MAPPR Team members partnered with local high school and
college students for a project entitled “Por Nuestros Ojos” (“Through Our Eyes”). The project was based on PhotoVoice,
which uses participatory photography to help underserved and marginalized
communities share their experiences and document their reality.
For this particular project, students from UNC-Charlotte
were assembled with Hispanic high school students and challenged with capturing
images on film that, in their view, represented issues and circumstances that
either positively or negatively impacted their health and the health of their
community. The high school
students were chosen from a youth-led advocacy group called “United 4 The
Dream” (U4TD), which operates in collaboration with Latin American Coalition.
The Por Nuestros Ojos project was part of a larger study being
conducted by MAPPR entitled “A Transdisciplinary Approach for the Evaluation of
Social Determinants of Health”, which looks at cultural, environmental and
other factors that contribute to the health of communities.
The research team took data collected from previous research
to determine which communities seemed to be at highest risk for health-related
disparities. The youth underwent
trainings before being sent into these communities with cameras. The resulting images were then reviewed
by the students, and the most representative photos were selected. The students were asked to prepare a
brief description of the image and how they felt it impacted health. The final images and descriptions were
exhibited at a PhotoVoice event at the Latin American Coalition.
Issues cited as positively (+) or negatively (-) affecting
health included:
· Trash and lack of property maintenance (-)
· Visible water and air pollution (-)
· Local Women, Infant and Children offices/grocery stores/fire stations/schools (+)
· Fast food restaurants/scam doctors (-)
· Track/athletic courts/playgrounds (+/- depending on use and upkeep)
“Por Nuestros Ojos
served to validate and supplement what some of our research had already
determined,” says Claire Schuch, PhD Student at UNC-Charlotte and part of the
MAPPR Research Team. “It was also
used to deepen and develop a more nuanced understanding of the communities,
neighborhoods, and individuals at the heart of our research and intervention
efforts.”
The project also served to give a voice to a group of
traditionally unrepresented members of the Hispanic community: the youth. Many of the participants expressed
gratitude at the opportunity to participate in this project and to have their
opinions be presented in such a public forum.
To read the full paper on Por Nuestros Ojos, please click HERE.
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