“Black People Like Me”: A virtual conference series to engage underserved patients with asthma in patient centered outcomes research
Background In response to racial inequity in asthma, asthma-related research among diverse patients is vital. However, people from historically marginalized groups are underrepresented in clinical and patient-centered outcomes research (PCOR). The “Black People Like Me” (BPLM) virtual conference ser...
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Published in | Research involvement and engagement Vol. 9; no. 1; pp. 13 - 10 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
London
BioMed Central
24.03.2023
BioMed Central Ltd BMC |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
ISSN | 2056-7529 2056-7529 |
DOI | 10.1186/s40900-023-00428-3 |
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Abstract | Background
In response to racial inequity in asthma, asthma-related research among diverse patients is vital. However, people from historically marginalized groups are underrepresented in clinical and patient-centered outcomes research (PCOR). The “Black People Like Me” (BPLM) virtual conference series was developed to: (1) engage Black patients with asthma and their caregivers in education and discussions about asthma, and (2) encourage involvement in PCOR. Education about COVID-19 and COVID-19 vaccination was also incorporated.
Methods
The Project Advisory Group consisting of Black patients, clergy, physicians, and a program evaluator met monthly to develop BPLM. The program consisted of free one-hour virtual sessions held monthly for 6 months. BPLM was promoted through the Allergy & Asthma Network website, emails, social media, and personal contacts with a recruitment goal of ≥ 100 Black patients with asthma or caregivers. Program evaluations, interactive polling questions during each session, and participant pre- and post-session tests were conducted.
Results
Sessions averaged 658 participants including Black patients, family members, caregivers, Black clergy, health care providers, and other concerned community. Overall, 77% of participants strongly agreed with satisfaction with the sessions. Pre- and post-tests demonstrated that participants exhibited growth in knowledge regarding asthma risk, PCOR, and PCOR research opportunities for patients, exhibited preexisting and sustained knowledge regarding COVID-19 vaccination and side effects, and demonstrated an increased sense of empowerment during healthcare visits.
Conclusions
BPLM demonstrated that a virtual platform can successfully engage Black communities. Incorporating clergy and religious organizations was critical in developing the trust of the Black community towards BPLM.
Plain English summary
There are more Black people with asthma in the US than White people. Black people have more hospital stays or deaths from asthma than White people. This highlights the need for Black people to be involved in research. Black people are missing from research. Patient centered outcomes research (PCOR) looks at patient treatment results. A webinar series titled “Black People Like Me” (BPLM) was developed for the Black community. This was a discussion about asthma, COVID-19, and PCOR between patients and experts. BPLM was a free, one-hour, virtual meeting held once a month for 6 months. BPLM was developed by Black patients, clergy, physicians, and a program evaluator. The goal was to meet the needs of the Black community. An average of 658 people participated in each virtual meeting. BPLM found that 77% of attendees were highly satisfied with the sessions. BPLM increased attendee knowledge of asthma, COVID-19, and PCOR. Attendees reported an increased willingness to be involved in PCOR. Including Black clergy helped BPLM be successful by encouraging trust in the program within the Black community. Future programs like BPLM may be developed to help people make decisions about being involved in their health care and PCOR. |
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AbstractList | Background
In response to racial inequity in asthma, asthma-related research among diverse patients is vital. However, people from historically marginalized groups are underrepresented in clinical and patient-centered outcomes research (PCOR). The “Black People Like Me” (BPLM) virtual conference series was developed to: (1) engage Black patients with asthma and their caregivers in education and discussions about asthma, and (2) encourage involvement in PCOR. Education about COVID-19 and COVID-19 vaccination was also incorporated.
Methods
The Project Advisory Group consisting of Black patients, clergy, physicians, and a program evaluator met monthly to develop BPLM. The program consisted of free one-hour virtual sessions held monthly for 6 months. BPLM was promoted through the Allergy & Asthma Network website, emails, social media, and personal contacts with a recruitment goal of ≥ 100 Black patients with asthma or caregivers. Program evaluations, interactive polling questions during each session, and participant pre- and post-session tests were conducted.
Results
Sessions averaged 658 participants including Black patients, family members, caregivers, Black clergy, health care providers, and other concerned community. Overall, 77% of participants strongly agreed with satisfaction with the sessions. Pre- and post-tests demonstrated that participants exhibited growth in knowledge regarding asthma risk, PCOR, and PCOR research opportunities for patients, exhibited preexisting and sustained knowledge regarding COVID-19 vaccination and side effects, and demonstrated an increased sense of empowerment during healthcare visits.
