SOPHE-DNPAO Writing Workshop 2023

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Writing Workshop

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    SOPHE-DNPAO Writing Workshop 2023: Session 1

    12:00 pm – 12:45 pm 

    Welcome
    Speaker: Doreleena Sammons Hackett, SM, CPM 

    Welcome from CDC
    Speaker: S. Rene Lavinghouze, MA, MS

    Introductions and Workshop Overview
    Speaker: Doreleena Sammons Hackett, SM, CPM
     •Introduction of SMEs
     •Introduction of Writing Teams 
     •Introduction of CDC Staff
     •Overview of this workshop and learning outcomes

    Review of Virtual Site and Zoom

    Speaker: Jade Hackley,CHES     

    12:45 pm – 1:30 pm 

    Choosing Your Journal
    Speaker: LaNita Wright, PhD, MPH, MCHES, Cole Youngner, MPH     

    Guidelines for Writing Teams: Tips for Success 
    Speakers:
    Laura Kettel Khan, PhD, MIM
    Randy Schwartz,MSPH
    Moderator: Randy Schwartz, MSPH

    1:30 pm – 1:45 pm

    Ice breaker activity break (5 min.) – Jade Hackley, 
    Break (10 min.)   

    1:45 pm-2:15 pm

    Discuss different types of journal articles: 
    Research Articles, Review Articles, Briefs. Examples from Health Promotion Practice will be highlighted.

    The principal components of a manuscript and what they should contain (based on and varies slightly by article type):
     •Abstract/keywords
     •Background
     •Purpose/Aims
     •Introduction/Literature Review (key citations)
     •Methods
     •Results (Tables/Figures)
     •Discussion/implications/limitations
     •Implications for practice and/or policy and research

    Speakers:  Danielle Brittain
    Moderator: Randy Schwartz, MSPH

    2:15 pm – 2:45 pm

    What I Wish I Had Known

    Speakers: Kerry Gabbert, MPH

    Cole Youngner, MPH

    Randy Schwartz, MSPH

    Moderator: Rene Lavinghouze, MA, MS

    Role of the Coach in manuscript development/TA
     •Expectations -dos and don’ts
     •Authorship acknowledgment

    Speaker:  Rene Lavinghouze, MA, MS
    Moderator: Randy Schwartz, MSPH

    2:45 pm – 3:00 pm

    2 min Physical Activity, followed by off-screen 13-minute break
    Leader: Doreleena Sammons Hackett, SM, CPM

    3:00 pm – 3:55 pm

    Team Huddle

    Pre-assigned teams/coaches adjourn to breakout rooms
    •What kind of article do we want to submit?
     •Designate a lead author
     •Who will do a draft outline of an article (identify known citations)
     •Author assignments for manuscript sections
     •Role of the Coach will be clarified. 

    Deliverables for Session 1A:
     •Detailed draft outline of article
     •Draft Purpose/Aims (with citations)

    3:55 pm – 4:00 pm

    Wrap Up
    Speaker: Randy Schwartz, MSPH


    Homework assignment for Week 1

    • Develop a detailed outline. Each assigned author is responsible for their assigned section(s).
    • Draft Purpose/Aims section with citations – identify key citations.
    • Use APA Style Guide – References
    • Team to provide deliverables to Writing Coach at least 2 days in advance of May 16th,2023
    • Working session

    Doreleena Sammons Hackett, SM, CPM

    Director of Grants Administration

    Society for Public Health Education (SOPHE)

    Mrs. Hackett is the Project Director for the Racial and Ethnic Approaches to Community Health (REACH) Program federal cooperative agreement, a nationwide community-based program to reduce racial and ethnic health disparities in cooperation with the CDC Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity (DNPAO). She has over 40 years of experience of public experience with 27 years in Chronic Disease and Health Promotion program development and implementation including nutrition, cardiovascular disease prevention, gerontology, injury prevention, women’s health, HIV/AIDS awareness, health education, physical activity and program integration. Ten (10) years in maternal and child health. Work has included over 30 years’ experience working in State and local health departments and  10 years’ experience working in non-profit sector three of which was as an Executive Director. Her experience is extensive in the areas of Policy, Environment, and Systems (PES) Change; providing technical assistance and capacity building; planning, organizing and directing programs; development, implementation and monitoring of federal categorical grants and community-based grants; and, fiscal management including budget preparations, and resource allocation. 

