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NLM CONFERENCE 2009
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DIVISION OF PUBLIC HEALTH PROGRAMS
UNCFSP/NLM HBCU ACCESS Project The UNCFSP/NLM HBCU ACCESS Project, launched in 2002, is designed to promote disease prevention and wellness on HBCU campuses and in their surrounding communities through the use of online health resources provided by the National Library of Medicine (NLM). By increasing the utilization of NLM’s online resources, the project demonstrates how important it is for HBCUs to play a more substantial role in the planning, implementation, and evaluation of eHealth initiatives. HBCUs are the best-positioned and most logical entities in the African-American community to promote the use of the Internet for improving health.
Campus Health Advocates Mobilizing Prevention Strategies Network Consortium (CHAMPS) The Campus Health Advocates Mobilizing Prevention Strategies (CHAMPS) Network Consortium, funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), will bring together the expertise of UNCFSP and Historically Black Colleges and
Universities (HBCUs) to address HIV/AIDS prevention and the prevention of other health-risk behaviors in college-aged youth. Since college-aged African Americans are among those disproportionately impacted by HIV/AIDS, HBCUs have a unique opportunity to be catalysts for positive change through this consortium.
ROCHE/UNCFSP Health Communications Social Marketing Campaign (ROCHE) The ROCHE/UNCFSP Health Communications Social Marketing Campaign supports the development of health promotion and disease prevention messages by college students on HBCU campuses. Each in stitutional grant recipient chose one health disparity focus area for the crease of a Public Service Announcement (PSA) and indicated how their proposed project will have an impact on improving awareness and prevention of health related risky behaviors affecting youth. Faculty and student involvement from various curricular areas to produce a creative, conceptual,
and visual product that is culturally appropriate. The three grantees are: Bennett College for Women, focus area in HIV/AIDS; Johnson C. Smith University, focus area in Diabetes; University of the District of Columbia, focus area in Breast and Prostate Cancer.
UNCFSP/HBCU Screening, Testing, Outreach, and Prevention HIV/AIDS Program (STOP) The UNCFSP/HBCU Screening, Testing, Outreach, and Prevention (STOP) HIV/AIDS Program was recently funded by the Office of Minority Health (OMH), Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS). The Program aims to decrease the spread of HIV among college-aged African-American and other minority youth through HIV/AIDS education and outreach and the promotion of screening and testing to at-risk populations. The goals of the STOP HIV/AIDS Program are: 1) promoting HIV awareness and prevention through the use of model practices and programs to increase access to and use of health information, services, and follow up; 2) developing methods and approaches to more effectively promote HIV risk reduction through the establishment of campus-community linkages; and 3) engaging students in training, experiential learning, and mentoring, to improve their cultural, linguistic and literacy competency. The HBCUs in partnership with UNCFSP to run the STOP HIV/AIDS Program include: the University of the District of Columbia, Virginia Union University, and Elizabeth City State University.
PROGRAM OBJECTIVES:
⇒ To demonstrate the vast potential of the internet as a tool for health behavior intervention
⇒ To introduce participants to the nature and scope of the online information available from NLM
⇒ To introduce participants to effective strategies and resources for health education and health promotion
⇒ To introduce participants to current research studies which address issues associated with health disparities
⇒ To share information about successful academic and community collaborations aimed at addressing health disparities
⇒ To provide participants with an overview of the UNCFSP/NLM HBCU ACCESS Project
⇒ To provide participants with information on how to complete the UNCFSP/NLM HBCU ACCESS Project grant application
⇒ To provide participants with an opportunity to join the UNCFSP/NLM HBCU ACCESS Project team as a campus liaison
LEARNING OBJECTIVES:
⇒ By the conclusion of this conference, participants will report increased awareness and/or comprehension of:
⇒ The mission and goals of the UNCFSP/NLM HBCU ACCESS Project
⇒ The potential of eHealth in addressing health disparities
⇒ The importance of health promotion research in combating health disparities
⇒ Methods and resources for campus based health promotion activities
⇒ The benefits of campus and community partnerships for promoting health and wellness
