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Dive into the research topics where Wizdom Powell is active.

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Featured researches published by Wizdom Powell.


Behavioral Medicine | 2016

Masculinity and Race-Related Factors as Barriers to Health Help-Seeking Among African American Men.

Wizdom Powell; Leslie B. Adams; Yasmin Cole-Lewis; Amma A. Agyemang; Rachel D. Upton

Mens tendency to delay health help-seeking is largely attributed to masculinity, but findings scarcely focus on African American men who face additional race-related, help-seeking barriers. Building principally on reactance theory, we test a hypothesized model situating racial discrimination, masculinity norms salience (MNS), everyday racism (ERD), racial identity, sense of control (SOC), and depressive symptomatology as key barriers to African American mens health help-seeking. A total of 458 African American men were recruited primarily from US barbershops in the Western and Southern regions. The primary outcome was Barriers to Help-Seeking Scale (BHSS) scores. The hypothesized model was investigated with confirmatory factor and path analysis with tests for measurement invariance. Our model fit was excellent CFI = 0.99; TLI = 1.00; RMSEA = 0.00, and 90% CI [0.00, 0.07] and operated equivalently across different age, income, and education strata. Frequent ERD and higher MNS contributed to higher BHHS scores. The relationship between ERD exposure and BHHS scores was partially mediated by diminished SOC and greater depressive symptomatology. Interventions aimed at addressing African American mens health help-seeking should not only address masculinity norms but also threats to sense of control, and negative psychological sequelae induced by everyday racism.


Journal of Community Health | 2017

Medical Mistrust and Colorectal Cancer Screening Among African Americans.

Leslie B. Adams; Jennifer Richmond; Giselle Corbie-Smith; Wizdom Powell

Despite well-documented benefits of colorectal cancer (CRC) screening, African Americans are less likely to be screened and have higher CRC incidence and mortality than Whites. Emerging evidence suggests medical mistrust may influence CRC screening disparities among African Americans. The goal of this systematic review was to summarize evidence investigating associations between medical mistrust and CRC screening among African Americans, and variations in these associations by gender, CRC screening type, and level of mistrust. MEDLINE, CINAHL, Web of Science, PsycINFO, Google Scholar, Cochrane Database, and EMBASE were searched for English-language articles published from January 2000 to November 2016. 27 articles were included for this review (15 quantitative, 11 qualitative and 1 mixed methods study). The majority of quantitative studies linked higher mistrust scores with lower rates of CRC screening among African Americans. Most studies examined mistrust at the physician level, but few quantitative studies analyzed mistrust at an organizational level (i.e. healthcare systems, insurance, etc.). Quantitative differences in mistrust and CRC screening by gender were mixed, but qualitative studies highlighted fear of experimentation and intrusiveness of screening methods as unique themes among African American men. Limitations include heterogeneity in mistrust and CRC measures, and possible publication bias. Future studies should address methodological challenges found in this review, such as limited use of validated and reliable mistrust measures, examination of CRC screening outcomes beyond beliefs and intent, and a more thorough analysis of gender roles in the cancer screening process.


Journal of Urban Health-bulletin of The New York Academy of Medicine | 2018

Implementing a Prison Medicaid Enrollment Program for Inmates with a Community Inpatient Hospitalization

David L. Rosen; Catherine A. Grodensky; Anna R. Miller; Carol E. Golin; Marisa Elena Domino; Wizdom Powell; David A. Wohl

In 2011, North Carolina (NC) created a program to facilitate Medicaid enrollment for state prisoners experiencing community inpatient hospitalization during their incarceration. The program, which has been described as a model for prison systems nationwide, has saved the NC prison system approximately


Archive | 2016

They Can’t Breathe: Why Neighborhoods Matter for the Health of African American Men and Boys

Wizdom Powell; Tamara Taggart; Jennifer Richmond; Leslie B. Adams; Andre Brown

10 million annually in hospitalization costs and has potential to increase prisoners’ access to Medicaid benefits as they return to their communities. This study aims to describe the history of NC’s Prison-Based Medicaid Enrollment Assistance Program (PBMEAP), its structure and processes, and program personnel’s perspectives on the challenges and facilitators of program implementation. We conducted semi-structured interviews and a focus group with PBMEAP personnel including two administrative leaders, two “Medicaid Facilitators,” and ten social workers. Seven major findings emerged: 1) state legislation was required to bring the program into existence; 2) the legislation was prompted by projected cost savings; 3) program development required close collaboration between the prison system and state Medicaid office; 4) technology and data sharing played key roles in identifying inmates who previously qualified for Medicaid and would likely qualify if hospitalized; 5) a small number of new staff were sufficient to make the program scalable; 6) inmates generally cooperated in filling out Medicaid applications, and their cooperation was encouraged when social workers explained possible benefits of receiving Medicaid after release; and 7) the most prominent program challenges centered around interaction with county Departments of Social Services, which were responsible for processing applications. Our findings could be instructive to both Medicaid non-expansion and expansion states that have either implemented similar programs or are considering implementing prison Medicaid enrollment programs in the future.


