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Working to Eliminate Cancer Health Disparities from Tobacco: A Review of the National Cancer Institute’s Community Networks Program

Authors :
Elisa K. Tong
Eliseo J. Pérez-Stable
James R. Hébert
Janice Y. Tsoh
Justin H. Smith
Yin Tan
Pebbles Fagan
Grace X. Ma
LorrieAnn Santos
Leslie C. Cooper
John Foster-Bey
Maria Lopez-Class
Kenneth C. Chu
Patricia Nez Henderson
Maria Teresa Canto
William R. Carroll
Source :
Nicotine & tobacco research : official journal of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco, vol 17, iss 8, Tong, EK; Fagan, P; Cooper, L; Canto, M; Carroll, W; Foster-Bey, J; et al.(2015). Working to eliminate cancer health disparities from tobacco: A review of the National Cancer Institute's community networks program. Nicotine and Tobacco Research, 17(8), 908-923. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntv069. UC Davis: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/2hm4d8x4
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2015.

Abstract

Author(s): Tong, Elisa K; Fagan, Pebbles; Cooper, Leslie; Canto, Maria; Carroll, William; Foster-Bey, John; Hebert, James R; Lopez-Class, Maria; Ma, Grace X; Nez Henderson, Patricia; Perez-Stable, Eliseo J; Santos, LorrieAnn; Smith, Justin H; Tan, Yin; Tsoh, Janice; Chu, Kenneth | Abstract: IntroductionIn 2005, the National Cancer Institute funded the Community Networks Program (CNP), which aimed to reduce cancer health disparities in minority racial/ethnic and underserved groups through community-based participatory research, education, and training. The purpose of this study was to describe the CNP model and their tobacco-related work in community-based research, education, and training using a tobacco disparities research framework.MethodsWe conducted a comprehensive review of the CNP tobacco-related activities including publications, published abstracts, research activities, trainee pilot studies, policy-related activities, educational outreach, and reports produced from 2005-2009. Two authors categorized the tobacco-related activities and publications within the framework.ResultsAlthough there was no mandate to address tobacco, the CNPs produced 103 tobacco-related peer-reviewed publications, which reflects the largest proportion (12%) of all CNP cancer-related publications. Selected publications and research activities were most numerous under the framework areas "Psychosocial Research," "Surveillance," "Epidemiology," and "Treatment of Nicotine Addiction." Thirteen CNPs participated in tobacco control policymaking in mainstream efforts that affected their local community and populations, and 24 CNPs conducted 1147 tobacco-related educational outreach activities. CNP activities that aimed to build research and infrastructure capacity included nine tobacco-related pilot projects representing 16% of all CNP cancer-related pilot projects, and 17 publications acknowledging leveraged partnerships with other organizations, a strategy encouraged by the CNP.ConclusionsThe CNP is a promising academic-community model for working to eliminate tobacco-related health disparities. Future efforts may address scientific gaps, consider collaboration across groups, assess the extent of operationalizing community-based participatory research, and improve common tracking measures.

Details

ISSN :
1469994X and 14622203
Volume :
17
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nicotine & Tobacco Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cf6207898bd12ad16f8334bba5822ee2