Conclusions
BPLM demonstrated that a virtual platform can successfully engage Black communities. Incorporating clergy and religious organizations was critical in developing the trust of the Black community towards BPLM.
Plain English summary
There are more Black people with asthma in the US than White people. Black people have more hospital stays or deaths from asthma than White people. This highlights the need for Black people to be involved in research. Black people are missing from research. Patient centered outcomes research (PCOR) looks at patient treatment results. A webinar series titled “Black People Like Me” (BPLM) was developed for the Black community. This was a discussion about asthma, COVID-19, and PCOR between patients and experts. BPLM was a free, one-hour, virtual meeting held once a month for 6 months. BPLM was developed by Black patients, clergy, physicians, and a program evaluator. The goal was to meet the needs of the Black community. An average of 658 people participated in each virtual meeting. BPLM found that 77% of attendees were highly satisfied with the sessions. BPLM increased attendee knowledge of asthma, COVID-19, and PCOR. Attendees reported an increased willingness to be involved in PCOR. Including Black clergy helped BPLM be successful by encouraging trust in the program within the Black community. Future programs like BPLM may be developed to help people make decisions about being involved in their health care and PCOR. In response to racial inequity in asthma, asthma-related research among diverse patients is vital. However, people from historically marginalized groups are underrepresented in clinical and patient-centered outcomes research (PCOR). The "Black People Like Me" (BPLM) virtual conference series was developed to: (1) engage Black patients with asthma and their caregivers in education and discussions about asthma, and (2) encourage involvement in PCOR. Education about COVID-19 and COVID-19 vaccination was also incorporated. The Project Advisory Group consisting of Black patients, clergy, physicians, and a program evaluator met monthly to develop BPLM. The program consisted of free one-hour virtual sessions held monthly for 6 months. BPLM was promoted through the Allergy & Asthma Network website, emails, social media, and personal contacts with a recruitment goal of [greater than or equal to] 100 Black patients with asthma or caregivers. Program evaluations, interactive polling questions during each session, and participant pre- and post-session tests were conducted. Sessions averaged 658 participants including Black patients, family members, caregivers, Black clergy, health care providers, and other concerned community. Overall, 77% of participants strongly agreed with satisfaction with the sessions. Pre- and post-tests demonstrated that participants exhibited growth in knowledge regarding asthma risk, PCOR, and PCOR research opportunities for patients, exhibited preexisting and sustained knowledge regarding COVID-19 vaccination and side effects, and demonstrated an increased sense of empowerment during healthcare visits. BPLM demonstrated that a virtual platform can successfully engage Black communities. Incorporating clergy and religious organizations was critical in developing the trust of the Black community towards BPLM. BackgroundIn response to racial inequity in asthma, asthma-related research among diverse patients is vital. However, people from historically marginalized groups are underrepresented in clinical and patient-centered outcomes research (PCOR). The “Black People Like Me” (BPLM) virtual conference series was developed to: (1) engage Black patients with asthma and their caregivers in education and discussions about asthma, and (2) encourage involvement in PCOR. Education about COVID-19 and COVID-19 vaccination was also incorporated.MethodsThe Project Advisory Group consisting of Black patients, clergy, physicians, and a program evaluator met monthly to develop BPLM. The program consisted of free one-hour virtual sessions held monthly for 6 months. BPLM was promoted through the Allergy & Asthma Network website, emails, social media, and personal contacts with a recruitment goal of ≥ 100 Black patients with asthma or caregivers. Program evaluations, interactive polling questions during each session, and participant pre- and post-session tests were conducted.ResultsSessions averaged 658 participants including Black patients, family members, caregivers, Black clergy, health care providers, and other concerned community. Overall, 77% of participants strongly agreed with satisfaction with the sessions. Pre- and post-tests demonstrated that participants exhibited growth in knowledge regarding asthma risk, PCOR, and PCOR research opportunities for patients, exhibited preexisting and sustained knowledge regarding COVID-19 vaccination and side effects, and demonstrated an increased sense of empowerment during healthcare visits.ConclusionsBPLM demonstrated that a virtual platform can successfully engage Black communities. Incorporating clergy and religious organizations was critical in developing the trust of the Black community towards BPLM. In response to racial inequity in asthma, asthma-related research among diverse patients is vital. However, people from historically marginalized groups are underrepresented in clinical and patient-centered outcomes research (PCOR). The "Black People Like Me" (BPLM) virtual conference series was developed to: (1) engage Black