⇒ Proposal guidelines for the UNCFSP/NLM HBCU ACCESS grants program
ABOUT THE PROGRAM
AGENDA Monday – June 15, 2009
8:15 am – 9:00 am
Registration and Continental Breakfast
9:00 am – 9:30 am
Official Conference Opening
Welcome and Introduction
Robyn Lynn Watson, PhD
Director, Division of Public Health
United Negro College Fund Special Programs Corporation
Remarks
Aaron R. Andrews
President & CEO
United Negro College Fund Special Programs Corporation
Welcome and Introduction
Cynthia Gaines
Project Officer
UNCFSP/NLM HBCU ACCESS Project
Division of Specialized Information Services
National Library of Medicine
National Institutes of Health
Remarks
Donald A. B. Lindberg, MD
Director, National Library of Medicine
National Institutes of Health
9:30 am – 10:15 am
Introduction of Board Members and Speakers
De Lois M. Powell, PhD
Manager, UNCFSP/NLM HBCU ACCESS Project
United Negro College Fund Special Programs Corporation
NLM’s Collaborative Work with Underserved Populations to Improve Access to and Use of Health Information
Gale A. Dutcher, MLS, MS
Deputy Associate Director, Division of Specialized Information Services
National Library of Medicine
Disaster Information Management Research Center: Outreach to Minority Populations
Stephen J. Phillips, MD
Associate Director, Division of Specialized Information Services
Director, Disaster Information Management Research Center
National Library of Medicine
10:15 am – 10:30 am
NETWORKING BREAK
10:30 am – 11:15 am
Keynote Address
Promoting Public Policy on Health Issues Impacting Underserved Populations
The Honorable Louis W. Sullivan, MD
Former Secretary, US Department of Health and Human Services
President Emeritus, Morehouse School of Medicine
The Sullivan Alliance to Transform America’s Health Professions
11:15 am – 12:30 pm
Panel A – Effective Messaging to Help Eliminate Health Disparities
Effective Messaging to Eliminate Health Disparities: A Look at the Evidence
Derrick Tabor, PhD
Health Scientist Administrator
National Center on Minority Health and Health Disparities
National Institutes of Health
Cancer Prevention in the 21st Century: The Cancer Preventorium Concept
Elmer Huerta, MD, MPH
Founder & Director, Cancer Preventorium
Washington Cancer Institute
The Washington Hospital Center
AGENDA Monday – June 15, 2009
Panel A (Continued)
Student Health Educators: A Most Valuable Health Communication Resource for HBCUs
Professor Betsy D. Simon, MS, CHES, CPP
Director, Student Life Center, Division of Student Affairs
Principal Investigator, Coppin’s eHealth Education Project
Coppin State University
Effective Messaging to Address Barriers to Participation of Minority Populations in Clinical Trials
Michele K. Evans, MD
Deputy Scientific Director
National Institute on Aging, Intramural Research Program
National Institutes of Health Biomedical Research Center
12:30 pm - 1:30 pm
NETWORKING LUNCH
(lunch provided)
ACCESS Project Poster Session
1:30 pm – 2:15 pm Keynote Address
Substance Abuse: A Personal Retrospective
Minister Dr. Clifton Davis
Actor, Singer, Composer, Producer
President and CEO
Clifton Davis Productions, LLC
2:15 pm – 3:15 pm
Panel B – Social Determinants of Health Disparities
The Role of Healthcare Quality in Overcoming Minority Health Disparities
Lisa A. Cooper, MD, MPH
Professor, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions
Division of General Internal Medicine
Welch Center for Prevention, Epidemiology, and Clinical Research
Addressing the Health Disparities Crisis: Promoting Environmental Health Literacy in Minority Communities
Marian Johnson-Thompson, PhD
Former Director, Education and Biomedical Research Development
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
National Institutes of Health
Access to Health Information: the Role of NLM Health Informational Resources
Shannon M. Baldwin, MPH
Biomedical Information Service Branch
Division of Specialized Information Services
National Library of Medicine
3:15 pm – 3:30 pm
NETWORKING BREAK
AGENDA Monday – June 15, 2009
3:30 pm – 4:30 pm
Panel C – Success Stories: HBCU Campus-community Health Partnerships
A Strategic Research Initiative to Eliminate Health Disparities in North Carolina
LaHoma Smith-Romocki, PhD, MPH
Chair, Department of Public Health Education
Principal Investigator, Eagles eHealth Project
North Carolina Central University
A Campus-community Partnership to Eliminate Health Disparities in Delaware
Lisa Barkley, MD
Dean, College of Health and Public Policy
Campus eHealth Liaison
Delaware State University
Healthy Living, Healthy You: Addressing Campus-community Obesity
Dorothy C. Browne, PhD
Professor, Department of Sociology and Social Work
Special Assistant to the President on Research and Public Health
North Carolina A&T State University
4:30 pm – 4:45 pm
Closing Remarks
Robyn Lynn Watson, PhD
