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Featured researches published by Barbara Brenner.


Environmental Health Perspectives | 2005

Community-Based Participatory Research: Lessons Learned from the Centers for Children's Environmental Health and Disease Prevention Research

Barbara A. Israel; Edith A. Parker; Zachary Rowe; Alicia L. Salvatore; Meredith Minkler; Jesús López; Arlene Butz; Adrian Mosley; Lucretia Coates; George H. Lambert; Paul A Potito; Barbara Brenner; Maribel Rivera; Harry Romero; Beti Thompson; Gloria D. Coronado; Sandy Halstead

Over the past several decades there has been growing evidence of the increase in incidence rates, morbidity, and mortality for a number of health problems experienced by children. The causation and aggravation of these problems are complex and multifactorial. The burden of these health problems and environmental exposures is borne disproportionately by children from low-income communities and communities of color. Researchers and funding institutions have called for increased attention to the complex issues that affect the health of children living in marginalized communities—and communities more broadly—and have suggested greater community involvement in processes that shape research and intervention approaches, for example, through community-based participatory research (CBPR) partnerships among academic, health services, public health, and community-based organizations. Centers for Children’s Environmental Health and Disease Prevention Research (Children’s Centers) funded by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency were required to include a CBPR project. The purpose of this article is to provide a definition and set of CBPR principles, to describe the rationale for and major benefits of using this approach, to draw on the experiences of six of the Children’s Centers in using CBPR, and to provide lessons learned and recommendations for how to successfully establish and maintain CBPR partnerships aimed at enhancing our understanding and addressing the multiple determinants of children’s health.


Public Health Nutrition | 2008

Race and food store availability in an inner-city neighbourhood

Maida P. Galvez; Kimberly B. Morland; Cherita Raines; Jessica Kobil; Jodi Siskind; James Godbold; Barbara Brenner

BACKGROUND A growing body of research has shown that disparities in resources, including food stores, exist at the neighbourhood level and the greatest disparities are seen in minority neighbourhoods, the same neighbourhoods at increased risk of obesity and diabetes. Less is known about whether differences in availability of resources by African American or Latino race/ethnicity exist within a single minority community. OBJECTIVE The present study examined whether census blocks either 75% African American (AA) or 75% Latino (L) are associated with food store availability, as compared with racially mixed (RM) census blocks, in East Harlem, New York. DESIGN/METHODS A cross-sectional study utilising a walking survey of East Harlem was performed. Food stores were classified into: supermarkets, grocery stores, convenience stores, specialty stores, full-service restaurants and fast-food stores. RESULTS One hundred and sixty-five East Harlem census blocks were examined; 17 were AA, 34 were L and 114 were RM. Of AA census blocks, 100% had neither supermarkets nor grocery stores. AA census blocks were less likely to have convenience stores (prevalence ratio (PR) = 0.25, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.07-0.86) compared with RM census blocks. In contrast, predominantly L census blocks were more likely to have convenience stores (PR = 1.8, 95% CI 1.20-2.70), specialty food stores (PR = 3.74, 95% CI 2.06-7.15), full-service restaurants (PR = 1.87, 95% CI 1.04-3.38) and fast-food restaurants (PR = 2.14, 95% CI 1.33-3.44) compared with RM census blocks. CONCLUSIONS We found that inequities in food store availability exist by race/ethnicity in East Harlem, New York. This has implications for racial/ethnic differences in dietary quality, obesity and obesity-related disorders.


Academic Pediatrics | 2009

Childhood Obesity and Neighborhood Food-Store Availability in an Inner-City Community

Maida P. Galvez; Lu Hong; Elizabeth Choi; Laura Liao; James Godbold; Barbara Brenner

OBJECTIVE Prior studies have shown an association between fast-food restaurants and adolescent body size. Less is known about the influence of neighborhood food stores on a childs body size. We hypothesized that in the inner-city, minority community of East Harlem, New York, the presence of convenience stores and fast-food restaurants near a childs home is associated with increased risk for childhood obesity as measured by body mass index (BMI). DESIGN Baseline data of 6- to 8-year-old East Harlem boys and girls (N=323) were used. Anthropometry (height and weight) was conducted with a standardized protocol. Food-store data were collected via a walking survey. Stores located within the same census block as the childs home address were identified by using ArcGIS 8.3. We computed age- and sex-specific BMI percentiles by using national norms of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Using odds ratios, we estimated risk of a childs BMI percentile being in the top tertile based on number and types of food stores on their census blocks. RESULTS Convenience stores were present in 55% of the surveyed blocks in which a study particpant lived and fast-food restaurants were present in 41%. Children (n=177) living on a block with 1 or more convenience stores (range, 1-6) were more likely to have a BMI percentile in the top tertile (odds ratio 1.90, 95% confidence interval, 1.15-3.15) compared with children having no convenience stores (n=146). CONCLUSIONS The presence of convenience stores near a childs residence was associated with a higher BMI percentile. This has potential implications for both child- and neighborhood-level childhood obesity interventions.


