![Dr. Joseph Ravenell Takes a Blood Pressure Reading From Man in Barbershop Chair](/news/sites/default/files/styles/hero/public/2017-08/dr-joseph-ravenell-takes-blood-pressure-reading-from-man-in-barbershop-chair.jpg?h=fd94176c&itok=atCZ-0iN)
Dr. Joseph Ravenell administers a blood pressure test as part of a community health outreach program in New York City barbershops.
Photo: Joshua Bright
Aging black men are at much greater risk of dying prematurely from than any other group in the United States, in part because they have less frequent access to preventive health services.
In an effort to change this, , associate professor in the and the 聽at 秘密研究所 Langone, and his team have spent several years building relationships with barber shops across New York City. The idea is that they could reach black men who do not have a doctor to help them get screened for colorectal cancer.
Dr. Ravenell and his team referred participants who enrolled in their study either to a patient navigator, a control arm that received blood pressure counseling, or a group that received both. Participants who worked with a navigator were twice as likely to get screened as those who did not.
"What this study shows is that having trusted community members who are based in trusted community settings and teaming them with the healthcare system can definitely help to address important healthcare disparities," Dr. Ravenell tells Modern Healthcare.
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