Director, Division of Public Health
United Negro College Fund Special Programs Corporation
6:00 pm – 8:00 pm
NETWORKING RECEPTION
Bethesda Marriott
Dirksen and Russell Rooms
5151 Pooks Hill Road
Bethesda, MD
AGENDA Tuesday – June 16, 2009
8:15 am – 9:00 am
Registration and Continental Breakfast
9:00 am – 9:15 am
Opening Remarks
Robyn Lynn Watson, PhD
Director, Division of Public Health
United Negro College Fund Special Programs Corporation
9:15 am – 10:30 am
Panel D: Technologies and Informational Strategies to Enhance Education and Delivery of Health Services
Telemedicine: The Promotion of Inter-and Intra-continental Medical Education
Victor W. Mbarika, PhD
Director, International Center for Information Technology & Development
College of Business
Southern University and A&M College (Baton Rouge)
Corporate-community Partnership in Support of the Delivery of Vital Health Information
Daniel L. M. Shungu, PhD
Chair and Executive Director
United Front against Riverblindness
Clinical Systems: The Impact of Culture on Systems Design and Outcomes Management
Emma Jones Oritsejafor, RN, MSN
Nursing Information System Specialist II
Duke Health Technology Solutions
Duke University Health System
Informational Strategies for Translating Genome-based Knowledge into Health Benefits
Charles N. Rotimi, PhD
Director, Center for Research on Genomics and Global Health
National Human Genome Research Institute
National Institutes of Health
10:30 am – 10:45 am
NETWORKING BREAK
10:45 am – 11:30 am
Keynote Address
Addressing Health Disparities in the 21st Century
Thomas A. LaVeist, PhD
Director, Johns Hopkins Center for Health Disparities Solutions Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
11:30 am – 12:00 pm
Introduction of the 2009-2010 UNCFSP/NLM HBCU ACCESS Project Request for Proposals
De Lois M. Powell, PhD
Manager, UNCFSP/NLM HBCU ACCESS Project
United Negro College Fund Special Programs Corporation
12:00 pm – 12:30 pm
Developing a Process and Outcome Evaluation of the NLM/UNCFSP ACCESS Program
Alla Keselman, PhD
Evaluation Specialist, Division of Specialized Information Services
National Library of Medicine
Tom Vischi
Principal Associate
Development Services Group, Inc
12:30 pm – 1:30 pm
NETWORKING LUNCH (lunch provided)
ACCESS Project Poster Session
AGENDA Tuesday – June 16, 2009
1:30 pm – 2:15 pm
Social Justice: The Human Face of Health Disparities in Urban California
Keith Norris, MD, FASN
Vice President for Research and Health Affairs, Professor of Medicine
Charles Drew University of Medicine and Science
2:15 pm – 3:20 pm
ACCESS Project Reports: 2008-2009
Increasing Awareness and Use of the NLM online Health and Medical Resources to Eliminate Health Disparities Related to HIV/AIDS in the African American Community in Elizabeth City, NC
Elizabeth City State University
Regina McCoy-Davis, BN, PHN, RN
Project Director
Director, Department of Student Health
Robert L. Copeland, PhD
Project Mentor
Professor of Pharmacology
Howard University Medical Center
Morgan Informatics/National Library of Medicine Database System: MINDS.com eHealth
Morgan State University
Melissa B. Littlefield, PhD
Project Director
Associate Professor, Department of Social Work
Melvin Spann, PhD
Project Mentor
Chair, ACCESS Project National Advisory Board
3:20 pm – 3:35 pm
NETWORKING BREAK
3:35 pm – 4:40 pm
ACCESS Project Reports: 2008-2009
Promoting eHealth with Community Service Learning
Prairie View A&M University
Sheila Harvin, MSN, RN, CNS-P/MH
Project Director
Assistant Professor, College of Nursing
Larry R. Shannon, PhD
Project Mentor
President and CEO
Shannon and Associates, Inc.
A Multidimensional Collaborative Project Utilizing the NLM Online Health Resources to Eliminate Health Disparities among African Americans in the Tri-county Communities of Maryland’s Eastern Shore
University of Maryland Eastern Shore
James Heimdal, PhD
Project Director
Chair, Department of Exercise Science
Rosalind K. Lett
Project Mentor
President and CEO
Information-2-Knowledge, LLC
4:40 pm – 5:00 pm
Closing Remarks
Cynthia Gaines
Project Officer
UNCFSP/NLM HBCU ACCESS Project
Division of Specialized Information Services
National Library of Medicine
AGENDA Wednesday – June 17, 2009
9:00 am – 3:00 pm
NLM DATABASE TRAINING WORKSHOP (Limited space)
PURPOSE
The Specialized Information Services Division of the National Library of Medicine (NLM) is sponsoring this training event for the UNCFSP/NLM HBCU ACCESS Project. The purpose of the training is to provide 2009 eHealth Conference participants with an introduction to the NLM databases which includes medical, environmental health, toxicological, and other quality internet resources. Participants will have the opportunity to learn the contents of each database, receive hands-on training, and participate in lively discussions using realistic scenarios.
