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Dive into the research topics where Karen Rocío Flórez is active.

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Featured researches published by Karen Rocío Flórez.


Health Affairs | 2015

Diet And Perceptions Change With Supermarket Introduction In A Food Desert, But Not Because Of Supermarket Use

Tamara Dubowitz; Madhumita Ghosh-Dastidar; Deborah A. Cohen; Robin Beckman; Elizabeth D. Steiner; Gerald Hunter; Karen Rocío Flórez; Christina Huang; Christine Anne Vaughan; Jennifer Sloan; Shannon N. Zenk; Steven Cummins; Rebecca L. Collins

Placing full-service supermarkets in food deserts--areas with limited access to healthy food--has been promoted as a way to reduce inequalities in access to healthy food, improve diet, and reduce the risk of obesity. However, previous studies provide scant evidence of such impacts. We surveyed households in two Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, neighborhoods in 2011 and 2014, one of which received a new supermarket in 2013. Comparing trends in the two neighborhoods, we obtained evidence of multiple positive impacts from new supermarket placement. In the new supermarket neighborhood we found net positive changes in overall dietary quality; average daily intakes of kilocalories and added sugars; and percentage of kilocalories from solid fats, added sugars, and alcohol. However, the only positive outcome in the recipient neighborhood specifically associated with regular use of the new supermarket was improved perceived access to healthy food. We did not observe differential improvement between the neighborhoods in fruit and vegetable intake, whole grain consumption, or body mass index. Incentivizing supermarkets to locate in food deserts is appropriate. However, efforts should proceed with caution, until the mechanisms by which the stores affect diet and their ability to influence weight status are better understood.


Annual Review of Public Health | 2016

Latino Immigrants, Acculturation, and Health: Promising New Directions in Research

Ana F. Abraído-Lanza; Sandra E. Echeverria; Karen Rocío Flórez

This article provides an analysis of novel topics emerging in recent years in research on Latino immigrants, acculturation, and health. In the past ten years, the number of studies assessing new ways to conceptualize and understand how acculturation-related processes may influence health has grown. These new frameworks draw from integrative approaches testing new ground to acknowledge the fundamental role of context and policy. We classify the emerging body of evidence according to themes that we identify as promising directions--intrapersonal, interpersonal, social environmental, community, political, and global contexts, cross-cutting themes in life course and developmental approaches, and segmented assimilation--and discuss the challenges and opportunities each theme presents. This body of work, which considers acculturation in context, points to the emergence of a new wave of research that holds great promise in driving forward the study of Latino immigrants, acculturation, and health. We provide suggestions to further advance the ideologic and methodologic rigor of this new wave.


Aids Education and Prevention | 2014

An Intervention to Reduce HIV-Related Stigma in Partnership with African American and Latino Churches

Kathryn Pitkin Derose; Laura M. Bogart; David E. Kanouse; Alexandria Felton; Deborah Owens Collins; Michael A. Mata; Clyde W. Oden; Blanca X. Domínguez; Karen Rocío Flórez; Jennifer Hawes-Dawson; Malcolm V. Williams

HIV-related stigma negatively affects prevention and care, and community-based interventions are needed. Here we describe the development of a multi-ethnic, faith-based intervention to reduce HIV stigma that included: educational workshops on HIV, testing, and stigma; peer leader workshops using role plays and drawing on principles of motivational interviewing; a pastor-delivered sermon on HIV that incorporated theological reflection and an imagined contact scenario; and congregation-based HIV testing events. Lessons learned include: partnership development is essential and requires substantial investment; tailoring intervention components to single race-ethnic groups may not be preferable in diverse community settings; and adapting testing processes to be able to serve larger numbers of people in shorter time frames is needed for congregational settings. This development process successfully combined the rigorous application of social science theory and community engagement to yield a multifaceted HIV stigma reduction intervention appropriate for Protestant and Catholic churches in African American and Latino communities.


Health Education & Behavior | 2015

Breast Cancer Screening Among Dominican Latinas: A Closer Look at Fatalism and Other Social and Cultural Factors

Ana F. Abraído-Lanza; Mariana Cunha Martins; Rachel C. Shelton; Karen Rocío Flórez

With the marked increase of the Latino population in the United States during the past 20 years, there has been growing interest in the social, cultural, and structural factors that may impede breast cancer screening among Latino women, especially among those subgroups that have been understudied. Acculturation and fatalism are central cultural constructs in these growing fields of research. However, there is great debate on the extent to which acculturation and fatalism affect breast cancer screening among Latinas relative to other social or structural factors or logistical barriers. Moreover, little theoretical work specifies or tests pathways between social, structural, and cultural determinants of screening. This study tests a theoretical model of social and structural (socioeconomic status and access to health care) and cultural factors (acculturation and fatalism) as correlates of mammography screening among Dominican Latinas, a group that has been understudied. The study expands prior work by examining other factors identified as potential impediments to mammography screening, specifically psychosocial (e.g., embarrassment, pain) and logistical (e.g., not knowing how to get a mammogram, cost) barriers. Interview-administered surveys were conducted with 318 Latinas from the Dominican Republic aged 40 years or older. Fatalistic beliefs were not associated with mammogram screening. Greater acculturation assessed as language use was associated with decreased screening. The strongest predictor of decreased screening was perceived barriers. Results highlight the importance of assessing various self-reported psychosocial and logistical barriers to screening. Possible avenues for screening interventions include intensifying public health campaigns and use of personalized messages to address barriers to screening. Results add to a limited body of research on Dominicans, who constitute the fifth largest Latino group in the United States.