Environmental Research | 2012

Associations between phthalate metabolite urinary concentrations and body size measures in New York City children

Susan L. Teitelbaum; Nancy Mervish; Erin Moshier; Nita Vangeepuram; Maida P. Galvez; Antonia M. Calafat; Manori J. Silva; Barbara Brenner; Mary S. Wolff

OBJECTIVE To examine prospectively associations between urinary phthalate metabolite concentrations and body size measures in children. METHODS Urinary concentrations of nine phthalate metabolites: monoethyl (MEP); mono-n-butyl (MBP); mono-(3-carboxypropyl) (MCPP); monobenzyl (MBzP); mono-isobutyl (MiBP); mono-(2-ethylhexyl) (MEHP); mono-(2-ethyl-5-oxohexyl) (MEOHP); mono-(2-ethyl-5-carboxypentyl) (MECPP); and mono-(2-ethyl-5-hydroxyhexyl) phthalate (MEHHP) and the molar sum of the low molecular-weight phthalate metabolites (low MWP: MEP, MBP and MiBP) and high molecular-weight phthalate metabolites (high MWP: MECPP, MEHHP, MEOHP, MEHP and MBzP) and of four di-(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (DEHP) metabolites (ΣDEHP: MEHP, MEHHP, MEOHP, MECPP) and anthropometry, including body mass index and waist circumference were measured among 387 Hispanic and Black, New York City children who were between six and eight years at cohort enrollment (2004-2007). Relationships between baseline metabolite concentrations and body size characteristics obtained one year later were examined using multivariate-adjusted geometric means for each body size characteristic by continuous and categories of phthalate metabolite concentrations. Stratified analyses by body size (age/sex specific) were conducted. RESULTS No significant associations are reported among all girls or boys. Dose response relationships were seen with monoethyl phthalate and the sum of low molecular-weight phthalates and body mass index and waist circumference among overweight children; for increasing monoethyl phthalate concentration quartiles among girls, adjusted mean body mass indexes were as follows: 21.3, 21.7, 23.8, 23.5 and adjusted mean waist circumference (cm) were as follows: 73.4, 73.5, 79.2, 78.8 (p-trend<0.001 for both). CONCLUSION In this prospective analysis we identified positive relationships between urinary concentrations of monoethyl phthalate and the sum of low molecular-weight phthalates and body size measures in overweight children. These are metabolites with concentrations above 1 μM.


American Journal of Preventive Medicine | 2009

Effective Recruitment of Minority Populations Through Community-Led Strategies

Carol R. Horowitz; Barbara Brenner; Susanne Lachapelle; Duna A. Amara; Guedy Arniella

BACKGROUND Traditional research approaches frequently fail to yield representative numbers of people of color in research. Community-based participatory research (CBPR) may be an important strategy for partnering with and reaching populations that bear a greater burden of illness but have been historically difficult to engage. The Community Action Board, consisting of 20 East Harlem residents, leaders, and advocates, used CBPR to compare the effectiveness of various strategies in recruiting and enrolling adults with prediabetes into a peer-led, diabetes prevention intervention. METHODS The board created five recruitment strategies: recruiting through clinicians; recruiting at large public events such as farmers markets; organizing special local recruitment events; recruiting at local organizations; and recruiting through a partner-led approach, in which community partners developed and managed the recruitment efforts at their sites. RESULTS In 3 months, 555 local adults were approached; 249 were appropriate candidates for further evaluation (overweight, nonpregnant, East Harlem residents without known diabetes); 179 consented and returned in a fasting state for 1/2 day of prediabetes testing; 99 had prediabetes and enrolled in a pilot randomized trial. The partner-led approach was highly successful, recruiting 68% of those enrolled. This strategy was also the most efficient; 34% of those approached through partners were ultimately enrolled, versus 0%-17% enrolled through the other four strategies. Participants were predominantly low-income, uninsured, undereducated, Spanish-speaking women. CONCLUSIONS This CBPR approach highlights the value of partner-led recruitment to identify, reach out to, and motivate a vulnerable population into participation in research, using techniques that may be unfamiliar to researchers but are nevertheless rigorous and effective.