LOCATION
The University of the District of Columbia (UDC)
Building 41, eLab, Room 104
4200 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.
Washington, DC 20008
INSTRUCTORS
Rose Foster
Group Manager, Medical Education and Outreach Group
Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education
Wilma Templin-Branner, MS
Health Education Specialists/Project Manager, Medical Education and Outreach…
Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education
LaFrancis McMurray, MPH
Health Education Specialist, Medical Education and Outreach Group
Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS The Honorable Louis W. Sullivan, MD
Promoting Public Policy on Health Issues Impacting Underserved Populations
Louis W. Sullivan, M.D., is chairman of the board of the National Health Museum in Atlanta, Georgia, and is also
chairman of the Washington, D.C.-based Sullivan Alliance to Transform America’s Health Professions. Additionally, he serves as chair of the President’s Commission on Historically Black Colleges and Universities, and was co-chair of the President’s Commission on HIV and AIDS from 2001-2006. Dr. Sullivan is the founding dean and first president of Morehouse School of Medicine (MSM). With the exception of his tenure as secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) from 1989 to 1993, Dr. Sullivan was president of MSM for more than two decades. On July 1, 2002, he retired and was appointed president emeritus. He continues to support the school, including its national fund-raising activities. Dr. Sullivan is the recipient of more than 55 honorary degrees, including an honorary doctor of medicine degree from the University of Pretoria in South Africa.
Minister Dr. Clifton Davis
Drug Abuse: A Personal Retrospective
Minister, Dr. Clifton Davis is best known for his 5-year stint as Reverend Reuben Gregory on the television series “Amen”. From January 1995 to September 1996, he served as Vice Chancellor for Development & Planning at Elizabeth City State University. More recently he has been engaged in public speaking mainly making motivational speeches at colleges and universities. Born in Chicago, the son of an evangelist, Minister Dr. Davis launched his acting career by the age of 15. Upon graduation from Pine Forge Institute, he concentrated on his singing and acting career. For his role in the musical Do It Again, he received the Theatre World Award and a Grammy nomination for his hit song, “Never Can Say Goodbye”. Over the years, Dr. Davis has become a celebrated motivational speaker and is the recipient of more than 150 awards and citations for his service to organizations such as UNCF, the NAACP, and Easter Seals. Dr. Davis holds a BA in Theology from Oakwood College, Huntsville, Alabama, a Master of Divinity degree from Andrews University in Michigan, and is the recipient of an honorary Doctor of Ministry degree and a Doctor of Humane Letters degree from Lincoln University.
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS Thomas A. LaVeist, PhD
To Be Announced Professor of Health Policy and Management and Director of the Center for Health Disparities Solutions at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Dr. Thomas A. LaVeist has published the results of his
research studies on the major healthcare gaps in America, to include his book: Minority Populations and Health: An Introduction to Race, Ethnicity and Health in the United States. He received his bachelor degree from the University of Maryland Eastern Shore, the Ph.D. in medical sociology from the University of Michigan with a postdoctoral fellowship in public health at the University of Michigan, School of Public Health. Dr. LaViest’s research on minority health has been funded by the National Institutes of Health, National Center on Minority Health and Health Disparities, Center for Disease Control, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Brookdale Foundation, Commonwealth Fund, Russell Sage Foundation and the Kaiser Family Foundation.
Keith Norris, MD, FASN
Social Justice: The Human Face of Health Disparities in Urban California
Following the completion of studies and residency at the Howard University School of Medicine in Washington, DC, Keith Norris, MD now serves as professor of medicine and VP for Research and Health Affairs at the Charles Drew University of Medicine and Science (CDU), and Associate Professor of Medicine at the UCLA School of Medicine. At CDU, he directors the NIH-RCMI/NCRR Clinical Research Center and is PI for the NIH/NIDDK African American Study of Kidney Disease and Hypertension. Dr. Norris is a member of the NKF-Kidney Disease Outcomes Quality Initiative National Advisory Board, editor-in-chief of the journal, Ethnicity and Disease, and the immediate past-president of the National Association of Minority Nephrologists. Serving the Watts-Willowbrook section of South Los Angeles, Charles Drew University of Medicine and Science and Dr. Norris continue to evolve and grow in response to the needs of this community.
