APHA 2016 Annual Meeting

3169.0 CCC, 501 Reproductive Health Policy—Geography and Strategy Moderator(s): Susan Berke Fogel, JD 10:30 a.m. Women’s Access to Reproductive Health and Rights Becoming Dependent on Where They Live— Jennie Wetter 10:50 a.m. Strategies to Address the Threat to Reproductive Health Care from Expanding Catholic Health Systems— Lois Uttley, MPP 11:10 a.m. Exploring Provider Perspectives as Barriers and Facilitators to Implementation of Quality Family Planning Recommendations at Title X Clinics: A Qualitative Study— Megan Simmons, MPH, PhD(c) 11:30 a.m. Family Planning Text Outreach in a Community Health Center (FQHC) setting— Rachel Everhart, PhD, MS Organized by: Population, Reproductive and Sexual Health Endorsed by: Women’s Caucus

Table 9 Taking It to the Pews (TIPS): The Innovation, Successes and Challenges of Sunday Morning HIV Testing in African American Churches— Carole Bowe Thompson, BS Table 10 Community Conversations’ Model of Social Inclusion: Building A ‘Health Community’ Among Black Women— Audra Meadows, MD, MPH Organized by: Public Health Education and Health Promotion Endorsed by: Community Health Workers, Food and Nutrition CE Credits: CME, CHES, CNE, CPH, MCHES Health Communication Issues Within Healthcare Organizations (organized by HCWG) Moderator(s): Theresa Byrd, DrPH 10:30 a.m. Leveraging regional partnerships to manage healthcare capacity during a severe influenza pandemic: The Flu on Call™ pilot project in Milwaukee, WI— Paul A. Biedrzycki, MPH, MBA, CIH 10:45 a.m. Social Marketing: A Unique Approach to Diversifying the Public Health Workforce in Wisconsin— Ashley Monson, CHES 11:00 a.m. Virtual Office Hours: Showcasing a model social media training program to advance the goals of HHS/Dr. DeSalvo’s Health 3.0 unveiled at APHA 2015— Pavni Guharoy, MPH 11:15 a.m. Digital Media Dissemination Approach to Engage Organizations to Promote Health, Safety and Well-being— Madeline Newman, MPH Candidate 11:30 a.m. Burnout and health problems among domestic violence service workers: Communicating social support with coworkers as a coping practice— Daniel Park, M.A. Organized by: Public Health Education and Health Promotion CE Credits: CME, CHES, CNE, CPH, MCHES Implementing and Evaluating Health Disparities Initiatives: Case Examples from the CDC REACH Implementation Initiative Moderator(s): Vincent Francisco, Ph.D 10:30 a.m. Health for All: Healthy Places that Promote Health Equity among Latinos in Kansas City, KS— Jerry A. Schultz, PhD 10:50 a.m. Promoting healthy eating and physical activity in Cabarrus County, NC— Corliss Allen Solomon, MPH 11:10 a.m. Be Well, a health and wellness initiative to promote health in an African American community— Alisha Brown, MNM 11:30 a.m. Promoting access to health services and healthy food among Latinos and Marshallese communities in NW Arkansas— Michael Stephens Organized by: Public Health Education and Health Promotion Endorsed by: Food and Nutrition, Women’s Caucus CE Credits: CME, CHES, CNE, CPH, MCHES 3172.0 CCC, 104 3173.0 CCC, 106

Organized by: Population, Reproductive and Sexual Health Endorsed by: American Indian, Alaska Native and Native Hawaiian Caucus, Public Health Education and Health Promotion, Women’s Caucus CCC, 108 Community Linkages that Bolster Chronic Disease Screening and Prevention Moderator(s): Katya Seligman, MPH 10:30 a.m. Creating community-clinical linkages: Connecting networks to increase engagement with the National Diabetes Prevention Program via a call center referral system— Annie Pham 10:50 a.m. Creating clinical/community linkages with health systems and other stakeholders to screen and treat prediabetes— Janet Williams, MA 11:10 a.m. Improving Screening and Prevention of Chronic Disease by Implementing Home-Based Primary Care Programs in FQHCs throughout the U.S.: An Empirical Assessment— Walter Jones, PhD 11:30 a.m. Building clinical-community linkages in a rural healthcare system: Effective strategies for increasing clinical referrals to community evidence-based programs for patients with or at risk for chronic disease— Laura Robbins, BA, CHES Organized by: Public Health Education and Health Promotion Endorsed by: Community Health Workers CCC, Mile High Ballroom 3A Culturally Appropriate Strategies to Support Healthy Lifestyle Behaviors Moderator(s): Tamar Ginossar, Ph.D. Table 1 Healthy Habits / Healthy Seniors: A peer-to-peer health campaign designed by seniors for seniors— Michéle Samarya-Timm, MA, HO, MCHES, REHS, CPH, DLAAS Table 2 Getting to the heart of the matter in Michigan: Collective impact on population health— Lorena Disha, M.P.H. Table 3 Creating healthy eating and active living 3170.0 3171.0 Table 4 Utilizing participatory methods to inform and prioritize an evaluation plan for the Raising St. Louis Early Childhood Initiative— Beth Rotter, PhD, MPH Table 5 Implementation and evaluation of a corner store initiative in an underserved Latino community— Johana Bravo, MPH Table 6 Camp FRESH: Improving the Health of Urban Youth through Education— Christopher C. Moore, BA Table 7 Promoting sun safety behaviors with preschoolers: A cancer prevention intervention— Richard Rairigh Table 8 Reducing Teen Childbearing among rural communities: Utilizing local food and activity asset mapping to inform coalition work— Suzanne Stluka, MS, RDN, LN

10:30–12:00

3169.1

CCC, Mile High Ballroom 4ABC

Sexual Health Roundtable Discussions Moderator(s): Aleta Baldwin, MA Table 1 Are Parental Relationship always

Protective? A Social Network Analysis of Black, Latino and White Homeless Youth and Sexual Risk-Taking Behaviors— Jaih B. Craddock, MSW, MA Development into Evidence-Based Teen Pregnancy Prevention Programs in Juvenile Corrections— Allison Muzzey, BA

Monday, October 31

Table 2 Incorporating Positive Youth

Table 3 What’s my future worth? A needs assessment of barriers and resources of teen pregnancy prevention in high risk areas of Dallas— Mandy Golman, PhD, MCHES Table 4 Reproductive Control and Its Link to Dating Violence and Mental Health in Young Adult Females— Vi Donna Le, MPH Table 5 Promoting Healthy and Sustainable Families in Rural Native American Communities through Home Visitation Services— Rebecca Morris, AAS Table 6 Using a reproductive justice framework to integrate reproductive health services and primary care in NY: Qualitative interviews with key opinion leaders— Diana Romero, PhD, MA Table 7 Do As I Say, Not As I Do: Exploring Double Standards, Stigma, and the Acceptance of Comprehensive Sex Education Among African American Church Leaders in the South— Danielle Lambert, MPH, CHES Table 8 Couple’s Condom Use as a Function of the Variation in Sexual Behaviors and Genital Self-Esteem— Israel Rodriguez, MPH Table 9 Explicitness of sexting behavior and sexual risk among young adults— Ashlee Sawyer, BS Table 10 Youth-focused gender integrated health

education and promotion interventions: The Philadelphia Ujima Coalition for a Healthier Community Experience— Lidyvez Mejia, MPH (candidate)

Latinos: An Innovative Anti-Poverty Strategy— Bianca Faccio, Research Analyst

APHA 2016 ANNUAL MEETING • DENVER, CO

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