    Mrs. Hackett has a Master of Science Degree (SM) in Public Health Nutrition from the Harvard School of Public Health (Boston, MA) and a Bachelor of Science Degree in Pre-Medicine from Bennett College (Greensboro, NC). She is a Certified Public Manager (CPM) (Rutgers, The State University in New Brunswick, NJ), and a Certified Master Trainer in Chronic Disease Self-Management (As instructed by Stanford University Patient Education Research Center. She is currently pursuing a Doctorate in Ministry Degree from Payne Theological Seminary. 

    Jade Hackley

    Office and Project Associate

    Ms. Hackley began with SOPHE May, 2022, she holds dual degrees in Community Health with a specialization in Health Risk Behaviors and French language and literature from the University of Maryland College Park where she graduated in 2018. Ms. Hackley has completed several projects such as an internship with the Department of Commerce. She also obtained her CHES certification in October 2022.

     

     

    LaNita Wright, PhD, MPH, MCHES

    Assistant Professor of Public Health, Kennesaw State University and Editorial Board, Health Promotion Practice

    Kennesaw State University

    LaNita S. Wright is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Health Promotion and Physical Education, Public Health Education program at Kennesaw State University. She teaches undergraduate courses pertaining to public health theory, planning, implementation and evaluation.

    Her current research focuses on how interconnected systems influence health-promoting behaviors, especially among adolescents, with a recent research project focusing on the Black Church’s role in preventing teen pregnancy. She also recently facilitated a community engagement project (alongside a nonprofit) pertaining to the local community’s perceptions of sexual health related topics and implementation. Her recent work has been published in Health Promotion Practice and Journal of Adolescence.

    LaNita offers professional service in various ways, including peer-reviewing manuscripts for multiple journals and book publishers, and serving on the Health Promotion Practice Editorial Board.

    She received a Doctor of Philosophy in Health Promotion and a Master of Public Health in Health Promotion Sciences from the University of Oklahoma. She received a Bachelor of Science in Health Services Administration from Auburn University.

    LaNita is a passionate, dedicated public health professional. She finds joy in playing an active role in the development of young people through research, teaching, training, and mentoring.  

    Cole Youngner, MPH

    Cole Youngner is a Technical Editor & Writer supporting the Program Development & Evaluation Branch at DNPAO and its grant recipients. Tapping into his academic days as a peer writing tutor, he works with DNPAO recipients on writing success stories and publications to disseminate public health practice wisdom to different audiences. His public health interests include socio-contextual determinants of health, global health, qualitative methods, mental health promotion, and injury and violence prevention. After a decade at Emory University as a student and employee, he continued his public health journey in different capacities with CDC from injury and violence prevention, health communications & writing, global health, to antibiotic resistance, and now, nutrition and physical activity promotion. In another life, he was also an award-winning bartender and spirits expert with a passion for sustainability in the food and beverage industries.

    Dr. Laura Kettel Khan, PhD, MIM

    Senior Scientist

    Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Obesity at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

    Dr. Laura Kettel Khan is currently the Senior Scientist in the Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Obesity at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, Georgia.  Dr. Kettel Khan is internationally known in the field of obesity prevention evaluation methodology and research design of multi-sectoral interventions and serves on numerous national advisory committees related to evaluation which build the evidence for policy, systems, and environmental (PSE) strategies for healthy communities.  She represents the CDC on numerous national partnerships with public and private funders which focus on healthy eating and active living.  Dr. Kettel Khan graduated with a doctoral degree in Nutritional Sciences from the University of Arizona in 1992, finished her post-doctoral training at Cornell University in 1994, after which she joined the Emory University Rollins School of Public Health, Department of International Nutrition, followed by her current position at the CDC since 1996. She has authored more than 150 peer reviewed articles and book chapters. 

    Randy Schwartz, MSPH

    President

    Public Health Systems Consultants

    Founding editor Health Promotion Practice and President, Public Health Systems Consultants 

    Randy is a nationally recognized public health professional with over thirty-five years’ experience in implementing health promotion/disease prevention initiatives in state health departments and voluntary health organizations with an emphasis on chronic disease prevention and control, cancer control, tobacco control, community-based health promotion, and healthy public policy. He is currently President of Public Health Systems Consultants and serves as the Sr. Public Health Consultant for Cancer Control with the National Association of Chronic Disease Directors (NACDD). He is an Adjunct Faculty member for several leading academic public health programs. Randy has written and presented on the importance of engaging public health practitioners along with researchers and engaged communities as a key factor in advancing implementation science. 