Health Communication | 2017

Promoting Health from the Pulpit: A Process Evaluation of HIV Sermons to Reduce HIV Stigma and Promote Testing in African American and Latino Churches

Denise Diaz Payan; Karen Rocío Flórez; Laura M. Bogart; David E. Kanouse; Michael A. Mata; Clyde W. Oden; Kathryn Pitkin Derose

ABSTRACT Embedding health messages into sermons is a potentially valuable strategy to address HIV and other health disparities in churches that predominantly serve racial and ethnic minorities. This study explores implementation of an HIV sermon as part of a multi-component intervention in three churches (Latino Catholic, Latino Pentecostal, and African American Baptist) in high HIV prevalence areas of Los Angeles County, California. Clergy were given an HIV sermon guide that included local public health data, stigma reduction cues, HIV testing messages, and a sample sermon. Findings are based on a process evaluation (i.e., reach, dose delivered, fidelity, and implementation) and in-depth content analysis to explore HIV frames and messages used by clergy. Sermons were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and coded using an inductive approach. Complementary data were collected through systematic observation. Overall, five clergy delivered nine HIV sermons to majority African American or Latino audiences. On average, 174 congregants were reached per sermon. We found large variation in fidelity to communicating key HIV messages from the sermon guide. While promoting HIV testing from the pulpit seemed viable and acceptable to all the participating clergy, fewer embedded explicit stigma reduction cues. Most spoke about HIV using compassionate and non-judgmental terms, however, issue framing varied across clergy. Structured training of clergy may be necessary to implement the more theoretically driven stigma reduction cues included in the sermon guide. More research is needed on the viability and acceptability of embedding specific health promotion messages into sermons.


Obesity science & practice | 2017

Improved parental dietary quality is associated with children’s dietary intake through the home environment

Karen Rocío Flórez; Andrea Richardson; Madhumita Ghosh-Dastidar; Robin Beckman; C. Huang; L. Wagner; Tamara Dubowitz

Improving access to supermarkets has been shown to improve some dietary outcomes, yet there is little evidence for such effects on children. Relatedly, there is a dearth of research assessing the impact of a structural change (i.e. supermarket in a former food desert) on the home environment and its relationship with childrens diet.


Archive | 2017

The Role of Urban Congregations in Addressing HIV

Kathryn Pitkin Derose; David E. Kanouse; Laura M. Bogart; Peter Mendel; Michael A. Mata; Clyde W. Oden; Ricky Bluthenthal; Deborah Owens Collins; Karen Rocío Flórez; Beth Ann Griffin; Ann C. Haas; Jennifer Hawes-Dawson; Kartika Palar; Laura Werber; Malcolm Williams; Blanca X. Domínguez; Alexandria Felton; Frances Aunon; Brian D. Stucky; Dennis E. Corbin; Joshua Breslau

With their extensive social reach and influence across diverse communities, faith-based organizations have an exceptional opportunity to help address human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) worldwide. But in these efforts, many congregations face constraints, including limited size and resources, as well as competing social needs and ministries. Until recently, the roles that faith-based organizations might play have not been clearly defined. In a carefully designed series of studies conducted over eight years, RAND researchers sought to better understand the capacity of urban congregations for HIV prevention and care, specifically in the areas of stigma reduction and HIV testing. The research was conducted collaboratively with community-based partners, including faith and public health leaders. It had three main phases: (1) research to understand the roles that congregations have played throughout the various stages of the HIV epidemic; (2) development of a multi-component, church-based program to address HIV stigma and promote HIV testing in African American and Latino churches; and (3) an evaluation to assess how the program worked in real-world settings.


Aids and Behavior | 2016

Effects of a Pilot Church-Based Intervention to Reduce HIV Stigma and Promote HIV Testing Among African Americans and Latinos.

Kathryn Pitkin Derose; Beth Ann Griffin; David E. Kanouse; Laura M. Bogart; Malcolm V. Williams; Ann C. Haas; Karen Rocío Flórez; Deborah Owens Collins; Jennifer Hawes-Dawson; Michael A. Mata; Clyde W. Oden; Brian D. Stucky


JAMA Internal Medicine | 2012

Mexico–United States Migration and the Prevalence of Obesity: A Transnational Perspective

Karen Rocío Flórez; Tamara Dubowitz; Naomi Saito; Guilherme Borges; Joshua Breslau


Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics | 2015

Associations between Depressive Symptomatology, Diet, and Body Mass Index among Participants in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program

Karen Rocío Flórez; Tamara Dubowitz; Madhumita Ghosh-Dastidar; Robin Beckman; Rebecca L. Collins

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