Building on the Strengths of a Cambodian Refugee Community Through Community-Based Outreach

Author:

Grigg-Saito Dorcas1,Och Sheila2,Liang Sidney3,Toof Robin4,Silka Linda5

Affiliation:

1. Lowell Community Health Center and Cambodian Community Health 2010 (CCH 2010) program in Lowell, Massachusetts

2. Lowell Community Health Center in Lowell, Massachusetts

3. Cambodian Community Health 2010 program in Lowell, Massachusetts

4. University of Massachusetts, Lowell

5. Department of Regional Economic and Social Development, University of Massachusetts, Lowell

Abstract

Literature and practice are limited on strategies to reach elder Southeast Asian refugees by using their strengths and resilience. This article presents the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention—funded Cambodian Community Health 2010 Program in Lowell, Massachusetts, as a case example and provides refugee history, project background, community survey results about strengths and risks, literature on strengths-based approaches, outreach activities, and evaluation. The focus is elimination of health disparities in cardiovascular disease and diabetes. “Community conversations” and a daylong forum with community leaders were used to develop plans for outreach. A Cambodian Elders Council provided information and guidance used to refine the program. Key findings highlight involving elders in organizing events, avoiding reliance on literacy, integrating health promotion with socialization, using ties with Buddhist temples, developing transportation alternatives, and utilizing local Khmer-language media. Implications include applicability to other refugee communities with low literacy, high levels of trauma, limited English, and strong religious involvement.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Nursing (miscellaneous),Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference24 articles.

1. Providing Culturally Specific Substance Abuse Services in Refugee and Immigrant Communities: Lessons from a Cambodian Treatment and Demonstration Project

2. Early Indications of Resilience and Their Relation to Experiences in the Home Environments of Low Birthweight, Premature Children Living in Poverty

3. Bromley, M.A. & Sip, S.K.C. (2001). Substance abuse treatment issues with Cambodian Americans. In S. L. A. Straussner (Ed.), Ethnocultural factors in substance abuse treatment (pp. 321-344). New York: Guilford .

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