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2026 Free Professional Development and WorkshopsFrom Pandemic Response to Cancer Prevention: Lessons from a Longstanding CBPR Partnership with People Experiencing HomelessnessDate: Wednesday, February 11, 2026 Time: 4:00 to 5:00 PM (EST) Location: Zoom (Meeting ID: 831 9646 6428) Webinar OverviewThis webinar, hosted by the American Academy of Health Behavior, will describe the development of a community–academic partnership with people experiencing homelessness that began as a community-based participatory research (CBPR) effort to support COVID-19 response and infectious disease preparedness. Dr. Rodrigues will reflect on how centering lived experience during a public health crisis built trust, shaped research priorities, and created the foundation for sustained collaboration. Drawing on this trajectory, she will highlight how this partnership led to new research directions, with a focus on recent work bringing cervical cancer screening to a homeless shelter. The talk will discuss challenges and successes in conducting community-centered health behavior research in homelessness settings and offer lessons for building partnerships that endure beyond a single funding opportunity or health crisis. Speaker
Listening First, Researching Together: An Example of Building Community-Centered Research on Adolescent Physical Activity, Mental Health, and Social ConnectionDate: Thursday, February 26, 2026 Time: 4:00 to 5:00 PM (EST) Location: Zoom (Meeting ID: 875 0509 6487) Webinar OverviewCommunity-centered research requires more than good intentions. It demands ongoing listening, flexibility, and genuine reciprocity at every stage. This webinar, hosted by the American Academy of Health Behavior, chronicles a multi-year research journey that began with a partnership with Boys & Girls Clubs and evolved through continuous dialogue with community stakeholders and youth participants. Our work started when club leadership identified summer programming needs related to adolescent physical activity and social connection. After a successful project and through many conversations with club staff and administrators, they helped us understand a deeper need: mental health evaluation and social emotional learning support for their members. We responded by conducting a longitudinal evaluation of their summer care program and co-creating a social emotional learning and physical activity program alongside girls in the club. As our partnership deepened, club leadership shared concerns about teens who age out of their programming and the unique challenges these youth face around physical activity, mental health, and social connectedness during summer months when structured support disappears. This community-identified gap became the foundation for a K01 grant to better understand how social and built environment factors influence adolescent mental health and physical activity during summer using ecological momentary assessment. This phase required us to extend beyond the club setting and conduct study visits in families' homes, which brought new challenges in preparation, coordination, and relationship building. Throughout this journey, we prioritized participant ease and comfort while giving data back to participants and partners through community reports and individualized family reports. Dr. Prochnow will walk through each of these steps, sharing the challenges encountered, the approaches used to center participants, and the successes that emerged. Speaker
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