashford University The primary purpose of this study was to assess whether a faith-based diabetes education program (ProjectPower) would significantly influence African American’s knowledge, readiness to change, and feelings of empowerment about diabetes care. The DHHS has outlined 17 diabetes-related objectives aimed at improving diabetes diagnosis and care nationally. The first objective is to “increase the proportion of persons with diabetes who receive formal diabetes education” from 48% in 1998 to 60% in 2010. A secondary purpose of this study was to examine the ecological factors that would affect knowledge, readiness to change, and feelings of empowerment about diabetes care. For this presentation, only open-ended questions will be discussed. Open-ended questions, rooted in the Ecological Model, were used to assess barriers to diabetes care and behavior change. The Ecological Model proposes that people are affected by intrapersonal, interpersonal, community and policy influencers. Although the responses to the open-ended questions were very brief, the intrapersonal influencers mainly guided the use of the model and the thoughts of participants in this study. In order to conduct the study, a volunteer convenience sample of 48 church members, family and friends participated in the study. The inclusion criteria were: African American male and females ages 18 years and older that lived in Houston/Harris County, Texas and surrounding areas. Those with or without diabetes participated. The majority of the participants were female (79.2%), and 20.8% were males. Participants were, on average, 60 years of age (M = 60.52, SD = 15.00) and ranged from 18 years to 82 years of age. The study used a pre-test/post-test survey design that included both open-ended and closed-ended questions. Participants were tested both before and after a three-module workshop. Participants were also invited to participate in a one-month follow-up survey. Data analyses included frequencies, ANOVA, and Pearson’s Product Moment correlations. Results indicated that the diabetes knowledge test scores were significantly higher at the time of post-test compared with results at the time of pre-test, while neither the readiness-to-change scores nor the diabetes empowerment change scores were significantly different between the pre-test and post-test. One response related to the interpersonal influencer and several positive comments regarding the program itself were made. 41. Reliability and Validity of the Women’s Health Survey (WHS) – a Tool Assessing American Indian (AI) Women’s Motivation to Get a Screening Mammogram Eleni Tolma, PhD, Health Promotion Sciences, University of Oklahoma Health Science Center; Robert Hamm, PhD, University of Oklahoma Health Science Center; Chasity Battertom, MHA, University of Oklahoma Health Science Center, David Thompson, PhD, University of Oklahoma, Health Science Center background: Despite efforts to promote breast cancer screening, the number of Oklahoman women who died from breast cancer during the last two decades did not substantially change, and women of ethnic minorities were disproportionally under-screened. This study describes the development of an instrument designed to measure the motivation of American Indian (AI) women to get a regular screening mammogram. The study took place at a tribal clinic in Oklahoma. theoretical framework: This consists of an expanded theoretical framework of the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) with constructs relevant to mammography screening (i.e. self-efficacy, perceived susceptibility to breast cancer, fatalism) and to the (AI) culture (i.e. cultural norms). hypothesis: No hypothesis is tested here. methods: The methodological design consisted of 8 major steps: a) review of the published literature to identify beliefs relevant to AI women’s mammography behavior and to the constructs of the TPB; b) performance of 9 key informant interviews with breast cancer survivors and clinic representatives; c) performance of elicitation interviews with 24 women of the priority population followed by 2 focus groups; d) transformation of the elicitation beliefs into complete item statements and development of the first draft of the Women’s Health Survey (WHS); e) review of the WHS by a panel of 5 experts; f) qualitative review of the survey with 2 focus group discussions (n=6); g) pilot-testing of the instrument with a repres o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 55 ✯ Poster Abstracts ✯ thursday – saturday | november 4-6 sentative sample of the priority population (n=34); h) evaluation of the performance of the instrument in a prospective study through the use of random sampling (n=162). The study population consisted of women 40-65 years old who were due for a mammogram 6 months at the time of the study. Factor analysis was performed using principal components analysis extraction and varimax rotation. Internal consistency of all factors was assessed using the standardized Cronbach’s coefficient alpha. results: Cronbach’s alphas on the sample ranged from 0.65 to 0.96. A majority (14 of 15) alphas were above 0. 70. The final results yielded 15 constructs assessed via a total of 79 items. conclusion: The WHS is a reliable and valid instrument that measures AI women’s motivation to get a screening mammogram. The use of a sound methodology through qualitative and quantitative research enhanced the psychometric properties of the survey. Implications for practice: The results obtained through the administration of the WHS can be used in the development of theory-based interventions to promote mammography screening among AI women. 