    He has authored or co-authored numerous articles on health promotion and chronic disease prevention. Randy is the Founding Editor of the journal, Health Promotion Practice, a journal of the Society for Public Health Education. He has been awarded the Society for Public Health Education’s Distinguished Fellow Award, the Society’s highest honor. 

    René Lavinghouze, MA, MS, CRP

    Translation Team Lead in the Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Obesity at Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

    René Lavinghouze has over 32 years in designing, conducting, and managing evaluations focusing on prevention programs and is currently the Translation Team Lead in the Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Obesity at CDC.  Her focus is on the study of program infrastructure as the foundation that supports program capacity, implementation, and sustainability.  She is lead author of the Component Model of Infrastructure (CMI), a practical, systems-approach model that supports program implementation and enables outcome measurement, links infrastructure to capacity, and facilitates the likelihood of sustainable public health achievements.  She was the evaluation lead in the Office on Smoking and Health at CDC for 6 years and has worked in the Division of Oral Health and in HIV/AIDS prevention at CDC.  Prior to coming to CDC, she worked at a private evaluation and organizational service firm for over 7 years and has worked in academic and local health department settings.  She received her Master’s in Community Psychology from Georgia State University and a Master’s in Interactive Technology from The University of Alabama.

    Danielle Brittain, PhD,

    Professor and Associate Dean for Academic and Student Affairs, Colorado School of Public Health, University of Colorado, Associate Editor for Practice Notes in Health Promotion Practice

    University of Colorado

    Danielle (Dani) R. Brittain, PhD, is a Professor and Associate Dean for Academic and Student Affairs in the Colorado School of Public Health at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus. Her research concerns the: (a) identification of social-psychological factors impacting adherence to physical activity among marginalized populations of women (i.e., adult lesbians; women with non-cancer chronic pain) and (b) development of theoretically-driven interventions targeting social and behavior change processes that aid in the self-management and maintenance of physical activity. Dr. Brittain is actively involved in the Society for Public Health Education and is an Associate Editor for Practice Notes in Health Promotion Practice. In her spare time, she enjoys being outside, being active, and playing with her dog Harper.

    Kerry Gabbert, MPH

    Project Coordinator/Visiting Instructor

    Be Wild, Be Wonderful, Be Healthy- CDC High Obesity Program


    Kerry Gabbert is a visiting instructor at West Virginia University Extension Service, and program coordinator for Extension’s CDC High Obesity Program project, ‘Be Wild, Be Wonderful, Be Healthy’. Prior roles include program coordinator for WV’s SNAP-Ed program, and development and implementation of worksite wellness and stress management programs across the state.

    Kerry earned her MPH in 2013 and is currently a PhD student at WVU’s School of Public Health.

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    SOPHE-DNPAO Writing Workshop 2023: Session 1-A

    12:00 pm- 4:00 pm Session 1A: Team Working Session 

    • Review the draft MS outline, assignment of authors for different sections, address coach’s comments

    • Refine draft Purpose/Aims section – identify key citations, address coach’s comments

    • Preview/discuss overall manuscript trajectory in advance of developing additional sections

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    SOPHE-DNPAO Writing Workshop 2023: Session 2

    12:00 pm – 12:20 pm 

    Review of Session 1
     •Sharing of accomplishments by 1 group
     •Q&A

    Speaker: Randy Schwartz, MSPH

    12:20 pm – 1:20 pm

    Deep Dive into Manuscript Introduction & Literature Review (PPT)
     •Introduction - key elements and drawing in the reader
     •Framing Your Literature Review 

    Speakers: 
    LaNita Wright, PhD, MPH, MCHES
    Joseph G. L Lee, PhD, MPH
    Moderator: Randy Schwartz, MSPH 

    1:20 pm-2:00 pm 

    Presentation of Quantitative Methods and Results

    Speaker: Danielle Brittain, PhD
    Moderator: Randy Schwartz, MSPH

    2:00 pm – 2:15 pm

    2 min Physical Activity, followed by off-screen 13-minute break
    Leader: Doreleena Sammons Hackett, SM, CPM

    2:15 pm – 2:50 pm

    What I Wish I Had Known 

    Speakers:
    Kerry Gabbert, MPH
    Cole Youngner, MPH 
    Randy Schwartz, MSPH
    Moderator: Rene Lavinghouze, MA, MS

