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A Culturally Sensitive Church-Based Health-Smart Intervention for Increasing Health Literacy and Health-Promoting Behaviors among Black Adult Churchgoers
22
Citations
22
References
2019
Year
Health-promotion Intervention ProgramNutrition LiteracyHealth DisparitiesSocial Determinants Of HealthHealth-promoting BehaviorsHealthy EatingHealth CommunicationAfrican American StudiesPublic HealthBlack Adult ChurchgoersHealth EducationBlack AdultsPublic Health InterventionHealth InterventionHealth PromotionHealth EquityHealth LiteracyCommunity HealthHealth BehaviorArtsHealth Disparity
The purpose of the paper is to examine the effectiveness of a six-week, culturally sensitive, church-based health-promotion intervention in increasing nutrition label health literacy and health-promoting behaviors (i.e., healthy eating, healthy drinking, and physical activity) and improving weight and blood pressure among Black adults. Study participants are a sample of 321 Black adult churchgoers (N = 321) who were divided between an intervention group (N = 172) and a wait-list control group (N = 149). The health-promotion intervention program is informed by Health Self-Empowerment Theory. At post-test, the participants in the intervention group demonstrated significantly greater increases in nutrition label health literacy, overall level of engagement in health-smart behaviors, and levels of engagement in two specific health-smart behaviors (i.e., healthy eating and healthy drinking) compared with those in the wait-list control group. Implications of these findings for future similar health-promotion intervention programs and research are discussed.
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