42. Maternal Smoking and Adverse Birth Outcomes Akila Pasupulati, MPH Candidate, Western Kentucky University Smoking among women is of great concern today because of the adverse outcomes in newborns whose mothers smoke during the prenatal period. It is of great concern that high percentage of smokers is among pregnant women and women of childbearing age (Kentucky epidemiological notes, 2003).Smoking are a serious public health problem in Kentucky. In 2001, Kentucky led the 50 states in the percentage of current smokers, 30.9% (Kentucky epidemiological notes, 2003). Mothers who smoke increase the risk for their infants to suffer from low birth weight, intrauterine growth retardation, various respiratory diseases and infant mortality (Kentucky epidemiological notes, 2003). The prevalence of smoking among women of childbearing age has increased over the past decade. Data from 2001 BRFSS ranks Kentucky second in the nation for percentage of women of age 18-44 years who smoke. The main aim of the research proposal is to identify the group of women at maximum risk to have adverse outcomes in pregnancy and design an intervention to reduce smoking control any co variants associated with smoking during pregnancy thus decreasing neonatal mortality and morbidity. The results of the analysis from the secondary data set will help make recommendations to target the women at maximum risk to have adverse birth outcomes related to smoking and associated factors. Any measured outcomes will be evaluated to determine the success of the proposed recommendations. 43. Developing Picture-Based Environmental Health Education Materials for Refugees: Lessons Learned Xanthi Scrimgeour, MHEd, CHES, Principal, CommunicateHealth, Inc.; Stacy Robison, MPH, CHES, CommunicateHealth, Inc. Refugee children are twice as likely as children born in the United States to have elevated blood lead levels. Moreover, recent immigrant and refugee populations have unique information needs when it comes to childhood lead poisoning prevention. As a result, both the message and the presentation of environmental health information need to be tailored to reach these at-risk communities. To assist resettlement workers and service providers in educating refugees about lead poisoning prevention, the authors followed an iterative design process to develop picture-based materials that could be used with refugees in a classroom, health clinic, home visit, or one-on-one educational setting. The authors 56 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 will briefly describe the iterative design process and its relevance for health education practice. The presentation will include an overview of the lessons learned from individual interviews with refugee resettlement workers and focus groups conducted with refugees from Bhutan, Burma, Somalia, and Russia. 44. Feasibility of Biochemical Validation in Self-reported Smoking Behavior Among College Students Devan Romero, MS, DrPH, CHES, Loma Linda University School of Public Health background and theoretical framework: Self-reported smoking and saliva cotinine in college students were compared and the feasibility of biochemical assay collection in a crosssectional research. Saliva cotinine is primarily tested in current smokers; therefore this study sought to test a random sample of all smoking groups identify actual nicotine exposure. The Theory of Triadic Influence was used as the guiding theoretical framework suggesting a comprehensive assessment of smoking behavior is used in young adults. methods: A random sample of 50 college students were selected from a larger study (N = 490) at a Southwestern University. Participants completed an anonymous survey reporting characteristics of smoking behavior and cigarette exposure. Nicotine exposure was tested by testing saliva samples using a cotinine detection strip. A positive cotinine test was categorized as level 1-6 and a negative result was zero. We hypothesized that students who report current smoking would result in positive cotinine exposure level. results: Thirty-two of the 50 test strips resulted in a readable exposure level, 18 were excluded and deemed inconclusive. The results of the cotinine exposure tests resulted in 37.5% scoring “0”, 53.1% “1”, 3.1% “2”, and 6.3% “3”. Of the 32 participants, 28.1% were classified as current smokers and 71.9% were nonsmokers. Most participants stated they were not smokers (93%); however, 12.5% reported smoking in the past 30 days, 18.8% more than 30 days ago, none reporting quitting. Fortythree percent smoked yesterday and 50% of these participants tested at a level 1, 7.1% at a level 3 and 42.9% at 0. conclusions: The results of saliva cotinine exposure were inconclusive and the sample size did not adjust for the amount of invalid tests. A majority of current smokers did not test positively for cotinine exposure and a third who did, were nonsmokers. Almost half who reported smoking yesterday did not have a positive exposure, indicating insensitivity of the test. Either nonsmokers that tested positive to cotinine exposure are not accurately reporting their smoking behavior or have been exposed to secondhand smoke. implications: Biochemical validation in this study did not increase the validity of self-reported smoking and a larger sample size is needed to achieve a valid number of tests. This test was not cost effective or feasible for limited budgets given the large amount of inconclusive tests. Future studies testing for cotinine exposure should account for the possibility of inaccuracy in self-reported smoking and exposure to secondhand smoke. 