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Volume 32, Issue 4: August, 2005
Abstract
Identifying Churches for Community-Based Mammography
Promotion: Lessons From the LAMP Study
Naihua Duan, PhD, Sarah Fox, MSPH, EdD, Kathryn Pitkin Derose,
MPH, PhD, Sally Carson, BA, and Susan Stockdale, MA, PhD
There is great potential in public health and faith communities
partnering to promote health education and research. This
article describes lessons learned from the design and implementation
of such a partnership, the Los Angeles Mammography Promotion
in Churches Program (LAMP). It is feasible, although challenging,
to enumerate and survey churches in a geographically defined
urban population, using data compiled from telephone directories,
religious sources (e.g., denominational networks), chambers
of commerce, and newspapers. Among those sources, telephone
directories provided the broadest coverage, whereas religious
sources yielded the highest recruitment rate. For collecting
survey data from churches, telephone methods are superior
to mail methods. For church-based health education programs
that seek comprehensive coverage and have adequate resources,
it is recommended that telephone directories be combined with
religious sources to identify target churches. For programs
with limited resources and less emphasis on comprehensive
coverage, using religious sources alone is recommended.
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