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Community Advisory Board
Purpose
The HHPC Community Advisory Board (CAB) is a coalition of Harlem residents and health professionals who provide leadership and guidance to the HHPC. Specifically, the CAB’s purpose is to advocate for the creation and utilization of best health promotion and disease prevention practices in the Harlem community, facilitate the dissemination of best health practice information resulting from study and research to the residents of the Harlem community, and collaborate with other PRC/CABs in furthering the goals of the PRCs and the benefits of community-based research.
Harlem Health Promotion CAB Center Vision Statement
We envision a Harlem free of health disparities where all residents can access and utilize the necessary resources to lead healthy productive lives. As we strive for a healthy Harlem, our vision for the Harlem Health Promotion Center is to be a center of excellence in health communication and education that will provide consumers with the knowledge, skills and motivation necessary to adopt healthier lifestyles.
Role in HHPC Planning and Activities
HHPC’s CAB has been involved in HHPC activities since its inception, and is directly involved in all aspects of HHPC activities in an advisory capacity. As active advisors, CAB members assist in determining HHPC’s overall direction and scope of services. They also participate in subcommittees and research projects that support HHPC’s overall mission.
Close ties with the community provide critical mechanisms for bi-directional communication between diverse community constituents and HHPC faculty and staff. Board members are active in suggesting potential areas of investigation, as well as identifying potential community partners and sites. Further, the CAB has constructed a community-specific dissemination plan for HHPC findings.
In addition to guiding the direction of HHPC research and service, CAB members work on sub-committees that foster CAB-HHPC collaboration and further support the HHPC mission. Four standing committees, Scientific Collaboration, Dissemination, Advocacy and Membership/By-Laws, along with ad-hoc committees, allow for efficient and consistent collaboration. With quarterly board meetings and frequent subcommittee meetings, each board member has the opportunity to contribute their expertise in a direct and ongoing manner.
Officers
Chair: William S. Witherspoon, Jr.
Advocacy Committee: To be named
Bylaws/Membership Committee: Debra Jackson
Dissemination Committee: Goldie Watkins-Bryant
Scientific Collaboration Committee: Mario Drummonds
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Members
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Each CAB member has a distinguished record of service and advocacy in the Harlem community, and CAB members maintain direct linkages to elected officials through the administration of their leadership roles.
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John L. Brown is an attorney and practices labor and employment law. He has been resident of Harlem for over 45 years, and is a member of Community Board 11. |
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Goldie Watkins Bryant, MPH is a retired Program Director for the Central Harlem Healthy Start Program of the Northern Manhattan Perinatal Partnership, Inc. She retired from the New York State Department of Health in 1995 as Associate Commissioner responsible for the New York City Regional Office which included the provision of Family Health and HIV/AIDS programs to New York City, Long Island, Westchester, Putnam and Rockland County residents. During her 27-year tenure with the Department of Health, as the first African American Health Physicist in the country, she developed New York State's radioactive materials control program which was initiated under Governor Nelson Rockefeller. |
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Mario Drummonds, MSW is the Executive Director of the Northern Manhattan Perinatal Partnership, a local maternal and child health agency working to improve the health status of pregnant and parenting women in Northern Manhattan. He is also the founder of Chocolate Chips Electronic, Inc., a full-service information technology and marketing company. The mission of Chocolate Chips is to spread the knowledge and use of information technology throughout poor working class neighborhoods in Brooklyn, NY. |
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Conrad Graves, PhD is a Retired professor in the Department of Social Work at Kean University. He is the founder and President of Central Harlem Inter-Agency Propuns, Inc, a project created to introduce a health prevention program within the Central Harlem community. |
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Debra Jackson studied engineering at the City College of New York. She is a Production Manager for Teachers College Press, and has served as an officer of the Convent Avenue Baptist Church and as a Girl Scout Leader. She is also a consumer advocate. |
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Sydney Moshette, MSW is a retired Director of Reality House, Inc., a substance abuse prevention and treatment services facility. He served as a charter member of Youth in Action anti-poverty program, and vice chair of the Northern Manhattan Perinatal Partnership. |
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Ademola Olugebefola, PhD is an internationally renowned artist and has lectured, presented papers, taught, and served as artist in residence. He has presented his multimedia presentation, "From Horus to Hip-Hop: The Creative & Cultural Evolution of the African Diaspora," at many colleges and universities. |
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Benjamin Ortiz, MD is Assistant Attending Physician and Assistant Professor of Clinical Pediatrics and Population and Family Health at the Columbia University Medical Center-The Affiliation at Harlem Hospital Center (HHC) and the Mailman School of Public Health. Dr. Ortiz's clinical responsibilities include general pediatrics in the Pediatric Ambulatory Center of HHC. His clinical research responsibilities include being co-Principal Investigator and Medical Director of the Harlem Children' Zone Asthma Initiative, and Project Director of a childhood obesity prevention program at HHC. He is a consultant for the American Lung Association as an educator in the Open Airways in Schools program and as Medical Director of the SuperKids Summer Experience. He sits on the boards numerous community-based and citywide public health organizations.