45. Using the Theory of Planned Behavior to Predict Safer Sexual Behavior in Ghanaian Immigrants in a Large Midwestern City in the U.S. Matthew Asare, MBA, PhD Candidate, University of Cincinnati Ghanaian immigrant population in the United States is at a high risk for developing HIV/AIDS. The purpose of this study was to use the Theory ✯ Poster Abstracts ✯ thursday – saturday | november 4-6 of Planned Behavior to predict safer sexual behavior among Ghanaian immigrants in a large Midwestern city in the United States. A 55-item questionnaire was developed and tested for validity (face, content, and construct) and reliability (stability and test-retest). A total of 137 Ghanaian immigrants completed the questionnaire. The constructs of perceived behavioral control (p<0.001) and subjective norm (p<0.001) were significant predictors for intention to use condoms and they accounted for 38% of the variance. Behavioral intention for condom use (p<0.001) was the significant predictor for condom use and it accounted for 21% of the variance. Health education interventions based on constructs of theory of planned behavior must promote consistent and correct use of condoms in this target population. 46. Re-examining the Language and Meanings of HIV and AIDS in South Africa Yewande Sofolahan, BS, Pennsylvania State University; Collins Airhihenbuwa, PhD, Pennsylvania State University introduction: That HIV and AIDS disproportionately affect people in South Africa is a well established fact. There is a need to focus more attention on cultural meanings of stigma related to HIV and AIDS so as to better understand the contexts for intervention. The present study explores the language used to express HIV/AIDS stigma in Limpopo. methods: A total of 80 participants participated in 9 focus group interviews on factors related to HIV and AIDS stigma in South Africa. This study is part of a capacity building research project on HIV/AIDS stigma in South Africa based on the PEN-3 cultural model. results: The findings of this study revealed that participants referred to HIV as makgoma, a form of “social pollution.” They described makgoma using language which reflects divergence between biomedical explanations of HIV causation and traditional beliefs surrounding death and witchcraft. The findings revealed that there is no general consensus as to specifically how makgoma represents stigma related to HIV and AIDS. conclusion: Our findings revealed gaps in the interpretation of languages and beliefs between community members and healthcare workers. Thus a culturally based intervention that applies to a diverse population needs to be applied to better understand interpretations of HIV and AIDS stigma in South Africa. We conclude that understanding cultural interpretations of stigmatized conditions such as HIV and AIDS are the key to effective interventions. 47. Pregnancy Prevention for Latina Youth Gina Harris, BA, Friends First: A Healthy Choice background: The Quinceañera Program is a healthy relationship & communication program for Hispanic youth ages 12-15 and their parents and family. It gives the participants a chance to reflect on what a quinceañera means as a rite of passage. Participants explore topics including character development, love, dating, and relationships, peer pressure and refusal skills, goal setting, healthy choices, communication with their parents and peers, consequences to early sexual involvement, and benefits of delayed sexual activity. theoretical framework: The Quinceañera Program implements a whole-person format based on the frameworks of social learning theory, character education and positive youth development. It was developed as a culturally relevant way to address the high teen pregnancy rate among Hispanic youth. The program offers prevention education through the unique avenue of the quinceañera rite of passage for Hispanic young women, refocusing the young women & their families on the original meaning of the quinceañera ceremony. objectives: HP 2010 Objectives 9-8, 9-9, 9-11, and 25-11 were met through the implementation of the Quinceañera Program. The specific objectives of this independent program evaluation were: 1) Participants who receive the program will demonstrate greater gains in abstinence intentions, parental support, refusal skills, parent/child quality of communication, and knowledge of avoiding pregnancy and STDs/STIs, and 2) Immediately after participation, participants will be more likely to practice or reestablish sexual abstinence than youth not receiving the program. intervention: Fifteen Hispanic young women (ages 12 – 15 years) and their parents were served at each of six treatment sites with eight weekly, 3-hour lessons on healthy choices and relationship education. In addition, each youth was required to complete 10 hours of community service. evaluation measures & results: Pre-and post-program questionnaires were given to youth and their parents. The measures on the questionnaires were previously validated to assure valid, reliable data. T tests showed the program group at post-test was significantly improved from the pretest in the following areas: Abstinence intentions (p=.006); Support from parent (p=.0001); Parent comfort talking to child about abstinence (p=.001); Parent talked to child about abstinence (p=.016); and Parent/child quality of communication (p=.004). Parent/Child quality of communication significantly improved (eta effect size = .31) from being in the program group (vs. the control group) F (1,67) = 6.92, p = .01. The qualitative interviews triangulated the quantitative results, which show the ability of the program to improve the quality of parentchild communication. 