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      How Well Do Health-Mediation Programs Address the Determinants of the Poor Health Status of Roma? A Longitudinal Case Study

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          Abstract

          In Central and Eastern Europe (CEE), health-mediation programs (HMPs) have become central policy instruments targeting health inequities between segregated Roma and general populations. Social determinants of health (SDH) represent the root causes behind health inequities. We therefore evaluated how an HMP based in Slovakia addressed known SDH in its agenda and its everyday implementation. To produce descriptive data on the HMP’s agenda and everyday implementation we observed and consulted 70 program participants across organizational levels and 30 program recipients over the long-term. We used a World Health Organization framework on SDH to direct data acquisition and consequent data content analysis, to structure the reporting of results, and to evaluate the program’s merits. In its agenda, the HMP did not address most known SDH, except for healthcare access and health-related behaviours. In the HMP’s everyday implementation, healthcare access facilitation activities were well received, performed as set out and effective. The opposite was true for most educational activities targeting health-related behaviours. The HMP fieldworkers were proactive and sometimes effective at addressing most other SDH domains beyond the HMP agenda, especially material conditions and psychosocial factors, but also selected local structural aspects. The HMP leaders supported such deliberate engagement only informally, considering the program inappropriate by definition and too unstable institutionally to handle such extensions. Reports indicate that the situation in other CEE HMPs is similar. To increase the HMPs’ impact on SDH, their theories and procedures should be adapted according to the programs’ more promising actual practice regarding SDH.

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          Achieving cultural appropriateness in health promotion programs: targeted and tailored approaches.

          It is a truism of health education that programs and interventions will be more effective when they are culturally appropriate for the populations they serve. In practice, however, the strategies used to achieve cultural appropriateness vary widely. This article briefly describes five strategies commonly used to target programs to culturally defined groups. It then explains how a sixth approach, cultural tailoring, might extend these strategies and enhance our ability to develop effective programs for cultural groups. The authors illustrate this new approach with an example of cultural tailoring forcancer prevention in a population of lower income urban African American women.
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            Reconsidering community-based health promotion: promise, performance, and potential.

            Contemporary public health emphasizes a community-based approach to health promotion and disease prevention. The evidence from the past 20 years indicates, however, that many community-based programs have had only modest impact, with the notable exception of a number of HIV prevention programs. To better understand the reasons for these outcomes, we conducted a systematic literature review of 32 community-based prevention programs. Reasons for poor performance include methodological challenges to study design and evaluation, concurrent secular trends, smaller-than-expected effect sizes, limitations of the interventions, and limitations of theories used. The effectiveness of HIV programs appears to be related in part to extensive formative research and an emphasis on changing social norms.
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              The Medicalization of Society on the Transformation of Human Conditions into Treatable Disorders

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Int J Environ Res Public Health
                Int J Environ Res Public Health
                ijerph
                International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
                MDPI
                1661-7827
                1660-4601
                13 December 2017
                December 2017
                : 14
                : 12
                : 1569
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Health Psychology, Faculty of Medicine, P. J. Safarik University, 04011 Košice, Slovakia; zuzana.dankulincova@ 123456upjs.sk (Z.D.V.); andrea.geckova@ 123456upjs.sk (A.M.G.)
                [2 ]Kosice Institute for Society and Health, Faculty of Medicine, P. J. Safarik University, 04011 Košice, Slovakia; j.p.van.dijk@ 123456umcg.nl
                [3 ]Department of Community and Occupational Medicine, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, 9713 AV Groningen, The Netherlands; s.a.reijneveld@ 123456umcg.nl
                [4 ]Department of General Anthropology, Faculty of Humanities, Charles University, 158 00 Prague, Czech Republic
                [5 ]Olomouc University Society and Health Institute, Palacky University, 771 11 Olomouc, Czech Republic
                Author notes
                [* ]Correspondence: andrej.belak@ 123456upjs.sk ; Tel.: +421-55-234-3392
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6634-0137
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7599-2196
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2993-3798
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1206-7523
                Article
                ijerph-14-01569
                10.3390/ijerph14121569
                5750987
                29236067
                63f179cc-8513-4e5c-b6a7-e356239acb8e
                © 2017 by the authors.

                Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 08 November 2017
                : 10 December 2017
                Categories
                Article

                Public health
                slovakia,roma,health inequities,ethnicity,social determinants,policy evaluation,qualitative research,community health

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