Journal Home
Search for

Volume 33, Issue 5, Pages 418-427 (November 2007)


View previous. 10 of 13 View next.

Lay Health Advisor Interventions Among Hispanics/Latinos: A Qualitative Systematic Review

Scott D. Rhodes, PhD, MPHaCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Kristie Long Foley, PhD, MPHa, Carlos S. Zometa, PhD, MSPHb, Fred R. Bloom, PhDc

Background

With an expanding Hispanic/Latino community in the United States, practitioners and researchers working to promote health and prevent disease have relied on lay health advisor (LHA) models to address a variety of health issues. The primary goal of this systematic review was to explore how LHA approaches have been used and evaluated within Hispanic/Latino communities in the U.S.

Methods

Ten literature databases were searched from their inception through July 2006, using keywords associated with LHA approaches. This review consisted of human studies that included adult Hispanics or Latinos of either gender, were conducted in the U.S., were published in English-language peer-reviewed journals, and contained enough abstractable information. Data abstraction was completed independently by three data abstractors using a standardized abstraction form that collected intervention characteristics and study results.

Results

A total of 172 studies were identified and 37 met the inclusion criteria. Of these, 28 included female LHAs exclusively and five included a small number of male as well as female LHAs. Training for LHAs ranged from 6 to 160 hours. Primary roles of LHAs included: supporting participant recruitment and data collection, serving as health advisors and referral sources, distributing materials, being role models, and advocating on behalf of community members. Fourteen studies found evidence of effectiveness.

Conclusions

Given the long history of using LHAs as an approach to health promotion and disease prevention and the current emphasis of LHA approaches as a potential solution to health disparities in general, and among Hispanics/Latinos in particular, few rigorous studies have been published that document the effectiveness of LHAs on a variety of public health concerns. A stronger empirical evidence base is clearly needed.

a Wake Forest University Health Sciences, Winston-Salem, North Carolina

b University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

c Division of Sexually Transmitted Diseases Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia

Corresponding Author InformationAddress correspondence and reprint requests to: Scott Rhodes, PhD, Wake Forest University Health Sciences, Social Sciences and Health Policy, Medical Center Boulevard, Winston-Salem NC 27157-1063.

PII: S0749-3797(07)00466-7

doi:10.1016/j.amepre.2007.07.023


View previous. 10 of 13 View next.