학술논문

Supporting Faith-Based Communities Through and Beyond the Pandemic.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Community Health; Aug2023, Vol. 48 Issue 4, p593-599, 7p, 2 Graphs
Subject
Health education
Curriculum
Physical fitness
Communities
Community-based social services
COVID-19 pandemic
Health promotion
Psychological resilience
Adult education workshops
Social support
Descriptive statistics
Research funding
Religious institutions
Health self-care
New York (State)
Language
ISSN
00945145
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic brought widespread and notable effects to the physical and mental health of communities across New York City with disproportionate suffering Black/African American and Hispanic/Latino communities alongside additional stressors such as racism and economic hardship. This report describes the adaptation of a previously successful evidence-based community engagement health education program for the deployment of resilience promoting workshop program in faith-based organizations in BIPOC communities in New York City. From June 2021 to June 2022, nine faith-based organizations implemented 58 workshops to 1,101 non-unique workshop participants. Most of the workshops were delivered online with more women (N = 803) than men (N = 298) participating. All organizations completed the full curriculum; the workshop focused on self-care and physical fitness was repeated most frequently (N = 13). Participants in the workshops ranged from 4 to 73 per meeting and were largely female. The Building Community Resilience Project is an easy and effective way to modify an existing, evidence-based community health education program to address new and relevant health needs such as resilience and stress amidst the COVID-19 pandemic among faith communities serving BIPOC populations. More research is needed regarding the impact of the workshops as well as adaptability for other faith traditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]