Cancer | 2006

Creating alliances to improve cancer prevention and detection among urban medically underserved minority groups : The east harlem partnership for cancer awareness

Lina Jandorf; Anne Fatone; Priti V. Borker; Mark Levin; Warria A. Esmond; Barbara Brenner; Gary C. Butts; William H. Redd

The East Harlem Partnership for Cancer Awareness (EHPCA) was formed in 1999 to reduce disparities in cancer screening and prevention among medically underserved minorities residing in a large urban community (East Harlem, New York City) by increasing awareness of cancer risk, prevention, and treatment, and promoting greater participation in breast, cervical, colorectal, and prostate cancer screening and early detection. The Partnership augments a 20‐year collaboration between an academic medical center, a public hospital, and 2 community health centers. Needs assessments were conducted to inform program development. Cancer education, outreach, and screening programs were developed based on the PRECEED‐PROCEED model for health education and health promotion programming. Needs assessments revealed that although the majority of the population (86%) was insured and had a source of primary care, cancer screening guidelines for breast, cervical, prostate, and colorectal cancers were not being followed. Outreach strategies, targeted curricula, educational sessions, and screening programs have been developed and implemented to improve knowledge levels and increase screening participation. The EHPCA is a model of a successful partnership among the public and private sectors to reduce disparities in cancer screening and prevention in a diverse, medically underserved, urban minority community. Future efforts to reduce cancer screening disparities in this population will include patient navigation and improved access to standard‐of‐care screening such as colonoscopy. Cancer 2006.


American Journal of Bioethics | 2011

De Minimis Risk: A Proposal for a New Category of Research Risk

Rosamond Rhodes; Jody Azzouni; Stefan Bernard Baumrin; Keith J. Benkov; Martin J. Blaser; Barbara Brenner; Joseph W. Dauben; William James Earle; Lily Frank; Nada Gligorov; Joseph Goldfarb; Kurt Hirschhorn; Rochelle Hirschhorn; Ian R. Holzman; Debbie Indyk; Ethylin Wang Jabs; Douglas Lackey; Daniel A. Moros; Sean Philpott; Matthew E. Rhodes; Lynne D. Richardson; Henry S. Sacks; Abraham Schwab; Rhoda S. Sperling; Brett Trusko; Arnulf Zweig

De Minimis Risk: A Proposal for a New Category of Research Risk Rosamond Rhodes a , Jody Azzouni b , Stefan Bernard Baumrin c , Keith Benkov a , Martin J. Blaser d , Barbara Brenner a , Joseph W. Dauben c , William J. Earle c , Lily Frank c , Nada Gligorov a , Joseph Goldfarb a , Kurt Hirschhorn a , Rochelle Hirschhorn d , Ian Holzman a , Debbie Indyk a , Ethylin Wang Jabs a , Douglas P. Lackey c , Daniel A. Moros a , Sean Philpott e , Matthew E. Rhodes f , Lynne D. Richardson a , Henry S. Sacks a , Abraham Schwab g , Rhoda Sperling a , Brett Trusko a & Arnulf Zweig h a Mount Sinai School of Medicine b Tufts University c The Graduate Center, CUNY d New York University Medical School, CUNY e Union Graduate College f Pennsylvania State University g Indiana University, Purdue h University of Oregon (Emeritus)


Journal of Urban Health-bulletin of The New York Academy of Medicine | 2012

The association between parental perception of neighborhood safety and asthma diagnosis in ethnic minority urban children.

