Grant Details
Grant Number: |
5U01CA290613-02 Interpret this number |
Primary Investigator: |
Castro, Eida |
Organization: |
Ponce School Of Medicine |
Project Title: |
Mental Health Cpr: Transforming Cancer Survivors' Mental Health with Community Participatory Reach for Equity |
Fiscal Year: |
2024 |
Abstract
PROJECT SUMMARY
Hispanic cancer patients and survivors face social and structural inequalities perpetuating mental health
disparities. Despite these challenges, the study team and community partners are convinced that psychosocial
and mental health inequities perpetrated by socio-environmental factors can be overcome through community-
based multilevel interventions; yet none currently exist. This project is highly transformative and innovative
because it disrupts traditional psycho-oncology mental health care to address upstream structural (limited access
to psychosocial and mental health inequities and psychological distress screening), social (mental health
stigma), and biological (stress and inflammation biomarkers) determinants of mental health among Hispanic
cancer patients and survivors. This transformation will be achieved by simultaneously integrating grassroots
(community leaders) and top-down (institutional) resources to increase access to specialized psycho-oncology
mental health care services and psychological distress screening while eradicating mental health stigma. First,
the team will train lay community leaders to become community health workers addressing psycho-oncology
mental health prevention efforts. Second, the investigators, along with community stakeholders, will package the
proposed multilevel community-based intervention by integrating and adapting a suite of individual/community
interventions and service initiatives previously developed and implemented by members of the research team
and proven to positively impact Puerto Rican Hispanic cancer patients and survivors’ psychosocial and mental
health wellbeing. At the community level, the team will first train lay community leaders to become community
mental health workers through the PHSU-RCMI Community Training Institute for Health Disparities. At the
interpersonal level, the community-based intervention will integrate family-communications skills to impact
Hispanic cancer patients' and survivor family caregivers’ support quality. At the individual level, the intervention
will impact all phases of the mental health prevention continuum to prevent and address psychological distress
resulting from cancer and its treatment. At the biological level, investigators will assess the effect of the
community intervention on psychological stress biomarkers (cortisol and catecholamine metabolites) and
inflammation markers (cytokines and chemokines) related to chronic stress and cancer health outcomes. The
team anticipates this project will push a transformative population-level impact through a multilevel approach
that empowers communities to understand and address mental health among individuals.
Publications
None