48. How We Can Move Toward Reducing Injuries and Mortality from Motor Vehicle Crashes Michael Sabol, MPH, Research Analyst, Traffic Safety Policy Injuries and deaths resulting from motor vehicle crashes on our Nation’s highways affect millions of motorists, passengers, bicyclists and pedestrians each year and are a significant public health issue. Motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death for Americans ages 1-34 and account for over 37,000 deaths each year. The good news is that most of these deaths and injuries are preventable. This presentation will highlight what has helped us move toward the Healthy People 2010 goals and what new methods we may need to adopt to continue our progress. Over the past decade there have been also been many improvements in motor vehicle safety involving the vehicle, road and the driver. Vehicle technology has improved, our roads have become safer and drivers are better equipped at managing the task of driving and operating our vehicles. Air bag technology has become standard, road barriers have improved and are reinforced to keep cars from leaving the roadway and drivers have adapted to more traffic and technology behind the wheel to improve safety. Strategies such as education campaigns, laws and legislation and changes in public opinion and acceptance have helped to reduce motor vehicle crash-related injuries and deaths. Seat belt use has increased to over 80% in the U.S. Child and booster seats have been widely accepted and teen drivers have become safer due to stronger GDL laws now in all states. Yet, there are still thousands of deaths and millions of injuries on our roads, and much more work to do to realize the Healthy People 2020 goals ahead of us. Drivers still drive drunk, people still drive unbelted and do not restrain their children, and new distractions are present s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 57 ✯ Poster Abstracts ✯ thursday – saturday | november 4-6 behind the wheel. A challenge is presented to us to make further reductions in motor vehicle safety because if we keep doing the same thing, we’ll get the same result and our goals will not be achieved. We must realize that new strategies and ways to educate the public are needed. A shift in our safety culture and ways to harness technology needs to occur to help guide us in the decade ahead and beyond. Our safety on our Nation’s highways is being compromised every day and this presentation will discuss some of the strategies being used to help keep all of us safe behind the wheel and improve safety for all Americans. 49. Motor Vehicle Crashes and Adverse Maternal Outcomes in North Carolina Catherine J. Vladutiu, MPH, Department of Epidemiology, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Charles Poole, ScD, Department of Epidemiology, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Stephen W. Marshall, PhD, Department of Epidemiology, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Carri Casteel, PhD, Department of Epidemiology, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Mary K. Menard, MD, Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology, School of Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Harold B. Weiss, PhD, Department of Preventive and Social Medicine, Dunedin School of Medicine, University of Otago background: Motor vehicle crashes during pregnancy are the leading cause of maternal morbidity and mortality in the United States. Very little is known about the circumstances surrounding these crash events and the maternal characteristics that may increase women’s vulnerability to crashrelated injuries during pregnancy. Only a few population-based studies have examined maternal and fetal outcomes following crashes. However, many of these studies used hospital data and were able to capture only the most severe crashes. This study aims to estimate the incidence of motor vehicle crashes during pregnancy, the incidence of crash-related maternal injuries, and the prevalence of seat belt use in all reported crashes during pregnancy in North Carolina. hypothesis: Based on the crash fatality rate of women in North Carolina and findings from other state-based research, we hypothesized that 3-4% of pregnant women would be in a motor vehicle crash in North Carolina between 2001 and 2008. We further hypothesized that the majority of these crashes resulted in no or minor injuries and that unbelted pregnant women sustained more severe injuries than belted pregnant women. methods: Motor vehicle crashes during pregnancy were examined retrospectively in a cohort of 952,602 singleton live births and fetal deaths among pregnant women aged 16 to 44 in North Carolina between 2001 and 2008. Probabilistic record linkage was used to identify women and fetuses who were in a crash during pregnancy by merging live birth and fetal death records with police-reported motor vehicle crash records. Descriptive analyses were used to assess the distribution of maternal and crash characteristics. results: Between 2001 and 2008, approximately 3% of women in North Carolina whose pregnancy resulted in a live birth or fetal death were in a crash during pregnancy. The majority of these women were 25 to 34 years old, non-Hispanic White, married, high school graduates, and did not use tobacco or alcohol during pregnancy. Approximately 53% were not injured, 38% sustained minor injuries, and 9% were moderately or severely injured as a result of the crash. Less than one percent sustained fatal injuries. Ninetysix percent were wearing a seatbelt at the time of the crash. Injury severity differed by belt use such that a higher proportion of unbelted women sustained moderate or severe injuries (27%) compared to belted women (8%). 