Chronic Disease Prevention: African Americans Who Live in Food Desert Using Access, Training, Education (ATE)
View File(s)
- Author(s)
- Details
-
Regina Leonard, DNP, MAT, RN, Clinical Research, Mid-Atlantic Permenente Research Institute, Silver Spring, Maryland, USA
- Sigma Affiliation
- Epsilon Zeta
Visitor Statistics
Visits vs Downloads
Visitors - World Map
Top Visiting Countries
Country | Visits |
---|
Top Visiting Cities
City | Visits |
---|
Visits (last 6 months)
Downloads (last 6 months)
Popular Works for Leonard, Regina by View
Title | Page Views |
---|
Popular Works for Leonard, Regina by Download
Title | Downloads |
---|
View Citations
Citations
A discussion on the behavioral intervention which set out to modify diets and educate on preventable chronic diseases for the low-income African Americans who reside Washington, DC's largest food desert.
Type | Poster |
Acquisition | Proxy-submission |
Review Type | None: Event Material, Invited Presentation |
Format | Text-based Document |
Evidence Level | N/A |
Research Approach | N/A |
Keywords | Food Desert; Low-income African Americans; Preventable Chronic Disease |
Name | 29th International Nursing Research Congress |
Host | Sigma Theta Tau International, the Honor Society of Nursing |
Location | Melbourne, Australia |
Date | 2018 |
All rights reserved by the author(s) and/or publisher(s) listed in this item record unless relinquished in whole or part by a rights notation or a Creative Commons License present in this item record.
All permission requests should be directed accordingly and not to the Sigma Repository.
All submitting authors or publishers have affirmed that when using material in their work where they do not own copyright, they have obtained permission of the copyright holder prior to submission and the rights holder has been acknowledged as necessary.
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subjects.
-
Breastfeeding intention and initiation among rural, low-income Native Americans and African American adolescent mothers in North Carolina: Testing the Theory of Planned Behavior
Herndon, Cynthia H.Infant feeding practices can greatly impact a child's life with far reaching implications based upon decisions a mother makes for her newborn. Breastfeeding is the preferred method of infant feeding because of its association ... -
Caregiver experiences, functioning, and needs of low-income African-American and Latino mothers of children with asthma
Dowell, Jo A. (2013-10-22)Session presented on: Thursday, July 25, 2013: Purpose: The purpose of this proposed pilot study was to explore the caregiver experiences of African American and Hispanic/Latino mothers of children with asthma in an effort ... -
Low income African American adolescent girl's eating choices
Jenkins, Sandra KayThe aim of this exploratory qualitative study is to identify the problems African American adolescent girls face in making eating choices and to learn how they make decisions about eating. Differences related to culture ... -
Upstream healthcare: Values training for low-income children using baccalaureate nursing students and community youth
Martinez, Martha L.; Escandon, Socorro (2017-08-30)This presentation will describe teaching strategies employed in introducing nursing students, in their community health rotation, to upstream health care delivery and its impact on public health nursing. Student nurses and ... -
The development of an immunization training program for low-income families within the community
Cooper, Amanda W. (2016-12-01)Objective: The purpose of this study was to assess knowledge levels regarding childhood immunizations among low-income parents in an effort to improve the immunization rate of 19 to 35 month old children. Design and Sample: ...