Universities Collaborate with Community Partners
The Texas A&M University School of Nursing received a nearly $2.3 million grant for its community-based program, Community Hands Advancing Maternal Health Promotion (CHAMPions).
“The collaboration among our partners underscores the critical importance of better understanding and addressing the root causes of maternal mortality and morbidity,” Associate Professor Robin Page said in a news release. “This hub-and-spoke model is attracting a lot of attention on a federal level and across the country for its progressive, collaborative methodology.”
Through the program, “maternal-child navigators” – nurses, social workers, and community health workers – will visit “underserved mothers’ homes during pregnancy and their first year postpartum,” the release stated. The healthcare workers will provide health education and advice and engage in community outreach to raise awareness of maternal health risks.
The CHAMPions project also includes: Texas A&M School of Public Health, Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi College of Nursing and Health Sciences, Driscoll Children’s Hospital, Driscoll Health Plan, and the Global Institute for Hispanic Health.
Meanwhile, Florida International University’s Center for Women’s and Gender Studies received a five-year, $2.45 million grant for its Black Mothers Care Plan program.
The funding allows FIU researchers and community partners to “investigate how mobile and household-centered doula and midwifery care impacts black maternal health outcomes and experiences,” according to a news release.
FIU’s principal investigator Okezi Otovo, an associate professor of African and African Diaspora Studies and an affiliate faculty member for the CWGS, said in the release that the project will look at Miami-Dade County’s community-based care models to determine how that dynamic “leads to better outcomes.”
“There’s lots of research about community care models and why they help to improve health outcomes for mothers and babies,” Otovo said. “There are fewer community care studies that look directly at the populations that are most at risk of maternal mortality and morbidity in the U.S., which in our country are Black and indigenous mothers.”
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