58 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 conclusion: Despite the relatively high proportion of pregnant women in crashes who used seat belts, approximately half sustained injuries. Maternal injuries can adversely affect the health and survival of the fetus and further analyses should assess the impact of crashes and subsequent injuries on fetal outcomes. implications for practice: Pregnant women should continue to receive prenatal counseling about the risk of motor vehicle crashes during pregnancy and the importance of seat belt use to prevent harm to themselves and their fetus. Routine linkage of police-reported crash records with live birth and fetal death records would facilitate research on the effect of crashes during pregnancy and help raise awareness of this important issue. 50. Healthy Homes Pilot Project to Prevent Childhood Exposure to Indoor Environmental Hazards in Los Angeles County Brittany N. Morey, MPH Candidate, UCLA Children living in low quality housing are at greater risk of disease and injury caused by indoor environmental hazards, such as: lead, mold, asbestos, pests, dust, allergens, poison, chemicals, radon gas, and sources of injury. Chronic exposure to these hazards causes poor health outcomes, including brain and nerve damage, lead poisoning, lung cancer, behavior problems, learning problems, asthma, allergies, slowed growth, unintentional injury, and even death. The Healthy Homes Pilot Project is a partnership between the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health’s Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Program and the faithbased organization, Kingdom Causes. The goal of the Healthy Homes Pilot Project is to prevent childhood exposure to indoor environmental hazards in the California cities of Monterey Park and Alhambra. The project coordinator provided skill-building workshops for local community organizations and family service providers. Parents and childcare providers were encouraged to attend workshops to learn how to prevent children from being exposed to hazards in the home and at childcare centers. As a result, over 60 families and childcare providers received training. Pretests and posttests show an increase in knowledge about childhood lead poisoning prevention and healthy homes topics amongst workshop attendees. Providing parents and family service providers with healthy homes knowledge and skills is necessary to prevent childhood disease, unintentional injury, and death. Healthy Homes Workshops are an effective means to motivate and educate communities about indoor environmental hazards. ✯ Poster Abstracts ✯ thursday – saturday | november 4-6 51. Gender Differences in Motivational Tendencies for Physical Activity Valerie Lozano, BS, New Mexico State University; Rebecca Palacios, PhD, New Mexico State University background: The Behavioral Approach System (BAS) and the Behavioral Inhibition System (BIS) are two physiological systems that direct most human behavior. The BAS activates behavior in response to stimuli signaling reward and the BIS inhibits behavior in response to stimuli signaling punishment. Research has shown that individuals vary in their BIS and BAS tendencies and that these tendencies are differentially related to risk behaviors. This study examined the relationship of approach and inhibitory tendencies to physical inactivity, a risk behavior for obesity. methodology: One hundred and sixty four college students, 24% male and 53% Hispanic, completed a survey assessing motivational tendencies toward physical activity. The survey included 4 BAS related subscales (Drive, Sensation Seeking, Reward, and Positive Emotion) and 3 BIS related subscales (Punishment, Non-reward, and Negative Emotion). results: Most respondents ate 1 or 2 cups of fruits and vegetables per day during their pregnancy and felt that this amount was adequate. Burmese women perceived high cost (70%) and unavailability (33.3%) as the major barriers preventing them from eating fruits and vegetables. American (48%), Spanish (42.4%) and Bosnian (40%) women felt that lack of time was the major hindering factor. Burmese (87%) and Spanish speaking women (76%) ate fruits and vegetables because they were healthy; Bosnian (90%) and American (83%) women because they liked their taste. Most immigrant women wanted to receive educational materials on eating more fruits and vegetables. conclusions: Healthy People 2010 recommends eating at least 2 cups of fruits and 3 cups of vegetables per day. Results indicate that most women ate too few fruits and vegetables during their pregnancy. This presentation will provide information on how to tailor an intervention and develop materials to better meet the needs of immigrant and non-immigrant WIC women. results: A 2 x 2 research design with gender and ethnicity as independent variables and 7 motivational subscales as dependent variables was used. MANOVA identified significant gender effects for the BAS subscales of Reward (p < .05) and Drive (p < .01) and for the BIS subscale of Negative Emotion (p < .05). Male college students rated greater Reward and Drive for physical activity compared to female students. In contrast females rated greater Negative Emotion for physical activity than males. No significant Ethnicity effects were identified. The relation of these tendencies to actual physical activity and BMI are further examined. discussion: This study found that men exhibit more appetitive tendencies and women exhibit more inhibitory tendencies for exercise. 