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Tracey Tann Parker, RN, MSN, MPH, began her nursing career in 1985 at St. Luke's Hospital as a Licensed Practical Nurse. She graduated in 1987 from Phillips-Beth Israel School of Nursing and worked in Neurology and Neurosurgery, until transferring to Coronary Care. She is presently a Team Leader in Coronary Care at Beth Israel Medical Center. After graduating from Lehman College with a BS in Nursing, Ms. Tann Parker received an MS in Community Health Nursing and an MPH in Urban Public Health from Hunter College. A lifelong Harlem resident, Ms. Tann Parker is interested in the self- management of chronic diseases, such as hypertension and coronary artery disease.
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Muriel Petioni, MD is a retired family practice physician at Harlem Hospital in New York City. Dr. Petioni has been a formidable force in the Harlem community for over 47 years, as reflected in her vast community affiliations and her commitment to community medicine, social justice, health care for the disadvantaged and aged, black medical education and women' issues. |
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Jamel Scutchins, MS, BS, has been a Health Coordinator/Event Planner for the Morningside Area Alliance, an organization focusing on improving education, youth services, public health and community development in the Morningside Heights neighborhood of Northern Manhattan, since 2004. With a Masters degree in biology, Ms. Scutchins has also worked in the fields of biomedical research and secondary education. She is interested in both personal and community health and wellness, as well as education and community collaborations.
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Donna R. Williams, DDS, began her dental career in 1983 at Howard University as a Dental Hygienist. She graduated from Baltimore College Dental Surgery/University of Maryland (the first dental school in the world) in 1990. Dr. Williams has completed a fellowship in holistic dentistry and is among only 150 dentists around the world who are certified to use the only FDA-approved laser for periodontal surgery (this is for patients with advanced gum disease and impending tooth loss). Dr. Williams is a member of the American Dental Association, the Academy of General Dentistry, the National Society of Dental Practitioners, the New York State Academy of General Dentistry, and the Institute of Natural Dentistry. |
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Olajide Williams, MD, MPH, received his medical degree from the University of Lagos, Nigeria, and a Masters degree from Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health. He is currently an Associate Professor of Clinical Neurology at Columbia University and Attending Neurologist at New York Presbyterian Hospital and Harlem Hospital Center. Dr Williams has developed nationally-recognized public stroke programs, including Hip Hop Stroke in partnership with the National Stroke Association, and he is the founder and director of the Hip Hop Public Health Education Center, which focuses on developing innovative multimedia solutions for health behavior change in high-risk communities. Dr Williams is the author of Stroke Diaries: A Guide for Survivors and their Families (2010). |
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William S. Witherspoon Jr., LMSW is a health care executive whose life long commitment has been dedicated to helping people reach their fullest potential. For the past 18 years, he has worked as the Executive Director of the Upper Manhattan Mental Health Center, which is a community-based behavioral health care organization that provides an array of human services to thousands of children, adults and senior citizens each year. |
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