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Partnerships to Improve Lifestyle Interventions (PILI) 'Ohana Dissemination Proj


Collapse Biography 

Collapse Overview 
Collapse abstract
Overweight (BMI>25)/obesity (Bl\/ll>30) and diabetes mellitus (DM), a consequence of obesity, are growing public health crises in the US. The burden of overweight/obesity and DM is greater among Native Hawaiians (NHs), the indigenous people of Hawaii, and other Pacific Peoples (PPs) (e.g., Samoans, Chuukese, Filipinos) compared to the general population. This grant application titled, Partnerships to Improve Lifestyle Interventions (PILI) 'Ghana Dissemination Project, is the continuation of an 8-year community-based participatory research (CBPR) initiative by the PILI 'Ghana Partnership (PGP) to address obesity and related disparities in Hawaii and the larger Pacific. The PGP is comprised of 5 community, academic, and state organizations serving Native Hawaiians and Pacific Peoples (NHs/PPs). Gur CBPR mission is to integrate community wisdom and expertise with scientific methods to eliminate obesity and related disparities in NH/PP communities. Guided by theories of social action, social marketing, and diffusion of innovations, and a novel community-to-community mentoring model (CCMM) developed by our PGP, we will 1) Disseminate the scientific discoveries of the PGP and its lifestyle and diabetes intervention materials across 5 different types of community-based organizations serving Native Hawaiians and Pacific Peoples, 2) Implement the PGP's lifestyle and diabetes interventions across 5 different types of community-based organizations serving Native Hawaiians and Pacific Peoples, and 3) Assist in developing the capacity of community-based organizations serving Native Hawaiians and Pacific Peoples to engage in future health disparities research' using community-based participatory research (CBPR). Using the RE-AIM framework and a mixed-methods approach, we will evaluate our implementation strategies to include the contextual (e.g., type of CBG), organizational (e.g., mission, policies, leadership), individual (e.g., commitment, self-efficacy), and intervention (e.g., skills, motivation, fidelity) characteristics that affect the successful adoption, implementation (to include recruitment, retention, adaptations, and fidelity), and sustainability of the interventions.
Collapse sponsor award id
R24MD001660

Collapse Time 
Collapse start date
2005-09-30
Collapse end date
2017-02-28
RCMI CC is supported by the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities, National Institutes of Health (NIH), through Grant Number U24MD015970. The contents of this site are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the NIH

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