52. Fruit and Vegetable Consumption Among Immigrant and Non-immigrant Women Served by WIC in South Central Kentukcy Pragati Gole, MD, Western Kentucky University; SK Varun Malayala, MBBS, Western Kentucky University background: The recent influx of immigrants from Burma, Bosnia, Mexico, El Salvador and other countries to the United States has created awareness among public health professionals to understand the dietary preferences of these groups. Research has not focused on dietary intake of immigrant populations. purpose: The purpose of this study was to assess dietary patterns of immigrants and non-immigrants served by the WIC (Women, Infant, and Children) program and residing in South Central Kentucky. The study proposed to identify intake of fruits and vegetables during pregnancy, perceptions of fruits and vegetable intake during pregnancy, consumption preferences, and barriers and promoting factors regarding fruit and vegetable consumption. methods: The study utilized a cross-sectional research design. Post partum women attending the WIC clinic completed a 17-item selfadministered survey. This questionnaire incorporated constructs from the Social Cognitive Theory and the Theory of Planned Behavior. It was first developed in English and then translated into Burmese, Spanish and Bosnian. The survey was administered following approval from the Institutional Review Board. Respondents included women from the United States (n=100), Burma (n=30), Mexico and South America (n=33), Bosnia (n=10), and from other countries (n=7). s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 59 Poster Promenade ✯ 2010 SOPHE Awards ✯ ✯ poster promenade – new early riser session sat / nov 6 / 7:30 am – 8:15 pm The Poster Promenade highlights twelve selected posters that have been grouped into three categories. Each group will provide a 45 minute guided discussion tour of four posters. Choose one group based on your topic of interest to participate in as you enjoy your morning coffee. (CECHs credits provided) College Health: •Poster 3: Using Digital Storytelling Projects to Promote Health Behaviors to College Students •Poster 13: Theory of Planned Behavior Based Predictors of Sleep Intentions and Behaviors in Undergraduate College Students at a Midwestern University • Poster 8: Reaching the Optimum Potential of Distance Learning in Health Education through Properly Marketing Non-traditional College-level Courses • Poster 11: Communicating H1N1 Risk to Hispanic College Students Health Disparities: • Poster 47: Pregnancy Prevention for Latina Youth • Poster 40: The Effects of ProjectPower Diabetes Education Program on Adult African Americans’ Diabetes Knowledge, Empowerment, and Readiness to Change • Poster 43:Developing Picture-Based Environmental Health Education Materials for Refugees: Lessons Learned • Poster 52:Fruit and Vegetable Consumption among Immigrant and Non-immigrant Women Served by WIC in South Central Kentucky Web/Internet: • Poster 22: Training Future Health Leaders in Cultural Humility and Competency: Lessons Learned From Developing and Teaching a Multi-disciplinary Hybrid Online Course and Modules for Public Health and Health Services Students • Poster 25: Publishing an Undergraduate Project on the Web: Using Social Bookmarking as a Platform for Student Projects • Poster 30: Advocacy 2.0: Using Web 2.0 to Advocate for the Profession • Poster 33:Internet Risk Behavior Willingness to Engage in Unsafe Sexual Behavior 60 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 ✯ 2010 SOPHE Awards✯ ✯ Schedule-at-a-Glance ✯✯ time THURSDAY | NOVEMBER 4 event room 7:30 am - 6:00 pm Registration/Hospitality/CHES Desk Open Central Registration 8:00 am - 11:00 am SOPHE House of Delegates Meeting Colorado G-H 11:00 am – 6:00 pm SOPHE Board of Trustees Meeting Mattie Silks 1:00 pm – 5:00 pm PRE-CONFERENCE SKILL-BUILDING WORKSHOP I: Evaluation: A Key Tool to the Trade Molly Brown 2:00 pm – 5:00 pm RE-CONFERENCE SKILL-BUILDING WORKSHOP II: P The Spirit Health Resides in the People of the Land: Healing Our Community Matchless 3:00 pm – 7:00 pm Resource Room & Poster Set-Up Colorado A-D 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm RE-CONFERENCE SKILL-BUILDING WORKSHOP III: Is Your Health Web Site P Easy to Use? Strategies for Improving Health Literacy and the Web Molly Brown 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm PRE-CONFERENCE SKILL-BUILDING WORKSHOP IV: The Future is in your Hands: Key Components of Professional Preparation and Success Denver 3 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm PRE-CONFERENCE SKILL-BUILDING WORKSHOP V: SABPAC 101: For Faculty and Practitioners Gold Coin 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm National SOPHE Leadership Orientation Nat Hill time FRIDAY | NOVEMBER 5 event room 7:00 am – 6:00 pm Registration/Hospitality/CHES Desk Central Registration 7:00 am – 7:45 am Wellness Challenge Hotel Lobby/Gold Coin 7:00 am – 8:15 am SOPHE Member Orientation & Meeting Mentoring Kick-off Colorado G-H 7:00 am – 8:15 am SOPHE 2011 Annual Meeting Planning Committee Meeting Saratoga 7:00 am – 8:15 am SOPHE Communities of Practice Chairs Meeting: Addressing the Social Determinants of Health Mattie Silks 8:30 am – 5:00 pm CHES