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Criss, Shaniece

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Criss

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Shaniece

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Criss, Shaniece

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  • Publication
    Media, Health Communication, and the Cancer Risk Factors of Smoking and Obesity
    (2015-04-27) Criss, Shaniece; Davison, Kirsten; Gortmaker, Steven; Vishwanth, K. Vish
    Introduction: Smoking is the leading cause of preventable death in the United States, and obesity is the second cause. Both are risk factors for various types of cancer. Specifically, smoking is linked to lung, esophageal, bladder, kidney, and stomach cancers; and obesity is linked to postmenopausal breast, colorectal, endometrial, pancreatic, and gallbladder cancers. Multiple factors affect health behavior, and this dissertation investigated the role of media and health communication as modifiable influences related to smoking and obesity. Methods: Paper 1 examined the association between average hours of television viewing per day and smoking status among all Hispanic adults (n=675) and within the subgroups of Puerto Rican (n=182) and Dominican (n=396) adults using multivariable logistic regression models. Paper 2 explored how health information sources inform decision-making related to childhood obesity among Hispanic mothers during their children’s first 1000 days of life (conception-age 24 months) using seven focus groups. Paper 3 documented the development and uptake of a media competition (with 595 student participants) implemented in the context of a multi-sector community intervention targeting childhood obesity prevention through process evaluation. Paper 3 also examined community, organizational and provider characteristics that explain variation in implementation effectiveness and described diffusion of the media competition across community sectors using 54 key informant interviews. Results: In Paper 1, Hispanic adults who watched 5+ hours (5-15 hours) of TV per day were more likely to be a smoker than those who watched ≤2 hours, with the same association among Puerto Ricans. In Paper 2, trusted health information sources for Hispanic mothers included health care providers, female and male family members, BabyCenter.com and other Internet sources, selected social media, and television. In Paper 3, salient themes that emerged as implementation facilitators were having a cascade of champions and adaptability through providing opportunity to participate in the media competition outside traditional class time. Discussion: Papers 1 and 2 support the importance of understanding the nuances and differences in Hispanic adults in order to design appropriate media and health communication interventions. Paper 3 provides insight about how to replicate media competitions for children in other communities.
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    Publication
    Reducing Hispanic Children's Obesity Risk Factors in the First 1000 Days of Life: A Qualitative Analysis
    (Hindawi Publishing Corporation, 2015) Woo Baidal, Jennifer A.; Criss, Shaniece; Goldman, Roberta; Perkins, Meghan; Cunningham, Courtney; Taveras, Elsie
    Objectives:. Modifiable behaviors during the first 1000 days (conception age 24 months) mediate Hispanic children's obesity disparities. We aimed to examine underlying reasons for early life obesity risk factors and identify potential early life intervention strategies. Methods:. We conducted 7 focus groups with 49 Hispanic women who were pregnant or had children < age 24 months. Domains included influences on childhood obesity risk factors and future intervention ideas. We analyzed data with immersion-crystallization methods until no new themes emerged. Results:. Themes included coping with pregnancy may trump healthy eating and physical activity; early life weight gain is unrelated to later life obesity; fear of infant hunger drives bottle and early solids introduction; beliefs about infant taste promote early solids and sugary beverage introduction; and belief that screen time promotes infant development. Mothers identified physicians, nutritionists, and relatives as important health information sources and expressed interest in mobile technology and group or home visits for interventions. Conclusion:. Opportunities exist in the first 1000 days to improve Hispanic mothers' understanding of the role of early life weight gain in childhood obesity and other obesity risk factors. Interventions that link health care and public health systems and include extended family may prevent obesity among Hispanic children.