    2:50 pm – 3:55 pm

    Team Huddle

    Breakout groups

    Deliverable for 2A:
     •Introduction with citations
     •Background/Literature review- with citations
     •Refine purpose/aims

    3:55 pm – 4:00 pm

    Wrap Up Speaker: Randy Schwartz, MSPH

    Randy Schwartz, MSPH

    President

    Public Health Systems Consultants

    Founding editor Health Promotion Practice and President, Public Health Systems Consultants 

    Randy is a nationally recognized public health professional with over thirty-five years’ experience in implementing health promotion/disease prevention initiatives in state health departments and voluntary health organizations with an emphasis on chronic disease prevention and control, cancer control, tobacco control, community-based health promotion, and healthy public policy. He is currently President of Public Health Systems Consultants and serves as the Sr. Public Health Consultant for Cancer Control with the National Association of Chronic Disease Directors (NACDD). He is an Adjunct Faculty member for several leading academic public health programs. Randy has written and presented on the importance of engaging public health practitioners along with researchers and engaged communities as a key factor in advancing implementation science. 

    He has authored or co-authored numerous articles on health promotion and chronic disease prevention. Randy is the Founding Editor of the journal, Health Promotion Practice, a journal of the Society for Public Health Education. He has been awarded the Society for Public Health Education’s Distinguished Fellow Award, the Society’s highest honor. 

    LaNita Wright, PhD, MPH, MCHES

    Assistant Professor of Public Health, Kennesaw State University and Editorial Board, Health Promotion Practice

    Kennesaw State University

    LaNita S. Wright is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Health Promotion and Physical Education, Public Health Education program at Kennesaw State University. She teaches undergraduate courses pertaining to public health theory, planning, implementation and evaluation.

    Her current research focuses on how interconnected systems influence health-promoting behaviors, especially among adolescents, with a recent research project focusing on the Black Church’s role in preventing teen pregnancy. She also recently facilitated a community engagement project (alongside a nonprofit) pertaining to the local community’s perceptions of sexual health related topics and implementation. Her recent work has been published in Health Promotion Practice and Journal of Adolescence.

    LaNita offers professional service in various ways, including peer-reviewing manuscripts for multiple journals and book publishers, and serving on the Health Promotion Practice Editorial Board.

    She received a Doctor of Philosophy in Health Promotion and a Master of Public Health in Health Promotion Sciences from the University of Oklahoma. She received a Bachelor of Science in Health Services Administration from Auburn University.

    LaNita is a passionate, dedicated public health professional. She finds joy in playing an active role in the development of young people through research, teaching, training, and mentoring.  

    Joseph G. L. Lee, PHD, MPH

    Interim Director, ECU School of Social Work

    Affiliate Faculty, Center for Health Disparities, Brody School of Medicine

    Joseph Lee is originally from Madison County, NC. He attended Duke University for an undergraduate degree in Spanish and Latin American Studies. He has an MPH in maternal and child health and a PhD in health behavior from the UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health. Joseph is now an associate professor in the Department of Health Education and Promotion, College of Health and Human Performance, where he conducts research on tobacco prevention and control and LGBT health inequities.

    Danielle Brittain, PhD,

    Professor and Associate Dean for Academic and Student Affairs, Colorado School of Public Health, University of Colorado, Associate Editor for Practice Notes in Health Promotion Practice

    University of Colorado

    Danielle (Dani) R. Brittain, PhD, is a Professor and Associate Dean for Academic and Student Affairs in the Colorado School of Public Health at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus. Her research concerns the: (a) identification of social-psychological factors impacting adherence to physical activity among marginalized populations of women (i.e., adult lesbians; women with non-cancer chronic pain) and (b) development of theoretically-driven interventions targeting social and behavior change processes that aid in the self-management and maintenance of physical activity. Dr. Brittain is actively involved in the Society for Public Health Education and is an Associate Editor for Practice Notes in Health Promotion Practice. In her spare time, she enjoys being outside, being active, and playing with her dog Harper.

