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Author

Lorine Scott

Other affiliations: University of British Columbia
Bio: Lorine Scott is an academic researcher from Boston Children's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Health education. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 5 publications receiving 81 citations. Previous affiliations of Lorine Scott include University of British Columbia.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The RICH-ER (Responsive, Intersectoral-Interdisciplinary, Child Health- Education and Research) model as discussed by the authors is an alternative model of health care practice for children at risk because of their social, cultural and material circumstances.
Abstract: This paper builds upon insights from a programme of research on culture and health that is informed by critical theoretical perspectives. The evidence generated through this research programme is drawn upon to critically examine the assumptions about the prevailing understandings of the links between culture, health, and health inequalities and to illustrate the need for new paradigms of practice. Using the case of children at risk because of their social, cultural, and material circumstances, the tenets of an alternative model of health care practice, the RICH-ER (Responsive, Intersectoral-Interdisciplinary, Child Health – Education and Research) model was introduced and studied.

28 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study provides beginning evidence that RICHER can better meet the health and health care needs of people, especially those who are vulnerable due to multiple intersecting social determinants of health.
Abstract: The Responsive Interdisciplinary Child-Community Health Education and Research (RICHER) initiative is an intersectoral and interdisciplinary community outreach primary health care (PHC) model. It is being undertaken in partnership with community based organizations in order to address identified gaps in the continuum of health services delivery for ‘at risk’ children and their families. As part of a larger study, this paper reports on whether the RICHER initiative is associated with increased: 1) access to health care for children and families with multiple forms of disadvantage and 2) patient-reported empowerment. This study provides the first examination of a model of delivering PHC, using a Social Paediatrics approach. This was a mixed-methods study, using quantitative and qualitative approaches; it was undertaken in partnership with the community, both organizations and individual providers. Descriptive statistics, including logistic regression of patient survey data (n=86) and thematic analyses of patient interview data (n=7) were analyzed to examine the association between patient experiences with the RICHER initiative and parent-reported empowerment. Respondents found communication with the provider clear, that the provider explained any test results in a way they could understand, and that the provider was compassionate and respectful. Analysis of the survey and in-depth interview data provide evidence that interpersonal communication, particularly the provider’s interpersonal style (e.g., being treated as an equal), was very important. Even after controlling for parents’ education and ethnicity, the provider’s interpersonal style remained positively associated with parent-reported empowerment (p<0.01). This model of PHC delivery is unique in its purposeful and required partnerships between health care providers and community members. This study provides beginning evidence that RICHER can better meet the health and health care needs of people, especially those who are vulnerable due to multiple intersecting social determinants of health. Positive interpersonal communication from providers can play a key role in facilitating situations where individuals have an opportunity to experience success in managing their and their family’s health.

22 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Research results are shared that demonstrate that the RICHER model of engagement with children and families not only effectively fosters access for families with multiple forms of disadvantage, but also improves outcomes by empowering parents of particularly vulnerable children to become more active participants in care.
Abstract: Considerable evidence shows that children and families who are vulnerable because of their social and material circumstances shoulder a disproportionate burden of disease and are more likely to face both social and structural challenges in accessing healthcare. Addressing these issues in children is particularly important as evidence has demonstrated that inequities in health are cumulative over the life course. In this article, the authors report on the RICHER (Responsive, Intersectoral-Interdisciplinary, Child-Community, Health, Education and Research) social pediatrics initiative, which was designed to foster timely access to healthcare across the spectrum from primary care to specialized services for a community of inner-city children who have disproportionately high rates of developmental vulnerability. Their research shows that the initiative has effectively "reformed" health services delivery to provide care in ways that are accessible and responsive to the needs of the population. RICHER is an intersectoral, interdisciplinary outreach initiative that delivers care through the formation of innovative partnerships. The authors share research results that demonstrate that the RICHER model of engagement with children and families not only effectively fosters access for families with multiple forms of disadvantage, but also improves outcomes by empowering parents of particularly vulnerable children to become more active participants in care.

17 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Research insights are shared on an approach that shows promise for engaging across the spectrum of health services to foster access to services and supports for child development to reduce child health inequities.
Abstract: In recent years understanding and addressing child health inequities has become a priority for research and practice. In this paper we share research insights on an approach that shows promise for engaging across the spectrum of health services to foster access to services and supports for child development to reduce child health inequities. As pathways of influence on children’s health and development extend beyond the biomedical domain new approaches to practice are needed to foster health care access and to mobilise needed supports. The Social Paediatrics Initiative has been introduced in one of Canada’s poorest inner city neighbourhoods where a disproportionate number of children experience adverse childhood events and enter school developmentally delayed. The research was undertaken in partnership with practitioners, community based organisations and the formal health services sector. The study gathered data from parents, community members and clinicians to understand the range of conditions that int...

16 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
Vince R. Hunt1
TL;DR: Books and internet are the recommended media to help you improving your quality and performance.
Abstract: Inevitably, reading is one of the requirements to be undergone. To improve the performance and quality, someone needs to have something new every day. It will suggest you to have more inspirations, then. However, the needs of inspirations will make you searching for some sources. Even from the other people experience, internet, and many books. Books and internet are the recommended media to help you improving your quality and performance.

408 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
04 May 1984-JAMA
TL;DR: This book has a deceptively simple title but its contents are complex and the problems and questions often posed but unanswered are as follows.
Abstract: This book has a deceptively simple title but its contents are complex. It is an outgrowth of a seminar at the Center for Advanced Study in Behavioral Sciences from 1979 to 1980. The 12 chapters are written by individual authors from varied fields, so some overlaps and repetitions are inevitable. As this reviewer sees it, the problems and questions often posed but unanswered are as follows. First, there is the fact that relatively little research in this area has been focused on children as compared with adults. Then, there is the difficulty in adapting a definition of stress to which all would agree. What is a stress for some may not be for others. Do we measure stress psychologically or physiologically? How do we separate the effects of acute severe stress from that which is chronic and of less intensity? To add another complication, why do some youths and adults

209 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The concept of critical social justice is explored as a powerful ethical lens through which to view inequities in health and in healthcare access and strategies for engaging in dialogue about knowledge and actions to promote more equitable health and healthcare from local to global levels.
Abstract: The authors use the backdrop of the Healthy People 2010 initiative to contribute to a discussion encompassing social justice from local to national to global contexts. Drawing on findings from their programs of research, they explore the concept of critical social justice as a powerful ethical lens through which to view inequities in health and in healthcare access. They examine the kind of knowledge needed to move toward the ideal of social justice and point to strategies for engaging in dialogue about knowledge and actions to promote more equitable health and healthcare from local to global levels.

115 citations