PARTICIPATING COLLEGES / UNIVERSITIES
Allen University
Bowie State University
Charles Drew University of Medicine and Science
Coppin State University
Delaware State University
Drexel University
Duke University
Elizabeth City State University
Florida A&M University
George Washington University
Howard University
Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions
Lincoln University of Pennsylvania
Morgan State University
North Carolina Agricultural and Technical University
North Carolina Central University
Prairie View A&M University
Savannah State University
Southern University and A&M College, Baton Rouge
Tennessee State University
University of Maryland Eastern Shore
University of the District of Columbia
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 2008-2009 Project Partners
Past Partners 2002-2007
National Library of Medicine, Division of Specialized Information Services
UNCFSP/NLM HBCU ACCESS Project Advisory Board
∗ Dr. Melvin Spann, Advisory Board Chair
∗ Ms. Gladys Smiley Bell, Harvey Librarian at Hampton University
∗ Dr. Lisa A. Cooper (retiring), Johns Hopkins University Medical
Center
∗ Ms. Rose Foster, Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education
∗ Dr. Tiffany Gary-Webb, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public
Health
∗ Dr. Robert L. Copeland, Howard University School of Medicine
∗ Ms. Rosalind K. Lett, Information-2-Knowledge, LLC
∗ Dr. Larry R. Shannon, Shannon and Associates, LLC
HBCU Students and Faculty Mentors – Poster Presentations
HBCU Community Partners
Prairie View A&M University
∗ Houston Academy of Medicine-Texas Medical Center Campus (HAM-
TMC) Library
Dr. Elizabeth K. Eaton, Executive Director
∗ Families Under Urban and Social Attack, Inc. (FUUSA)
Rev. Leslie Smith, II, Chief Executive Officer and Founder
Elizabeth City State University
∗ Elizabeth City Housing Authority
∗ Mr. Judah A. Person, Jr., Executive Director & CEO
∗ ECSU Library
∗ Dr. Juanita Midgette, Director of Library Services
∗ ECSU Department of General Studies
Ms. Sherry B. Lewis, Coordinator of First-Year Experience Program
Morgan State University
∗ Belair-Edison Healthy Community Coalition, Ms. Ede Taylor, Executive
Director
∗ The Learning Bank of COIL, Ms. Stacy Smith, Chief Executive Officer
∗ DRU/Mondawin Healthy Families, Dr. Barbara Hughes, Executive
Director
∗ Women of Virtue, Ms. Cecilia Hill, President and CEO
∗ Homeland Security Academy High School, Ms. Arnetta Rudisill,
Principal
University of Maryland Eastern Shore
∗ Twelve Public Libraries in the Tri-Counties’ Library Systems:
Director Rose R. Donoway (Somerset-3)
Director Tom Hehman (Wicomico-4)
Director Mark A. Thomas (Worcester-5)
∗ Three Health Departments in the Tri-Counties:
Charity Holley, MA (Director, Health Promotions -
Somerset)
Lori Brewster, MS, APRN/BC, LCADC (Health
Officer - Wicomico)
Mimi Dean (Worcester)
∗ Three Hospitals located in the Tri-Counties:
The Edward W. McCready Memorial Hospital
(Charles F. Pinkerman, CEO - Somerset)
Peninsula Regional Medical Center (Alan Newberry,
President/CEO - Wicomico)
Atlantic General Hospital (Darby R. Schaub, MS,
CRNP, CDE - Worcester)
∗ Perdue Farms, Inc. (Roger C. Merrill, MD, Chief Medical Officer)
Campus-community eHealth Liaisons
Appreciation and Gratitude is Extended to:
∗ Bethesda Marriott Hotel
∗ McCabe’s Printing Group
∗ Meesha Media Group, LLC
∗ National Institutes of Health
∗ National Library of Medicine NLM ACCESS Project
∗ Sunspot Café (Rockville location)
∗ UNCF Special Programs Corporation
∗ World Venture Travel Agency
PAST NLM GRANTEES
2002-2003 2005-2006 Albany State University Bethune-Cookman College Bluefield State College Johnson C. Smith University Howard University Savannah State University Norfolk State University Shaw University 2003-2004 2006-2007 Dillard University Jackson State University Florida A&M University Langston University Paine College Norfolk State University Southern University and A&M Winston-Salem State University College
Division of Public Health UNCFSP/NLM HBCU ACCESS Project
UNCF Special Programs Corporation (UNCFSP) 2750 Prosperity Avenue, Suite 600