    Doreleena Sammons Hackett, SM, CPM

    Director of Grants Administration

    Society for Public Health Education (SOPHE)

    Mrs. Hackett is the Project Director for the Racial and Ethnic Approaches to Community Health (REACH) Program federal cooperative agreement, a nationwide community-based program to reduce racial and ethnic health disparities in cooperation with the CDC Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity (DNPAO). She has over 40 years of experience of public experience with 27 years in Chronic Disease and Health Promotion program development and implementation including nutrition, cardiovascular disease prevention, gerontology, injury prevention, women’s health, HIV/AIDS awareness, health education, physical activity and program integration. Ten (10) years in maternal and child health. Work has included over 30 years’ experience working in State and local health departments and  10 years’ experience working in non-profit sector three of which was as an Executive Director. Her experience is extensive in the areas of Policy, Environment, and Systems (PES) Change; providing technical assistance and capacity building; planning, organizing and directing programs; development, implementation and monitoring of federal categorical grants and community-based grants; and, fiscal management including budget preparations, and resource allocation. 

    Mrs. Hackett has a Master of Science Degree (SM) in Public Health Nutrition from the Harvard School of Public Health (Boston, MA) and a Bachelor of Science Degree in Pre-Medicine from Bennett College (Greensboro, NC). She is a Certified Public Manager (CPM) (Rutgers, The State University in New Brunswick, NJ), and a Certified Master Trainer in Chronic Disease Self-Management (As instructed by Stanford University Patient Education Research Center. She is currently pursuing a Doctorate in Ministry Degree from Payne Theological Seminary. 

    Kerry Gabbert, MPH

    Project Coordinator/Visiting Instructor

    Be Wild, Be Wonderful, Be Healthy- CDC High Obesity Program


    Kerry Gabbert is a visiting instructor at West Virginia University Extension Service, and program coordinator for Extension’s CDC High Obesity Program project, ‘Be Wild, Be Wonderful, Be Healthy’. Prior roles include program coordinator for WV’s SNAP-Ed program, and development and implementation of worksite wellness and stress management programs across the state.

    Kerry earned her MPH in 2013 and is currently a PhD student at WVU’s School of Public Health.

    Cole Youngner, MPH

    Cole Youngner is a Technical Editor & Writer supporting the Program Development & Evaluation Branch at DNPAO and its grant recipients. Tapping into his academic days as a peer writing tutor, he works with DNPAO recipients on writing success stories and publications to disseminate public health practice wisdom to different audiences. His public health interests include socio-contextual determinants of health, global health, qualitative methods, mental health promotion, and injury and violence prevention. After a decade at Emory University as a student and employee, he continued his public health journey in different capacities with CDC from injury and violence prevention, health communications & writing, global health, to antibiotic resistance, and now, nutrition and physical activity promotion. In another life, he was also an award-winning bartender and spirits expert with a passion for sustainability in the food and beverage industries.

    René Lavinghouze, MA, MS, CRP

    Translation Team Lead in the Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Obesity at Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

    René Lavinghouze has over 32 years in designing, conducting, and managing evaluations focusing on prevention programs and is currently the Translation Team Lead in the Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Obesity at CDC.  Her focus is on the study of program infrastructure as the foundation that supports program capacity, implementation, and sustainability.  She is lead author of the Component Model of Infrastructure (CMI), a practical, systems-approach model that supports program implementation and enables outcome measurement, links infrastructure to capacity, and facilitates the likelihood of sustainable public health achievements.  She was the evaluation lead in the Office on Smoking and Health at CDC for 6 years and has worked in the Division of Oral Health and in HIV/AIDS prevention at CDC.  Prior to coming to CDC, she worked at a private evaluation and organizational service firm for over 7 years and has worked in academic and local health department settings.  She received her Master’s in Community Psychology from Georgia State University and a Master’s in Interactive Technology from The University of Alabama.

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    SOPHE-DNPAO Writing Workshop 2023: Session 2-A

    12:00 pm- 4:00 pm Session 2A: Team Working Session 

    • Drafted Introduction section, literature review/background section, address coach’s comments

    • Continue to refine Purpose/Aims section

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    SOPHE-DNPAO Writing Workshop 2023: Session 3

    12:00 pm – 12:15 pm 

    Review of Session 2
     •Check in with the teams to see how they are doing
     •Coaches to highlight successes.
     •Q&A

    Speaker: Randy Schwartz, MSPH

    12:15 pm – 1:00 pm

    Responding effectively to Reviewers’ comments
    Done with the full group - Look at a portion of an already reviewed manuscript with comments attached. Find ones with significant flaws. How did they respond to the reviewer? Did they fix the problem?  

