Using Photovoice to Understand Youth and Parent Coping During COVID-19 in NY
Manage episode 330442823 series 2867287
A motivating and inspiring discussion with Drs. Albritton and Anglin around how they are leveraging the Power of Big and Small Data to bring about Big impact with a Photovoice project.
From collecting and analyzing data on how adolescents and their parents in Black and Latino families in the Bronx are coping during the pandemic to how anti-Black racism shows up in the community for young Black individuals with early psychosis, the Drs have uncovered some unexpected and surprising outcomes!
Attention needed...
· Stronger connection between research and policy
· Change in Systems and Priorities
Tashuna Albritton, PhD, MSW
talbritton@med.cuny.edu
LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/tashuna-albritton-phd-msw-53644940/
Tashuna Albritton, PhD is an Assistant Medical Professor at the City University of New York (CUNY) School of Medicine in the Department of Community Health and Social Medicine. Dr. Albritton has extensive training in community-based HIV/STD behavioral intervention research, particularly with underrepresented minority adolescent and young adult populations, in both urban and rural communities. She uses a mixed-methods approach and participatory methods to examine individual risk for HIV/STDs, interpersonal relationships, and community factors that impact disparities in sexual and reproductive health among young and disadvantaged populations. Dr. Albritton is interested in using online platforms to promote biomedical HIV prevention methods in high-risk populations.
Deidre M. Anglin, PhD , MS
danglin@ccny.cuny.edu
Twitter – @DeidreAnglin
Deidre M. Anglin, PhD is an Associate Professor of Psychology in the Doctoral Clinical Psychology Program at The City College of the City University of New York (CUNY) with postdoctoral research training in psychiatric epidemiology at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health. Dr. Anglin leads several projects and mentors students in her Clinical and Social Epidemiology (CASE) Lab designed to identify social determinants of psychosis risk in racial and ethnic minoritized populations. She has published several papers focused on race, racism, psychosis and the stigma of mental health service utilization in Black and Asian populations. She is currently the lead investigator of 3 federally-funded studies, one of which examines anti-Blackracism and neighborhood factors among Black young people with a first episode of psychosis. She is one of the First 100 doctoral scholars in the Leadership Alliance and a member of NIH’s National Research Mentoring Network (NRMN).
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Music credit: Yung Kartz
Subscribe to our podcast, and leave a review
Connect with us on Instagram, FaceBook, Twitter , and LinkedIn
https://eima-inc.com/lets-talk-small-data
@letstalksmalldatapod
Music credit: Yung Kartz
28 episoade