Nita Vangeepuram; Maida P. Galvez; Susan L. Teitelbaum; Barbara Brenner; Mary S. Wolff

Low-income populations, minorities, and children living in inner cities have high rates of asthma. Recent studies have emphasized the role of psychosocial stress in development of asthma. Residence in unsafe neighborhoods is one potential source of increased stress. The study objective was to examine the association between parental perception of neighborhood safety and asthma diagnosis among inner city, minority children. Cross-sectional data from a community-based study of 6–8-year-old New York City children were used. Asthma was defined as parental report of physician-diagnosed asthma and at least one asthma-related symptom. Parental perceptions of neighborhood safety were assessed with a questionnaire. Associations between perceived neighborhood safety and asthma were examined using chi-squared tests. Multivariate logistic regression analyses were then performed. Five hundred four children were included with 79% female, 26.5% non-Hispanic Black, and 73.5% Hispanic. Asthma was present in 23.8% of children. There was an inverse association between feeling safe walking in the neighborhood and asthma with 45.7% of parents of asthmatic children reporting they felt safe compared to 60.9% of parents of non-asthmatic children (p = 0.006). Fewer parents of asthmatic children than of non-asthmatic children reported that their neighborhood was safe from crime (21.7% versus 33.9%, p = 0.018). In multivariate analyses adjusting for race/ethnicity, age, gender, socioeconomic status, number of smokers in the home and breastfeeding history, parents reporting feeling unsafe walking in the neighborhood were more likely to have a child diagnosed with asthma (OR = 1.89, 95%CI 1.13–3.14). Psychosocial stressors such as living in unsafe neighborhoods may be associated with asthma diagnosis in urban ethnic minority children. Addressing the increased asthma burden in certain communities may require interventions to decrease urban stressors.


Journal of Exposure Science and Environmental Epidemiology | 2012

Temporal variability in urinary concentrations of perchlorate, nitrate, thiocyanate and iodide among children.

Nancy Mervish; Ben Blount; Liza Valentin-Blasini; Barbara Brenner; Maida P. Galvez; Mary S. Wolff; Susan L. Teitelbaum

Perchlorate, nitrate and thiocyanate are ubiquitous in the environment, and human exposure to these chemicals is accurately measured in urine. Biomarkers of these chemicals represent a persons recent exposure, however, little is known on the temporal variability of the use of a single measurement of these biomarkers. Healthy Hispanic and Black children (6–10-year-old) donated urine samples over 6 months. To assess temporal variability, we used three statistical methods (n=29; 153 urine samples): intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), Spearmans correlation coefficient between concentrations measured at different timepoints and surrogate category analysis to assess how well tertile ranking by a single biomarker measurement represented the average concentration over 6 months. The ICC measure of reproducibility was poor (0.10–0.12) for perchlorate, nitrate and iodide; and fair for thiocyanate (0.36). The correlations for each biomarker across multiple sampling times ranged from 0.01–0.57. Surrogate analysis showed consistent results for almost every surrogate tertile. Results demonstrate fair temporal reliability in the spot urine concentrations of the three NIS inhibitors and iodide. Surrogate analysis show that single-spot urine samples reliably categorize participants exposure providing support for the use of a single sample as an exposure measure in epidemiological studies that use relative ranking of exposure.


Mount Sinai Journal of Medicine | 2011

Community Engagement in Children's Environmental Health Research

Barbara Brenner; Melissa Manice

Community engagement strategies and skills can build trust and reduce historical mistrust between researchers, communities, and populations being studied, as well as contribute to the quality of study designs, methods, and dissemination of findings. This review paper discusses why community engagement is of increasing importance in childrens environmental health research, describes models and the continuum of methods that are used, and discusses their challenges and benefits. Two case studies, representing different study designs and using different community engagement models and methods, and lessons learned from these cases, are described. Community engagement methods are best understood on a continuum based on the degree to which community members or representatives of community populations are involved in research planning, decision-making, and dissemination. Methods along this continuum include community consultation, community-based participatory research, and community consent to research. Community engagement knowledge and skills are especially important in the conduct of childrens environmental health research, with its emphasis on reducing environmental risks at the community level, the increasing focus on genetics and gene-environment interactions, and the importance placed on translation of scientific results into behaviors and policies that protect the community. Across study designs, whether qualitative survey research, an observational epidemiology study, or a randomized intervention trial, understanding community interests, norms, and values is necessary to describe attitudes and behaviors of specific population groups, build evidence of cause and effect between environmental exposures and health, and demonstrate the effectiveness of interventions to reduce risks.

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Maida P. Galvez

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Mary S. Wolff

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Susan L. Teitelbaum

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Antonia M. Calafat

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Manori J. Silva

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Xiaoyun Ye

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Carol R. Horowitz

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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James Godbold

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Nancy Mervish

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Nita Vangeepuram

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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