Community Health from Engagement and Environmental Renewal (CHEER) will leverage previous Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) community engagement projects to reach and intervene on a high need population. Disadvantage and poverty have long-term and transgenerational adverse impacts on social interaction and cohesion and residents' emotional and physical health. Mothers living and raising children in these conditions face multiple stressors without the community support previous generations relied on. Decades of research on American cities have connected the social, economic, and physical characteristics of neighborhoods with a lack of social cohesion, inability to maintain shared norms of acceptable behavior,and increases in health disparities and risky behaviors. Social cohesion and collective efficacy inversely associate with depression among youth. In a parallel manner, improved parenting practices and youth behavior directly associate with neighborhood social interactions and social cohesion. While these associations are suggestive, CHEER will directly test causal hypotheses at the neighborhood and family levels in a randomized control trial, that can significantly advance the evidence base for public health interventions: Family Youth Intervention (FYI) and an Environment: Social and Physical Intervention (ESPI) to increase social interaction, social cohesion, and collective efficacy and influence wellbeing of mothers and their youth.
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Problem Behaviors in Children Ages 11 to 16 Years.
Timeframe: Baseline, 1-week and 6-month Follow-up
Age of Sexual Initiation
Timeframe: Baseline
Number of Participants Who Participates in Risky Sex
Timeframe: Baseline
Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods: Community Survey- Cohesion Index Subscale
Timeframe: Baseline, 12-month Follow up 1 and 18-month Follow up 2
Number of Participants Who Like Living in Their Neighborhood
Timeframe: Baseline
Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods: Community Survey- Neighborhood Perception
Timeframe: Baseline, 12-month Follow up and 18-month Follow-up
Social Contacts and Resources Scale
Timeframe: Baseline, 12- month Follow up 1, and 18-month Follow up 2