
Promotoras
de Salud - [Blue Ridge AHEC]
The mission
of the Promotoras project is to promote healthy living among the Harrisonburg-Rockingham
County area's 6,000+ Hispanic residents. It is anticipated that over the
course of one year, thirty (30) Hispanic women will learn disease prevention,
simple assessments of selected health problems, and begin to help their
neighbors access appropriate health and human resources.
The Blue
Ridge Area Health Education Center (BRAHEC) received a $38,529 grant award
over two years from the Virginia Health Care Foundation to initiate a
Hispanic lay health promoter program, a replication of the Cross-Over
Lay Health program in Richmond. To accomplish this, the program trains
lay health promoters (promotoras) to promote healthy living through health
education contacts within the local Hispanic communities. Additionally,
the promotoras provide information about how to access community health
and human service resources. Each promotora is equipped with a Spanish-language
community-based health and human services directory to facilitate access
to primary health care.
The program is designed to be sensitive to cultural concerns, including
the use of home remedies, and the program staff have found that participants
learn a great deal from each other. The promotoras are provided with opportunities
for education, career advancement, and project recognition.
Cardiovascular
Risk Reduction Program- [Southside AHEC]
Since
1992, the Southside AHEC has established itself as a regional leader
in developing community partnerships with health and social service
providers, school systems, public health departments, and others to
improve health and access to care for their predominately rural population.
Southside AHEC is working with the Piedmont Health District to conduct
cardiovascular risk reduction programs in African-American churches
in four counties. Other projects include reducing health-risk behaviors
at Randolph Henry High School through an innovative Internet program,
testing senior citizens for health literacy in Hopewell, and conducting
child care assessments in 11 counties as part of contracts with two
Head Start programs.
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