patients with asthma and their caregivers in education and discussions about asthma, and (2) encourage involvement in PCOR. Education about COVID-19 and COVID-19 vaccination was also incorporated.BACKGROUNDIn response to racial inequity in asthma, asthma-related research among diverse patients is vital. However, people from historically marginalized groups are underrepresented in clinical and patient-centered outcomes research (PCOR). The "Black People Like Me" (BPLM) virtual conference series was developed to: (1) engage Black patients with asthma and their caregivers in education and discussions about asthma, and (2) encourage involvement in PCOR. Education about COVID-19 and COVID-19 vaccination was also incorporated.The Project Advisory Group consisting of Black patients, clergy, physicians, and a program evaluator met monthly to develop BPLM. The program consisted of free one-hour virtual sessions held monthly for 6 months. BPLM was promoted through the Allergy & Asthma Network website, emails, social media, and personal contacts with a recruitment goal of ≥ 100 Black patients with asthma or caregivers. Program evaluations, interactive polling questions during each session, and participant pre- and post-session tests were conducted.METHODSThe Project Advisory Group consisting of Black patients, clergy, physicians, and a program evaluator met monthly to develop BPLM. The program consisted of free one-hour virtual sessions held monthly for 6 months. BPLM was promoted through the Allergy & Asthma Network website, emails, social media, and personal contacts with a recruitment goal of ≥ 100 Black patients with asthma or caregivers. Program evaluations, interactive polling questions during each session, and participant pre- and post-session tests were conducted.Sessions averaged 658 participants including Black patients, family members, caregivers, Black clergy, health care providers, and other concerned community. Overall, 77% of participants strongly agreed with satisfaction with the sessions. Pre- and post-tests demonstrated that participants exhibited growth in knowledge regarding asthma risk, PCOR, and PCOR research opportunities for patients, exhibited preexisting and sustained knowledge regarding COVID-19 vaccination and side effects, and demonstrated an increased sense of empowerment during healthcare visits.RESULTSSessions averaged 658 participants including Black patients, family members, caregivers, Black clergy, health care providers, and other concerned community. Overall, 77% of participants strongly agreed with satisfaction with the sessions. Pre- and post-tests demonstrated that participants exhibited growth in knowledge regarding asthma risk, PCOR, and PCOR research opportunities for patients, exhibited preexisting and sustained knowledge regarding COVID-19 vaccination and side effects, and demonstrated an increased sense of empowerment during healthcare visits.BPLM demonstrated that a virtual platform can successfully engage Black communities. Incorporating clergy and religious organizations was critical in developing the trust of the Black community towards BPLM.CONCLUSIONSBPLM demonstrated that a virtual platform can successfully engage Black communities. Incorporating clergy and religious organizations was critical in developing the trust of the Black community towards BPLM. Background In response to racial inequity in asthma, asthma-related research among diverse patients is vital. However, people from historically marginalized groups are underrepresented in clinical and patient-centered outcomes research (PCOR). The "Black People Like Me" (BPLM) virtual conference series was developed to: (1) engage Black patients with asthma and their caregivers in education and discussions about asthma, and (2) encourage involvement in PCOR. Education about COVID-19 and COVID-19 vaccination was also incorporated. Methods The Project Advisory Group consisting of Black patients, clergy, physicians, and a program evaluator met monthly to develop BPLM. The program consisted of free one-hour virtual sessions held monthly for 6 months. BPLM was promoted through the Allergy & Asthma Network website, emails, social media, and personal contacts with a recruitment goal of [greater than or equal to] 100 Black patients with asthma or caregivers. Program evaluations, interactive polling questions during each session, and participant pre- and post-session tests were conducted. Results Sessions averaged 658 participants including Black patients, family members, caregivers, Black clergy, health care providers, and other concerned community. Overall, 77% of participants strongly agreed with satisfaction with the sessions. Pre- and post-tests demonstrated that participants exhibited growth in knowledge regarding asthma risk, PCOR, and PCOR research opportunities for patients, exhibited preexisting and sustained knowledge regarding COVID-19 vaccination and side effects, and demonstrated an increased sense of empowerment during healthcare visits. Conclusions BPLM demonstrated that a virtual platform can successfully engage Black communities. Incorporating clergy and religious organizations was critical in developing the trust of the Black community towards BPLM. Keywords: Asthma, Disparities, Inequalities, Virtual, COVID-19, Patient-centered outcomes research Plain English summary There are more Black people with asthma in the US than White people. Black people have more hospital stays or deaths from asthma than White people. This