Lounge & Clinic (All Welcome) Matchless 8:30 am – 8:00 pm Resource Room, Career Center & Posters Open Colorado A-D 8:30 am – 8:45 am Opening Remarks/Welcome Colorado E-F 8:45 am – 9:15 am S OPHE Presidential Address: Addressing the Social Determinants of Health Diane Allensworth, PhD, 2009-10 SOPHE President and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Colorado E-F 9:15 am – 10:00 am LENARY SESSION I- Healthy People Objectives for the Nation: P Three Decades of Achievement J. Michael McGinnis, MD, MPP, Institute of Medicine Colorado E-F 10:00 am – 10:30 am Break Colorado A-D 10:30 am – 11:45 am CONCURRENT SESSIONS - A • Clearing the Smoke: Looking Back, Looking Forward at Healthy People Objectives • Innovative Uses of Health Education and Promotion Theory • Electronic Media: New Avenues for Reaching Healthy People Goals • Mile High Strategies for Professional Preparation in Health Education • Diversity in Action: Addressing the Needs of Immigrants and Special Populations Colorado E-F Colorado I-J Denver 5-6 Nat Hill Colorado H-G 11:45 am – 12:15 pm Box Lunch Pick-Up Central Registration 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm SOPHE Communities of Practice Roundtable Luncheons Colorado E-F 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm SOPHE Continuing Education Committee Meeting Matchless s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 61 2010 Schedule-at-a-Glance SOPHE Awards✯ ✯ ✯✯ time event room 1:15 pm – 2:30 pm CONCURRENT SESSIONS - B • Reach and Recovery: Strategies and Interventions for High Risk Adolescents • Challenges in Health Education: Building Professional Identity • Community and Population Health: Challenges for a New Decade • A Health Educator’s Call to Action: Emergency Preparedness and Response • Healthy Faculty 2020 and Beyond: Commitment to Health for All 2:30 pm – 3:00 pm Break Colorado A-D 3:00 pm – 4:15 pm CONCURRENT SESSIONS - C • Health Education Quality Assurance: A Recipe for Excellence • Shifting the Paradigm: Utilizing Innovative Policy Strategies for Improvements in Chronic Disease • Promising Directions in Nutrition and Wellness Promotion • College Health: Emerging Trends Among the Millennial Generation • Novel Uses of Electronic Media: Adapting to Diverse Audiences Colorado I-J Nat Hill Colorado E-F Denver 5-6 Colorado G-H 4:30 pm – 6:00 pm PLENARY SESSION II – Healthy People 2020: Mile High Expectations Panel Presentation: Shiriki Kumanyika, PhD, MPH, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine Rear Admiral Penelope Slade-Sawyer, PT, MSW, Office of Public Health and Science, DHHS Office of the Secretary; Doug Evans, PhD, The George Washington University Colorado E-F 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm Opening Gala Reception and Poster Session with Authors Colorado A-D time 7:00 am – 3:45 pm SATURDAY | NOVEMBER 6 event Registration/Hospitality/CHES Desks room 7:00 am – 7:45 am Wellness Challenge Hotel Lobby/Gold Coin 7:00 am – 8:00 am Continental Breakfast Central Registration 7:00 am – 8:15 am EARLY RISER SESSIONS • Holistic Approach to Health: The Mind Body Connection • Critical Thinking: A Necessary Life Skill for Leadership Matchless Molly Brown 7:00 am – 8:15 am SOPHE Faculty Community of Practice Colorado G-H 7:00 am – 8:15 am SOPHE Student/New Professional Community of Practice Colorado I-J 7:00 am – 8:15 am SOPHE Publications Committee Meeting Denver 2 7:00 am – 8:15 am SOPHE 2011 Mid Year Meeting Planning Committee 7:30 am – 8:15 am SOPHE New! Poster Promenade Colorado A-D 8:00 am – 2:00 pm Resource Room, Career Center & Posters Open Colorado A-D 8:30 am – 9:45 am CONCURRENT SESSIONS - D • SOPHE Student Fellowship Presentations • Healthy Aging: Living Long, Living Well • Scaling New Heights in Health Education Leadership: Revisiting Our Past to Inform Our Future • Food for Thought: Examining Connections Between Nutrition and Disease Prevention • Innovative Approaches to Health Communication: A Look at Photoactive and Digital Storytelling Colorado I-J Mattie Silks Colorado E-F Molly Brown Colorado G-H Break Colorado A-D PLENARY III - Elizabeth Fries Health Education Award & Lecture Conquering Cancer in the 21st Century John Seffrin, PhD, American Cancer Society Colorado E-F PLENARY IV - SOPHE 2010 Honorary Fellow Lecture Implementation Disorders: Diagnosis and Treatment David S. Sobel, MD, MPH, Kaiser Permanente Northern California Colorado E-F SOPHE All Member Business Meeting & Luncheon Colorado G-J 9:45 am – 10:00 am 10:00 am – 10:45 am 10:45 am- 11:30 am 11:45 am – 12:45 pm 62 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 Nat Hill Colorado I-J Colorado E-F Colorado H-G Denver 5-6 Central Registration Denver 1 ✯ time 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm 2:00 pm – 2:15 pm 2:15 pm – 3:30 pm 2:30 pm – 3:30 pm 2:30 pm – 5:00 pm 2:30 pm – 5:00 pm 2:30 pm - 5:00 pm 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm 9:00 pm – 10:00 pm Schedule-at-a-Glance ✯ event PLENARY V: Reaching the Healthy People Summit: Elevating Health Education Prominence in US Public Health Policy and Practice Lawrence W. Green, DrPH, University of San Francisco and Respondents Concluding Remarks Posters, Resource Room Break Down The National Prevention and Health Promotion Strategy Listening Session Kathleen A. Ethier, PhD and Corinne M. Graffunder, DrPH, MPH, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention SABPAC Meeting SOPHE Executive Board Meeting SOPHE Health Equity Grant Meeting Wiley/Jossey-Bass Reception (By Invitation) SOPHE Awards Ceremony (Denver Art Museum) Awards