Journal of Black Psychology | 2017

The Role of Racial Identity and Implicit Racial Bias in Self-Reported Racial Discrimination: Implications for Depression Among African American Men:

David H. Chae; Wizdom Powell; Amani Nuru-Jeter; Mia A. Smith-Bynum; Eleanor K. Seaton; Tyrone A. Forman; Rodman Turpin; Robert M. Sellers

Family influences on the health of African American men and boys must be considered in tandem with those produced by broader social ecologic exposures. The purpose of this chapter is to make the case for exploring the impact of neighborhoods on health risk-taking (e.g., substance abuse) among African American males during emerging adulthood, when substance use escalates. The central hypothesis, grounded in the Phenomenological Variant of Ecological Systems Theory (PVEST), and psychobiological models of stress, coping, and risk-taking, is that neighborhoods with high violence, alcohol, and drug activity instigate substance use through increased daily stress experiences, leading in turn to higher negative affect, emotion suppression, and dysregulated cortisol and testosterone. We place our arguments in the context of recent high profile deaths of African American males (e.g., Eric Garner) and discuss ways to advance future neighborhoods-level research with African American males as they transition to adulthood.


American Journal of Orthopsychiatry | 2017

Buried Hatchets, Marked Locations: Forgiveness, Everyday Racial Discrimination, and African American Men's Depressive Symptomatology.

Wizdom Powell; Kira Hudson Banks; Jacqueline S. Mattis

Racial discrimination is conceptualized as a psychosocial stressor that has negative implications for mental health. However, factors related to racial identity may influence whether negative experiences are interpreted as instances of racial discrimination and subsequently reported as such in survey instruments, particularly given the ambiguous nature of contemporary racism. Along these lines, dimensions of racial identity may moderate associations between racial discrimination and mental health outcomes. This study examined relationships between racial discrimination, racial identity, implicit racial bias, and depressive symptoms among African American men between 30 and 50 years of age (n = 95). Higher racial centrality was associated with greater reports of racial discrimination, while greater implicit anti-Black bias was associated with lower reports of racial discrimination. In models predicting elevated depressive symptoms, holding greater implicit anti-Black bias in tandem with reporting lower racial discrimination was associated with the highest risk. Results suggest that unconscious as well as conscious processes related to racial identity are important to consider in measuring racial discrimination, and should be integrated in studies of racial discrimination and mental health.


Aids Education and Prevention | 2017

Changing Attitudes About Concurrency Among Young African Americans: Results of a Radio Campaign

Adaora A. Adimora; Victor J. Schoenbach; Joan R. Cates; Anna B. Cope; Catalina Ramirez; Wizdom Powell; Robert P. Agans

Everyday racial discrimination (ERD) is linked to pronounced depressive symptomatology among African American men. Yet, many African American men do not experience depressive symptoms following ERD exposure often because they use positive coping strategies that offset its effects. Granting forgiveness is 1 coping strategy associated with less depression. However, extant findings about the mental health benefits of forgiveness are somewhat mixed and pay scarce attention to offenses which are fleeting, historically rooted, and committed outside of close personal relationships. Evidence further suggest age-related differences in forgiveness, ERD exposure, and depressive symptoms. We explore the extent to which 3 strategies of granting forgiveness of ERD—letting go of negative emotion (negative release), embracing positive emotion (positive embrace), or combining both (combined)—are associated with less depressive symptomatology in 674 African American men (ages 18 through 79). Building on past findings, we also test whether these forgiveness strategies moderate the ERD-depressive symptoms relationship for men in different age groups (18 through 25, 26 through 39, and 40). Higher combined and negative release forgiveness were directly related to lower depressive symptoms among 18 through 25 year olds. We also detected a less pronounced positive relationship between ERD and depressive symptoms among men reporting high levels of combined (18 through 25 and 26 through 39 groups) and negative release (26 through 39 and 40+ groups) forgiveness. We observed a more pronounced positive ERD-depressive symptoms relationship among 18 through 25 and 26 through 39 year olds reporting lower forgiveness. When faced with frequent ERD, younger African American men may have the most difficult time burying hatchets without marking their location but experience more positive mental health benefits when they do.


Archives of Sexual Behavior | 2018

The Association Between Men’s Concern About Demonstrating Masculine Characteristics and Their Sexual Risk Behaviors: Findings from the Dominican Republic

Paul J. Fleming; Clare Barrington; Wizdom Powell; Ann Gottert; Leonel Lerebours; Yeycy Donastorg; Maximo O. Brito

We created and evaluated an 8-month campaign of provocative radio ads to change attitudes about concurrent (overlapping) sexual partnerships among young African Americans. We created a concurrency attitude scale and compared its score distributions in independent samples of African Americans, ages 18-34 years, interviewed by telephone before (n = 678) and after (n = 479) the campaign. Pre- and post-campaign samples reflected similar response rates (pre: 32.6%; post: 31.8%) and distributions of personal characteristics. Reported exposure to concurrency messages was greater after the campaign (pre: 6.3%, post: 30.9%), and mean scores indicated less acceptance of concurrency (pre: 3.40 [95% CI 3.23, 3.57]; post: 2.62 [2.46, 2.78]). Score differences were not a function of differences in composition of the samples (adjusted means: pre: 3.37 [3.21, 3.53]; post: 2.62 [2.47, 2.76]). Findings demonstrate that a carefully targeted, intensive mass media campaign can change attitudes about concurrency, which should facilitate behavior change.


Race and Social Problems | 2017

What Would I Know About Mercy? Faith and Optimistic Expectancies Among African Americans

Jacqueline S. Mattis; Wizdom Powell; Nyasha A. Grayman; Yohance Murray; Yasmin Cole-Lewis; Janelle R. Goodwill


Archive | 2016

Positive psychology in African Americans.

Jacqueline S. Mattis; Nyasha Grayman Simpson; Wizdom Powell; Riana Elyse Anderson; Lawanna R. Kimbro; Jacob H. Mattis

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Jennifer Richmond

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Leslie B. Adams

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Anna R. Miller

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Carol E. Golin

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Catherine A. Grodensky

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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David A. Wohl

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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David L. Rosen

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Marisa Elena Domino

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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