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Barriers to care: cultural, gender and racial

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  • Topic: Barriers to Care: cultural, gender and racial
  • Alabama (AL) ESC
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Culturally Appropriate Storytelling to Improve Blood Pressure

January 18, 2011 | Journal Article

This study sought to develop and test a novel, evidence-based and culturally appropriate intervention to control blood pressure in African-Americans using storytelling DVDs.

Errol D. Crook, MD

October 1, 2005 | Story

In 2001, Crook was assistant professor both of medicine in the nephrology division and in physiology and biophysics at the University of Mississippi Medical Center.

Betty S. Pace, MD

October 1, 2005 | Story

Pace added a second dimension to her career when she entered a fellowship training program in hematology/oncology at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center in 1987.

Nicholas James Smith, Minority Medical Education Program, 2000

April 17, 2006 | Story

Smith read Gifted Hands, the autobiography of Ben Carson, MD, an African American from inner-city Detroit, who became director of pediatric neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins University Hospital. Nick Smith wanted to be a doctor.

Alabama Program Teaches Cosmetologists and College Students to Conduct Community-Based Health Outreach

October 12, 2004 | Program Results Report

Faculty in the Department of Nursing at Oakwood College in Huntsville, Ala., trained cosmetologists and others to deliver community-based health education and screening services.

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