Browsing by Author "Motley, Monica"
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- Development and Advancement of the Dan River Partnership for a Healthy Community (DRPHC)Zoellner, Jamie M.; Hill, Jennie L.; Price, Bryan; Motley, Monica; Corsi, Terri; Jones, Lillie Mai (Dan River Partnership for a Healthy Community, 2013-08)The DRPHC is an academic-community partnership who meets collectively to address obesity in the Dan River Region.
- Identifying and Exploring Capacity and Readiness of Faith-Based Organizations Implementing Lifestyle-Related Chronic Disease Health ProgramsMotley, Monica (Virginia Tech, 2015-10-26)Background: Lifestyle-related chronic disease is the leading cause of mortality and morbidity in the United States, accounting for more than 63% of deaths. Minority communities experience a disproportionate burden of adverse health outcomes related to these diseases. Collaborative partnerships with faith-based organizations (FBO) present a unique platform to effectively implement lifestyle-related health programs, especially in minority communities. Studies have consistently recognized a growing need to improve FBO capacity and readiness to design, deliver, and sustain programs more effectively. Methods: This research includes three phases: 1) preliminary research to gain the perspective of FBO, community, health and research partners actively involved in development and implementation of a collaborative lifestyle-related faith-based health program and to further explore capacity and readiness factors; 2) formative research to develop, pilot, revise, and improve content, format, measures, and implementation of a mixed methods questionnaire, Capacity and Readiness Church Health Assessment (CRCHA), that will further identify and assess FBO organizational capacity and readiness to implement lifestyle-related health and wellness programs; and 3) culminating research to pilot the CRCHA with descriptive and statistical analysis of associations between church characteristics and health programming. Results: Phase 1: Eighteen of 31 capacity and readiness factors were collectively rated as extremely important to participant roles and partnership experience. Qualitative analysis further contextualizes these factors. Phase 2: The CRCHA comprises four major sections with thirteen subsections to gather information about factors, characteristics, and attributes deemed relevant to FBO organizational capacity and readiness. Phase 3: Churches of varying size and capacity successfully completed the CRCHA. Data indicate potential utility for individual churches for self-assessment and capacity and readiness building and for researchers to identify church characteristics most strongly associated with effective health programming. Implications: Exploration of capacity and readiness within a larger and more diverse group of FBO will help to further identify capacity and readiness factors to facilitate active FBO participation in the development and implementation of effective lifestyle-related health and wellness programs. Thus, FBO would be better positioned to actively lead and/or partner in faith-based health programs that address their community's most pressing health issues.
- Women's Healthcare Utilization in Primary and Acute Care ContextsJohnson, Jasmine Amari (Virginia Tech, 2023-12-14)In recent years, there has been increased focus on rural and Appalachian health because of disparate chronic health outcomes when compared to the rest of the US. Appalachia, a subsection of the US, has even worse health outcomes related to chronic diseases. Although Appalachia is its own unique region, there is significant overlap with rural areas in terms of shared cultural characteristics (e.g., strong sense of community, distrust in outsiders, lack of trust in traditional medicine, and strong Christian religious affiliations and faith in God), limited access to healthcare services, and disparate health outcomes. The research presented in this dissertation is significant because it provides insight into and compares healthcare utilization rates in women in Appalachia and surrounding areas. Study 1: In addition to racial discrimination, Black Appalachian women often face other obstacles involving other types of negative interpersonal experiences when seeking healthcare. Despite these known disparities, Black women are frequently underrepresented in Appalachian health research. This study investigated healthcare experiences for sixteen Black Appalachian women using semi-structured interviews to identify and subsequently address ways to eliminate barriers to care. Interview questions utilized the theory of intersectionality and the Social Ecological Model to create a framework to describe the complexity of healthcare utilization and barriers to care while providing context into each participant's background and lived experience. Interview questions explored four topics: 1) barriers to medical care; 2) social support; 3) ideal and actual healthcare experiences; and 4) desired changes to improve quality of care. We used an inductive analysis process to create a robust thematic coding schema, organizing responses into 60 total themes and 141 codes, and reported the most frequent. Our results explore the ways in which one's intersectional identity as a Black Appalachian woman affects interpersonal interactions and experiences when engaging with the healthcare system. Participants frequently reported barriers related to scheduling conflicts and delays, experiences with rushed appointments and inhospitable providers and support staff, and desires for accurate collection of medical information. Participant responses often emphasized difficulties with the organization of the medical system, revealing specific areas for future intervention to improve quality of care for Black Appalachian women. Study 2: Use of the emergency department (ED) for low acuity conditions (e.g., back pain, dental pain, sore throat) and primary care places an additional strain on ED staff and resources, while increasing waiting and treatment times for high acuity patients. Factors such as race, gender, and insurance type have a strong association with the likelihood of a patient using the ED for a low acuity concern. Women are more likely to utilize healthcare services, which also holds true in the context of the ED. Using a sample of adult women from Virginia, West Virginia, Tennessee, North Carolina, and Kentucky, I investigated which demographic factors, age, race, geographic location (metro, nonmetro, rural), employment, and insurance coverage, affect a patient's likelihood to visit the ED for a low acuity condition within a southwestern Virginia hospital system. Log-binomial regression was used to estimate unadjusted and adjusted prevalence ratios of acuity level by race, age, rurality level, employment, and insurance type with corresponding 95% CIs. Our sample included 28,222 female patients who visited the ED between January 1, 2021 and September 30, 2022. Low acuity visits accounted for 15.9% (n=4,485) of visits during the timeframe. In summary, our results suggest that older age and location in non-metro area are the most salient factors contributing to a higher likelihood of low acuity ED visits among women. Race, a primary variable of interest, did not have the relationship to acuity that was expected based on previous literature; Black women patients were less likely to have a low acuity visit than white women patients. During our study period, overall number of visits remained steady, while there was an increase in proportion of low acuity visits. Further research is needed into the underlying causes to more definitively explain this increase.