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Progress in Community Health Partnerships | 2016

Research and Engagement Strategies for Young Adult Immigrants Without Documentation: Lessons Learned Through Community Partnership

Marissa Raymond-Flesch; Rachel Siemons; Claire D. Brindis

Abstract: Background: Limited research has focused on undocumented immigrants’ health and access to care. Objectives: This paper describes participant engagement strategies used to investigate the health needs of immigrants eligible for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA). Methods: Community-based strategies engaged advocates and undocumented Californians in study design and recruitment. Outreach in diverse settings, social media, and participant-driven sampling recruited 61 DACA-eligible focus group participants. Lessons Learned: Social media, community-based organizations (CBOs), family members, advocacy groups, and participant-driven sampling were the most successful recruitment strategies. Participants felt engaging in research was instrumental for sharing their concerns with health care providers and policymakers, noteworthy in light of their previously identified fears and mistrust of government officials. Conclusions: Using multiple culturally responsive strategies including participant-driven sampling, engagement with CBOs, and use of social media, those eligible for DACA eagerly engage as research participants. Educating researchers and institutional review boards (IRBs) about legal and safety concerns can improve research engagement.


Gateways: International Journal of Community Research and Engagement | 2018

Community-engaged Research with Rural Latino Adolescents: Design and Implementation Strategies to Study the Social Determinants of Health

Megan Comfort; Marissa Raymond-Flesch; Colette L. Auerswald; Linda McGlone; Marisol Chavez; Alexandra M. Minnis

The health of adolescents, perhaps more than in any other period of their life, is shaped by the social determinants of health (SDH). The constellation of SDH that disadvantages a specific group’s health may also make members of that population unable or unwilling to engage in health research. To build a comprehensive body of knowledge about how SDH operate within a specific social context, researchers must design studies that take into account how various vulnerabilities and oppressions may affect people’s experiences of being recruited, interviewed and retained in a study. In 2014, we initiated a prospective cohort study with Latino youth living in the agricultural area of Salinas, California. We began this study with the understanding that it was imperative to develop methodological strategies that actively addressed potential challenges in ways that were culturally responsive, community engaged and inclusive. In this article, we describe our approach to developing best practices in four key areas: 1) building community partnerships and engagement; 2) consideration of staffing and staff support; 3) engaging youth’s perspectives; and 4) developing culturally appropriate research protocols. In our sample of 599 participants, nearly all youth identify as Latinx (94 per cent), half (49 per cent) have at least one parent employed as a farmworker, 60 per cent reside in crowded housing conditions, and 42 per cent have mothers who did not complete high school. Given these multiple vulnerabilities, we view a robust number of youth expressing interest in study participation, the willingness of their parents to permit their children to be enrolled, and the achievement of an ambitious sample target as evidence that our efforts to undertake best practices in community-engaged and inclusive research were well received.


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2014

“There Is No Help Out There and If There Is, It's Really Hard to Find”: A Qualitative Study of the Health Concerns and Health Care Access of Latino “DREAMers”

Marissa Raymond-Flesch; Rachel Siemons; Nadereh Pourat; Ken Jacobs; Claire D. Brindis


Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health | 2017

Coming of Age on the Margins: Mental Health and Wellbeing Among Latino Immigrant Young Adults Eligible for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA).

Rachel Siemons; Marissa Raymond-Flesch; Colette L. Auerswald; Claire D. Brindis


Archive | 2014

Realizing the Dream for Californians Eligible for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA): Demographics and Health Coverage

Claire D. Brindis; Max W. Hadler; Ken Jacobs; Laurel Lucia; Nadereh Pourat; Marissa Raymond-Flesch; Rachel Siemons; Efrain Talamantes


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2014

“There is No Help Out There and if There is, It's Really Hard to Find”: A Qualitative Study of the Healthcare Access and Concerns of Latino “Dreamers”

Marissa Raymond-Flesch; Rachel Siemons; Nadereh Pourat; Ken Jacobs; Claire D. Brindis


BMC Public Health | 2017

Building social capital to promote adolescent wellbeing: a qualitative study with teens in a Latino agricultural community

Marissa Raymond-Flesch; Colette L. Auerswald; Linda McGlone; Megan Comfort; Alexandra M. Minnis


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2018

The Negative Health Consequences of Anti-Immigration Policies

Marissa Raymond-Flesch


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2017

Neighborhood Environment and Resilience: Associations Among 8th Grade Latino Youth Residing in an Agricultural Community

Alexandra M. Minnis; Marissa Raymond-Flesch; Linda McGlone; Colette L. Auerswald


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2017

To Address Health Disparities for Latino Youth, Promote Their Engagement in Health Care

Marissa Raymond-Flesch

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Rachel Siemons

University of California

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Ken Jacobs

University of California

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Nadereh Pourat

University of California

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Laurel Lucia

University of California

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Max W. Hadler

University of California

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