    Speakers: Cole Youngner, MPH 

    1:00 pm-1:05 pm 

    Break

    1:05 pm – 2:20 pm

    Qualitative Methods & Results
     •Qualitative Data
     •Tables, figures etc., guidelines
     •Discussion of findings

    Speakers:
    LaNita Wright, PhD, MPH, MCHES
    Joseph G. L. Lee, PhD, MPH
    Moderator: Randy Schwartz, MSPH

    2:20 pm – 3:15 pm

    Breakout groups

    Writing time for further refinement of Methods and Result sections ideas - coaches to provide TA as necessary 

    3:15 pm – 3:55 pm

    Manuscript Key Takeaways
     •Summarizing main points
     •Importance of work
     •Contribution to the literature in the conclusion

    Speaker:  LaNita Wright
    Moderator: Randy Schwartz, MSPH

    3:55 pm – 4:00 pm

    Wrap Up
    Q&A

    Deliverable 3A:
     •Outline
     •Preliminary - Methods & Results (get down what they have to work with including draft tables/figures)
     •Discussion/Limitations

    Speaker: Randy Schwartz, MSPH

    Randy Schwartz, MSPH

    President

    Public Health Systems Consultants

    Founding editor Health Promotion Practice and President, Public Health Systems Consultants 

    Randy is a nationally recognized public health professional with over thirty-five years’ experience in implementing health promotion/disease prevention initiatives in state health departments and voluntary health organizations with an emphasis on chronic disease prevention and control, cancer control, tobacco control, community-based health promotion, and healthy public policy. He is currently President of Public Health Systems Consultants and serves as the Sr. Public Health Consultant for Cancer Control with the National Association of Chronic Disease Directors (NACDD). He is an Adjunct Faculty member for several leading academic public health programs. Randy has written and presented on the importance of engaging public health practitioners along with researchers and engaged communities as a key factor in advancing implementation science. 

    He has authored or co-authored numerous articles on health promotion and chronic disease prevention. Randy is the Founding Editor of the journal, Health Promotion Practice, a journal of the Society for Public Health Education. He has been awarded the Society for Public Health Education’s Distinguished Fellow Award, the Society’s highest honor. 

    Cole Youngner, MPH

    Cole Youngner is a Technical Editor & Writer supporting the Program Development & Evaluation Branch at DNPAO and its grant recipients. Tapping into his academic days as a peer writing tutor, he works with DNPAO recipients on writing success stories and publications to disseminate public health practice wisdom to different audiences. His public health interests include socio-contextual determinants of health, global health, qualitative methods, mental health promotion, and injury and violence prevention. After a decade at Emory University as a student and employee, he continued his public health journey in different capacities with CDC from injury and violence prevention, health communications & writing, global health, to antibiotic resistance, and now, nutrition and physical activity promotion. In another life, he was also an award-winning bartender and spirits expert with a passion for sustainability in the food and beverage industries.

    LaNita Wright, PhD, MPH, MCHES

    Assistant Professor of Public Health, Kennesaw State University and Editorial Board, Health Promotion Practice

    Kennesaw State University

    LaNita S. Wright is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Health Promotion and Physical Education, Public Health Education program at Kennesaw State University. She teaches undergraduate courses pertaining to public health theory, planning, implementation and evaluation.

    Her current research focuses on how interconnected systems influence health-promoting behaviors, especially among adolescents, with a recent research project focusing on the Black Church’s role in preventing teen pregnancy. She also recently facilitated a community engagement project (alongside a nonprofit) pertaining to the local community’s perceptions of sexual health related topics and implementation. Her recent work has been published in Health Promotion Practice and Journal of Adolescence.

    LaNita offers professional service in various ways, including peer-reviewing manuscripts for multiple journals and book publishers, and serving on the Health Promotion Practice Editorial Board.

    She received a Doctor of Philosophy in Health Promotion and a Master of Public Health in Health Promotion Sciences from the University of Oklahoma. She received a Bachelor of Science in Health Services Administration from Auburn University.

    LaNita is a passionate, dedicated public health professional. She finds joy in playing an active role in the development of young people through research, teaching, training, and mentoring.  

    Joseph G. L. Lee, PHD, MPH

    Interim Director, ECU School of Social Work

    Affiliate Faculty, Center for Health Disparities, Brody School of Medicine

    Joseph Lee is originally from Madison County, NC. He attended Duke University for an undergraduate degree in Spanish and Latin American Studies. He has an MPH in maternal and child health and a PhD in health behavior from the UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health. Joseph is now an associate professor in the Department of Health Education and Promotion, College of Health and Human Performance, where he conducts research on tobacco prevention and control and LGBT health inequities.

