UCLA School of Public Health Field Studies Program


Community Health Sciences

Field Placement 1: Perinatal Advisory Council: Leadership, Advocacy and Consultation (PAC/LAC)
Location:
Los Angeles, CA
Preceptor: Dena Chwan, MPP

Field Placement 2: Public Health Foundation Enterprises Women, Infants, and Children Program (PHFE-WIC)
Preceptor: Sharen Anthony, RD

Location: Los Angeles, CA

Student Name: Agnes F. de la Vega
Year: 2003

I completed my field studies internship with two maternal and child health organizations in Los Angeles County. The Perinatal Advisory Council: Leadership, Advocacy and Consultation (PAC/LAC) provides quality education, consultation and advocacy to professionals and systems that care for women and their families. PAC/LAC is also a partner in the Los Angeles Best Babies Collaborative (LABBC) with Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology as the lead agency. Other LABBC partners include UCLA’s Center for Healthier Children, Families, and Communities, the Los Angeles County Department of Health Services – Maternal, Child, and Adolescent Health Programs, and the March of Dimes, Greater Los Angeles Division. The goals of the LABBC are to provide community-based strategies and technical assistance to organizations working to improve birth outcomes.

The Public Health Foundation Enterprises Women, Infants, and Children Program (PHFE-WIC) has been providing WIC services in Los Angeles and Orange Counties for over 25 years. PHFE-WIC is the largest local WIC agency in the country, with 55 clinics serving approximately 316,000 clients every month.

I conducted a needs assessment to gain insight into maternal and child health issues facing the Asian and Pacific Islander (API) community by gathering secondary data and by conducting site visits and key informant interviews with local community-based API organizations. Findings from the needs assessment will inform future PAC/LAC planning activities. In addition, I facilitated round table discussions with community members at the Healthy Births Learning Collaboratives (HBLCs). The discussions focused on the principles and application of effective community partnerships. I also attended various meetings and workgroups, such as Service Planning Area Council meetings and the First 5 LA Commission meeting.

A highlight of my internship was my exposure to public policy and advocacy. I prepared a policy brief about AB 292 (Yee), which would prohibit agencies that receive state funding from using any child under the age of 15 as an interpreter. In addition, I gave a presentation on Proposition 54 at PAC/LAC’s State of the State Public Policy Forum. Proposition 54 was on the ballot for the October 7, 2003 Special Statewide Election and would have prohibited state and local governments from collecting or using information about race, ethnicity, color, or national origin, unless specifically exempted. I also created a one-page fact sheet about Proposition 54 and distributed it to PHFE-WIC staff.

My responsibilities at PHFE-WIC were with WIC Empower Teens, which directs several programs. Targeting Outcomes for Children (TOUCH) was a one-year program which provided intensive care coordination for high-risk teen mothers at the Santa Ana East WIC Center. I compiled data from parent questionnaires using SPSS and wrote an evaluation of TOUCH.

The most recent program under WIC Empowers Teens is the “Sprinkle”, a breastfeeding support group for teen mothers at the WIC clinics. I helped plan the curriculum to teach teen facilitators the concept of the Sprinkle, presented the warm-up, and comoderated the training.

In order to evaluate WIC staff’s one-on-one interactions with teens, I developed a preliminary observation instrument using the nutrition counseling standard operating procedures and other WIC instruments. I pretested it at several WIC clinics and made the necessary adjustments to finalize the evaluation instrument.

 

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