highlights the need for Black people to be involved in research. Black people are missing from research. Patient centered outcomes research (PCOR) looks at patient treatment results. A webinar series titled “Black People Like Me” (BPLM) was developed for the Black community. This was a discussion about asthma, COVID-19, and PCOR between patients and experts. BPLM was a free, one-hour, virtual meeting held once a month for 6 months. BPLM was developed by Black patients, clergy, physicians, and a program evaluator. The goal was to meet the needs of the Black community. An average of 658 people participated in each virtual meeting. BPLM found that 77% of attendees were highly satisfied with the sessions. BPLM increased attendee knowledge of asthma, COVID-19, and PCOR. Attendees reported an increased willingness to be involved in PCOR. Including Black clergy helped BPLM be successful by encouraging trust in the program within the Black community. Future programs like BPLM may be developed to help people make decisions about being involved in their health care and PCOR. In response to racial inequity in asthma, asthma-related research among diverse patients is vital. However, people from historically marginalized groups are underrepresented in clinical and patient-centered outcomes research (PCOR). The "Black People Like Me" (BPLM) virtual conference series was developed to: (1) engage Black patients with asthma and their caregivers in education and discussions about asthma, and (2) encourage involvement in PCOR. Education about COVID-19 and COVID-19 vaccination was also incorporated. The Project Advisory Group consisting of Black patients, clergy, physicians, and a program evaluator met monthly to develop BPLM. The program consisted of free one-hour virtual sessions held monthly for 6 months. BPLM was promoted through the Allergy & Asthma Network website, emails, social media, and personal contacts with a recruitment goal of ≥ 100 Black patients with asthma or caregivers. Program evaluations, interactive polling questions during each session, and participant pre- and post-session tests were conducted. Sessions averaged 658 participants including Black patients, family members, caregivers, Black clergy, health care providers, and other concerned community. Overall, 77% of participants strongly agreed with satisfaction with the sessions. Pre- and post-tests demonstrated that participants exhibited growth in knowledge regarding asthma risk, PCOR, and PCOR research opportunities for patients, exhibited preexisting and sustained knowledge regarding COVID-19 vaccination and side effects, and demonstrated an increased sense of empowerment during healthcare visits. BPLM demonstrated that a virtual platform can successfully engage Black communities. Incorporating clergy and religious organizations was critical in developing the trust of the Black community towards BPLM. |
ArticleNumber | 13 |
Audience | Academic |
Author | Hart, Mary Gardner, Donna D. Moise, Rhoda Winders, Tonya A. Graham, LeRoy Stinson, Michael Mitchell, Lynda |
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BackLink | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36964633$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed |
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Cites_doi | 10.1513/AnnalsATS.201803-166IP 10.1016/j.cct.2021.106624 10.2217/cer-2019-0054 10.1007/s11136-016-1246-1 10.1177/2374373519882226 10.1186/1472-6963-14-66 10.1177/0890117120934609 10.1007/s11605-021-05192-x 10.1016/j.cpcardiol.2018.11.002 10.17226/26479 |
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In response to racial inequity in asthma, asthma-related research among diverse patients is vital. However, people from historically marginalized... In response to racial inequity in asthma, asthma-related research among diverse patients is vital. However, people from historically marginalized groups are... Background In response to racial inequity in asthma, asthma-related research among diverse patients is vital. However, people from historically marginalized... BackgroundIn response to racial inequity in asthma, asthma-related research among diverse patients is vital. However, people from historically marginalized... Plain English summary There are more Black people with asthma in the US than White people. Black people have more hospital stays or deaths from asthma than... |
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SubjectTerms | Asthma Black people Caregivers Clergy Clinical trials Conferences, meetings and seminars Coronaviruses COVID-19 Disparities Health care industry Human subjects Inequalities Medical research Medical screening Medicine Medicine & Public Health Medicine, Experimental Methodology Nonprofit organizations Pandemics Participation Patient outcomes Patient-centered care Patient-centered outcomes research Patients Religion Religious organizations Social exclusion Social networks Virtual White people |
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Title | “Black People Like Me”: A virtual conference series to engage underserved patients with asthma in patient centered outcomes research |
URI | https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40900-023-00428-3 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36964633 https://www.proquest.com/docview/2803071387 https://www.proquest.com/docview/2791375399 https://doaj.org/article/7730aa20142b4adcb79a198fa934c5ab |
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