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    SOPHE-DNPAO Writing Workshop 2023: Session 3-A

    12:00 pm- 4:00 pm Session 3A: Team Working Session 

    Further work on sections: Discussion/Limitations

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    SOPHE-DNPAO Writing Workshop 2023: Session 4

    12:00 pm – 12:30 pm

    Implications for Practice/Research as a critical component of any article:  

    Key takeaways/elements to be addressed (show/discuss examples of each):
     •Description of problematic issue(s) being addressed
     •Identify the specific audience(s) to which implications are addressed,
     •Make recommendations about what the audience should/could/should do/not do based on the research findings
     •Provide specific illustration(s) of what implementing the recommendations might look like

    Speaker: Danielle Brittain, PhD
    Moderator: Randy Schwartz, MSPH

    12:30 pm – 1:15 pm

    Knocking it out of the Park - Submitting your manuscript- 15 Minutes

    Speaker:  Kathleen Roe, DrPH, MPH, Editor, Health Promotion Practice

    Lessons Learned from two DNPAO Supplements- 30 mins

    Speaker:   Cole Youngner, MPH     

    1:15 pm-1:30 pm 

    2 min Physical Activity, followed by off-screen 13-minute break
    Leader: Doreleena Sammons Hackett, SM, CPM

    1:30 pm – 3:00 pm

    Team Huddle (Take Breaks as Needed)

    3:00 pm – 3:15 pm

    Breakout groups

     •Discussion/feedback from coaches on results/tables/figures
     •Feedback from coaches on discussion of results.

    3:15 pm – 3:30 pm

    Journal submission process
     •Author Checklist of submission requirements: Have you blinded all identifying information for review purposes, such as the identity of authors and funding
     •What is an ORCID?  How to obtain one.

    Speaker: Cole Youngner, MPH     
    Moderator: Randy Schwartz, MSPH

    3:30 pm – 3:50 pm

    Dissemination 

    Speakers:
    Rene Lavinghouze, MS 
    Joseph G. L Lee, PhD, MPH
    Moderator: Randy Schwartz, MSPH

    3:50 pm – 4:00 pm

    Wrap Up 

    Speakers: Randy Schwartz, MSPH 

    Deliverables for 4A:
     •Implications for Practice/research
     •Complete draft manuscript

    Danielle Brittain, PhD,

    Professor and Associate Dean for Academic and Student Affairs, Colorado School of Public Health, University of Colorado, Associate Editor for Practice Notes in Health Promotion Practice

    University of Colorado

    Danielle (Dani) R. Brittain, PhD, is a Professor and Associate Dean for Academic and Student Affairs in the Colorado School of Public Health at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus. Her research concerns the: (a) identification of social-psychological factors impacting adherence to physical activity among marginalized populations of women (i.e., adult lesbians; women with non-cancer chronic pain) and (b) development of theoretically-driven interventions targeting social and behavior change processes that aid in the self-management and maintenance of physical activity. Dr. Brittain is actively involved in the Society for Public Health Education and is an Associate Editor for Practice Notes in Health Promotion Practice. In her spare time, she enjoys being outside, being active, and playing with her dog Harper.

    Randy Schwartz, MSPH

    President

    Public Health Systems Consultants

    Founding editor Health Promotion Practice and President, Public Health Systems Consultants 

    Randy is a nationally recognized public health professional with over thirty-five years’ experience in implementing health promotion/disease prevention initiatives in state health departments and voluntary health organizations with an emphasis on chronic disease prevention and control, cancer control, tobacco control, community-based health promotion, and healthy public policy. He is currently President of Public Health Systems Consultants and serves as the Sr. Public Health Consultant for Cancer Control with the National Association of Chronic Disease Directors (NACDD). He is an Adjunct Faculty member for several leading academic public health programs. Randy has written and presented on the importance of engaging public health practitioners along with researchers and engaged communities as a key factor in advancing implementation science. 

    He has authored or co-authored numerous articles on health promotion and chronic disease prevention. Randy is the Founding Editor of the journal, Health Promotion Practice, a journal of the Society for Public Health Education. He has been awarded the Society for Public Health Education’s Distinguished Fellow Award, the Society’s highest honor. 

