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David Grunwald

Student Projects



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Ann Griego
For my JMP masters' thesis and PRIME project, I am evaluating the Centering Parenting Program at West Berkeley Family Practice. Centering Parenting is a group model of well woman and well child care wherein 5-6 women are placed into a group where they receive their primary care in addition to participating in education activities and benefiting from group support. I will be using both quantitative methods (chart reviews and descriptive statistics) and qualitative methods (ethnographic group observations, interviews, and longitudinal in-depth studies of 6 mothers) to determine the health outcomes for women and children – and qualitatively the reasons behind those outcomes.




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Monica Hahn
JMP Masters Thesis Project Description
Title: Oakland Asian Youth Envisioning Health Through Photovoice


Photovoice is a participatory action research method that blends a grassroots approach to photography with social action, and aims to foster social change. The goal of this Photovoice project is to build community capacity by empowering youth to creatively express their perception of pressing health and social justice issues through the use of digital photography. This project was conducted during the summer of 2007 at the Asian Health Services Youth Program with a group of 8 Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) youth aged 14-17 from the Oakland community. The youth were given digital cameras at the beginning of the project, and were encouraged to take photos that represent what they perceived to be the most salient health and social justice issues in the Oakland community. Over 6 weeks, the group met regularly and used these photos as sparks to ignite critical reflection and dialogue about these issues and brainstormed potential solutions to the problems they identified. This Photovoice project is part of a needs and strengths assessment for Asian Health Services Youth Program. Through this unique community-based participatory research method, AHS Youth Program is able to identify pressing health needs and gaps in health care for its youth patients, which can ultimately inform best practices in healthcare provision and health advocacy for the community health organization. This project is unique because it gives youth a chance to be heard and acknowledges them as empowered critical thinkers and problems solvers, and thus as positive assets to their communities. Through their photos and accompanying stories, the youth participants in this project elucidated many social, economic, and environmental contextual factors that affect youth health at the community level, including gang and turf violence, lack of access to healthy foods, the importance of health insurance, facilitated access to health risks such as alcohol, tobacco and drugs, and the benefits of youth programs.




Updated: December 17, 2007
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