Abstract PO-044: Cancer resources and needs assessment of immigrant communities based in New York

Author(s):  
Yousra Yusuf ◽  
Victoria Foster ◽  
Perla Chebli ◽  
Sonia Sifuentes ◽  
Chau Trinh-Shevrin ◽  
...  
10.7249/tr920 ◽  
2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carrie Farmer ◽  
Lisa Jaycox ◽  
Grant Marshall ◽  
Christine Vaughan ◽  
Glenda Wrenn

2017 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 502-506 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Bride ◽  
Ponni V. Perumalswami ◽  
Alexandre Ly van Manh ◽  
Lina Jandorf

2020 ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Stella S Yi ◽  
Rienna G Russo ◽  
Bian Liu ◽  
Susan Kum ◽  
Pasquale Rummo ◽  
...  

Abstract Objective: The food retail environment is an important determinant of food access and the ability to achieve a healthy diet. However, immigrant communities may procure their food in different ways than the mainstream population owing to preferences for specific cultural products or limited English language proficiency. The objective of this analysis was to describe the grocery shopping patterns and behaviours of one of the largest immigrant groups in New York City, Chinese Americans – a group experiencing high poverty and cardio-metabolic disparities. Design: Cross-sectional survey data. Setting: Community-based sample. Participants: Self-identified Chinese Americans in the New York metropolitan area (n 239). Results: Three shopping patterns were identified: type 1: shopped weekly at an ethnic grocery store – and nowhere else; type 2: shopped weekly at a non-ethnic grocery store, with occasional shopping at an ethnic store and type 3: did not perform weekly shopping. Type 1 v. type 2 shoppers tended to have lower education levels (37·5 v. 78·0 % with college degree); to be on public insurance (57·6 v. 22·8 %); speak English less well (18·4 v. 41·4 %); be food insecure (47·2 v. 24·2 %; P < 0·01 for all) and to travel nearly two miles further to shop at their primary grocery store (β = −1·55; 95 % CI −2·81, −0·30). Discussion: There are distinct grocery shopping patterns amongst urban-dwelling Chinese Americans corresponding to demographic and sociocultural factors that may help inform health interventions in this understudied group. Similar patterns may exist among other immigrant groups, lending preliminary support for an alternative conceptualisation of how immigrant communities interact with the food retail environment.


2006 ◽  
Vol 33 (5) ◽  
pp. 558-573 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Lounsbury ◽  
Bruce Rapkin ◽  
Lisa Marini ◽  
Elizabeth Jansky ◽  
Mary Jane Massie

This article presents findings from the ACCESS Project focusing on the impact of an outreach initiative that used “data sharing” as a mechanism to establish a wide variety of academic–community partnerships for cancer awareness. The Community Barometer, a brief needs assessment tool developed for this purpose, was used to collect data from clients, and sometimes staff members, of a variety of community-based organizations in New York City. Over a 5-year period, Barometer data were collected from 1,001 women who were affiliated with 20 community-based organizations. Analysis of these data supported our hypothesis that community-based organizations are more likely than chance to serve women with similar needs and preferences for breast health education and screening and that customized or tailored programs were warranted. Four case studies are presented. Limitations of the instrument and its administration in community settings as well as future research objectives are discussed.


2000 ◽  
Vol 43 (2) ◽  
pp. 189-209 ◽  
Author(s):  
Helen Rose Ebaugh ◽  
Mary Curry

Fictive kin, defined as family-type relationships, based not on blood or marriage but rather on religious rituals or close friendship ties, constitutes a type of social capital that many immigrant groups bring with them and that facilitates their incorporation into the host society. We describe three types of fictive kin systems in different immigrant populations and argue that their functions are similar across various ethnic groups and types of fictive kin relationships. Fictive kin systems expand the network of individuals who provide social and economic capital for one another and thereby constitute a resource to immigrants as they confront problems of settlement and incorporation. While anthropologists have long noted systems of fictive kin in premodern and modernizing societies, sociologists have paid little attention to fictive kin networks. We argue, however, that systems of fictive kin constitute an important part of the social networks that draw immigrants to a particular locale and provide them with the material and social support that enables them to become incorporated into a new and often hostile society. Data are derived from interviews with informants from various immigrant groups in Houston, Texas, and from a Yoruba community in Brooklyn, New York.


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