    Kathleen Roe, MPH, DrPH

    Editor-in-Chief

    Health Promotion Practice Journal

    Dr. Roe has been a professor of public health and community health education at San Jose State University for over 29 years, where she served as chair for the Health Science and Recreation Department from 2001-2013. She brings more than two decades of scholarship and editorial experience, including as founding associate editor for HPP’s “Circle of Research and Practice” Department; co-editor of HPP’s first supplement devoted to health disparities in 2002; and editorial board member of SOPHE’s Pedagogy in Health Promotion Journal.

    Cole Youngner, MPH

    Cole Youngner is a Technical Editor & Writer supporting the Program Development & Evaluation Branch at DNPAO and its grant recipients. Tapping into his academic days as a peer writing tutor, he works with DNPAO recipients on writing success stories and publications to disseminate public health practice wisdom to different audiences. His public health interests include socio-contextual determinants of health, global health, qualitative methods, mental health promotion, and injury and violence prevention. After a decade at Emory University as a student and employee, he continued his public health journey in different capacities with CDC from injury and violence prevention, health communications & writing, global health, to antibiotic resistance, and now, nutrition and physical activity promotion. In another life, he was also an award-winning bartender and spirits expert with a passion for sustainability in the food and beverage industries.

    Doreleena Sammons Hackett, SM, CPM

    Director of Grants Administration

    Society for Public Health Education (SOPHE)

    Mrs. Hackett is the Project Director for the Racial and Ethnic Approaches to Community Health (REACH) Program federal cooperative agreement, a nationwide community-based program to reduce racial and ethnic health disparities in cooperation with the CDC Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity (DNPAO). She has over 40 years of experience of public experience with 27 years in Chronic Disease and Health Promotion program development and implementation including nutrition, cardiovascular disease prevention, gerontology, injury prevention, women’s health, HIV/AIDS awareness, health education, physical activity and program integration. Ten (10) years in maternal and child health. Work has included over 30 years’ experience working in State and local health departments and  10 years’ experience working in non-profit sector three of which was as an Executive Director. Her experience is extensive in the areas of Policy, Environment, and Systems (PES) Change; providing technical assistance and capacity building; planning, organizing and directing programs; development, implementation and monitoring of federal categorical grants and community-based grants; and, fiscal management including budget preparations, and resource allocation. 

    Mrs. Hackett has a Master of Science Degree (SM) in Public Health Nutrition from the Harvard School of Public Health (Boston, MA) and a Bachelor of Science Degree in Pre-Medicine from Bennett College (Greensboro, NC). She is a Certified Public Manager (CPM) (Rutgers, The State University in New Brunswick, NJ), and a Certified Master Trainer in Chronic Disease Self-Management (As instructed by Stanford University Patient Education Research Center. She is currently pursuing a Doctorate in Ministry Degree from Payne Theological Seminary. 

    René Lavinghouze, MA, MS, CRP

    Translation Team Lead in the Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Obesity at Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

    René Lavinghouze has over 32 years in designing, conducting, and managing evaluations focusing on prevention programs and is currently the Translation Team Lead in the Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Obesity at CDC.  Her focus is on the study of program infrastructure as the foundation that supports program capacity, implementation, and sustainability.  She is lead author of the Component Model of Infrastructure (CMI), a practical, systems-approach model that supports program implementation and enables outcome measurement, links infrastructure to capacity, and facilitates the likelihood of sustainable public health achievements.  She was the evaluation lead in the Office on Smoking and Health at CDC for 6 years and has worked in the Division of Oral Health and in HIV/AIDS prevention at CDC.  Prior to coming to CDC, she worked at a private evaluation and organizational service firm for over 7 years and has worked in academic and local health department settings.  She received her Master’s in Community Psychology from Georgia State University and a Master’s in Interactive Technology from The University of Alabama.

    Joseph G. L. Lee, PHD, MPH

    Interim Director, ECU School of Social Work

    Affiliate Faculty, Center for Health Disparities, Brody School of Medicine

    Joseph Lee is originally from Madison County, NC. He attended Duke University for an undergraduate degree in Spanish and Latin American Studies. He has an MPH in maternal and child health and a PhD in health behavior from the UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health. Joseph is now an associate professor in the Department of Health Education and Promotion, College of Health and Human Performance, where he conducts research on tobacco prevention and control and LGBT health inequities.

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    SOPHE-DNPAO Writing Workshop 2023: Session 4-A

    12:00 pm- 4:00 pm Session 4A: Team Working Session 

    • Review/revise Implications for Practice/research

    • Review all sections and how it holds together as a manuscript for review is session 4A

    • Voluntary Pre-submission peer review Early/expedited review of the manuscript