Afterglow (Optional-Denver Art Museum) SUNDAY | NOVEMBER 7 time event room Colorado E-F Colorado E-F Colorado A-D Colorado E-F Matchless Denver 2 Mattie Silks Molly Brown room 9:00 am – 10:30 am National SOPHE Past Presidents Breakfast Mattie Silks 9:00 am – 11:00 am Health Promotion Practice Editorial Breakfast Molly Brown 10:30 am – 12:30 pm National SOPHE Old & New Executive Boards Mattie Silks 1:00 pm - 5:00 pm Minority Communities Advisory Committee Silverton MONDAY | NOVEMBER 8 time event 12:00 pm – 2:00 pm Health Education & Behavior Editorial Board Meeting (off site) s o p h e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 10 63 ✯ 2010 SOPHE Awards ✯ 60th Year Proclamation in Honor of SOPHE’s WHEREAS,1949 marks the year during which health education professionals first gathered to explore the organization of an independent society representing the discipline of public health educators; and WHEREAS, An organization known as the Society of Public Health Educators, or SOPHE, was officially founded in 1950 and elected Clair E. Turner as its first president; and WHEREAS, The founding fathers and mothers of SOPHE pioneered the first standards for professional preparation in health education, which later hastened the first accreditation of Master’s of Public Health Program in Community Health Education; and WHEREAS, SOPHE, later renamed as the Society for Public Health Education, has remained dedicated to its non-profit mission over 60 years to improving the health of all people through education; and WHEREAS, SOPHE provided seminal leadership in advancing the profession, including but not limited to, organizing the first Bethesda conference, developing entry- and graduate-level health education competencies, promulgating global health promotion competencies, articulating the first health education research agenda, developing a code of ethics, and obtaining recognition of “health educator” as a unique Standard Occupational Classification by the Department of Labor; and WHEREAS, Recognizing the importance of policy advocacy, SOPHE relocated to Washington, D.C., in 1995, and continues to pursue Dorothy Nyswander’s vision today in which “justice is the same for every [person]; where dissent is taken seriously as an index of something wrong or something needed; where diversity is expected; . . . where the best of health care is available to all; where poverty is a community disgrace not an individual’s weakness; [and] where desires for power over [people] become satisfaction with the use of power for people”; and WHEREAS, SOPHE’s many decades of conferences, peer-reviewed journals, and other forums have substantially contributed to health education research and its dissemination and translation into excellence in practice; and WHEREAS, SOPHE’s diverse membership has enriched the research and practice base of the field as behavioral scientists, practitioners, and students working in schools, universities, health/medical settings, community based organizations, worksites, international agencies, and federal, state and local government; and WHEREAS, Chapters, which have been a part of SOPHE’s fabric for more than forty years, provide a rich source of continuing education, advocacy, networking, and partnerships that are vital to SOPHE’s continued success; and WHEREAS, SOPHE co-sponsored research has revealed employers’ thoughts and attitudes toward the unique contributions of professionally trained health educators and championed efforts such as National Health Education Week to bring national attention to the unique contributions of professionally trained health educators; and WHEREAS, Partnerships with other public and private organizations are a valued part of SOPHE’s history and have contributed to progress in health education and health promotion; therefore be it: RESOLVED: That SOPHE substantially commit to working with other health education related organizations, both nationally and internationally, to unify, promote and strengthen the profession; RESOLVED: That SOPHE develop and implement a marketing and advocacy initiative promoting the value of health education specialists, as the frontline advocate for promoting health among individuals, families and communities; RESOLVED: That during this 60th anniversary year, all SOPHE members find opportunities to give of their time, talent or treasure at the national, chapter or local levels to help pursue SOPHE’s mission and continue to enrich the field of health education and health promotion; and RESOLVED: That all SOPHE members share the achievements and accomplishment of the Society by providing a copy of this proclamation to their employers, colleagues, students, and others. 64 soph e co n f e r e n c e ✯ n ove m b e r 4 - 6 , 2 0 1 0 Hotel Map ! ! Save These Important Dates [ macrh 5-7, 2011 ] 14th annual health education advocacy summit washington, dc In collaboration with the Coalition of National Health Education Organizations and Partner Organizations [ may 1-4, 2011 ] sophe mid year meeting albuquerque, new mexico “A Tapestry for Change: Addressing Chronic Health Issues in a Dynamic World” In collaboration with the National Association of Chronic Disease Directors [ october 27-29, 2011 ] sophe 62nd annual meeting washington, dc [ october 25-27, 2012 ] sophe 63rd annual meeting san francisco, california special thanks! special thanks to the members of colorado sophe for all their dedication, support and hospitality in making this conference a success! ! ! Society for Public Health Education 10 G St. NE Ste. 605 Washington DC 20002 www.SOPHE.org