Lohr Abby M, Salinas Manisha, Pardo Laura Suarez, Raygoza Jhenitza P, Mohamed Ahmed, Campos Enid, Dirie Hana, Ali Khadija, Porraz Capetillo María Graciela, Elmi Hindi, Nur Omar, Molina Luz, Osman Ahmed, Valente Thomas W, Griffin Joan M, Wieland Mark L, Sia Irene G
Center for Clinical and Translational Science, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA.
Department of Quantitative Health Sciences, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2025 Mar 1;25(1):826. doi: 10.1186/s12889-025-21682-y.
Evidence-based health promotion programs are commonly assessed within research environments, yet there is a critical need to understand how to implement interventions across multiple settings, prioritizing populations who are underserved and under-resourced. A possible approach involves leveraging established social networks to enhance health outcomes. Within these networks, influential individuals, known as health promoters (HPs), play a key role in disseminating health information. The Rochester Healthy Community Partnership created a social network-based intervention called Healthy Immigrant Community (HIC), utilizing HPs to encourage healthy eating and physical activity to address cardiovascular disease outcomes among Hispanic/Latino and Somali immigrant populations. We conducted three focus groups pre-, mid-, and post intervention (nine groups total; n = 30) to understand HPs' motivations for participating, implementation barriers and facilitators they faced, and suggestions for improvement.
Using the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities Research Framework and Public Health Critical Race Praxis, we conducted a longitudinal trajectory analysis to explore themes and changes over time.
Participants reported that their motivations to be a HP in Healthy Immigrant Community were personal goals, such as health improvement and weight loss, as well as collective community benefits and personal gains like knowledge and leadership skills. Barriers included logistical challenges, navigating health-related differences between one's country of origin and the US, and structural issues such as racism, high costs (e.g., food), and absence of an affordable gym. Facilitators included strong community ties, peer-to-peer support, and culturally relevant approaches, with participants recommending additional resources, tailored programming, and reframing the program's focus on overall health rather than weight loss.
Our study highlighted a shift in HPs' motivations to participate in Healthy Immigrant Community from weight loss to holistic health promotion. The HPs' reflections on their experience showcase the transformative impact of culturally tailored, equity-focused interventions while emphasizing the need to address systemic barriers and incorporate community feedback for sustainable change.
基于证据的健康促进项目通常在研究环境中进行评估,但迫切需要了解如何在多种环境中实施干预措施,优先考虑服务不足和资源匮乏的人群。一种可能的方法是利用已建立的社会网络来改善健康结果。在这些网络中,有影响力的个人,即健康促进者(HP),在传播健康信息方面发挥着关键作用。罗切斯特健康社区伙伴关系创建了一个基于社会网络的干预项目,称为健康移民社区(HIC),利用健康促进者鼓励健康饮食和体育活动,以改善西班牙裔/拉丁裔和索马里移民人群的心血管疾病状况。我们在干预前、干预中期和干预后进行了三次焦点小组讨论(共九个小组;n = 30),以了解健康促进者参与的动机、他们面临的实施障碍和促进因素,以及改进建议。
我们使用美国国立少数族裔健康与健康差异研究所的研究框架和公共卫生批判种族实践,进行了纵向轨迹分析,以探索主题和随时间的变化。
参与者报告说,他们成为健康移民社区健康促进者的动机包括个人目标,如改善健康和减肥,以及集体社区利益和个人收获,如知识和领导技能。障碍包括后勤挑战、应对原籍国与美国之间与健康相关的差异,以及种族主义、高成本(如食品)和缺乏负担得起的健身房等结构性问题。促进因素包括紧密的社区联系、同伴支持和文化相关方法,参与者建议提供更多资源、量身定制的项目,并将项目重点从减肥重新调整为促进整体健康。
我们的研究强调了健康促进者参与健康移民社区的动机从减肥转向全面健康促进的转变。健康促进者对他们经历的反思展示了文化量身定制、以公平为重点的干预措施的变革性影响,同时强调需要解决系统性障碍并纳入社区反馈以实现可持续变革。