Nathaniel Woodard

Nathaniel Woodard
  • Doctor of Philosophy
  • Assistant Professor at University at Buffalo, State University of New York

About

31
Publications
853
Reads
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74
Citations
Current institution
University at Buffalo, State University of New York
Current position
  • Assistant Professor

Publications

Publications (31)
Article
Black breast cancer survivors (BCS) are more likely to experience poor quality of life (QoL) compared to White BCS. Physical activity (PA) has been shown to improve QoL in cancer survivors. However, there is limited evidence demonstrating associations between PA and multiple QoL domains among Black BCS. This study examined the association between P...
Article
Full-text available
Background Although community engagement has had a substantial presence in public health research, community input to inform geospatial and health analyses remains underutilized and novel. This article reports on community engagement activities to solicit stakeholder perspectives on the role of neighborhood conditions in health and cancer. We discu...
Article
Structural racism is associated with alcohol and tobacco use among Black Americans. There is a need to understand how this relationship differs within varying groups of Black Americans. This study assessed the moderating roles of age, gender, and income in the association between structural racism and binge alcohol consumption and tobacco smoking s...
Preprint
BACKGROUND Black individuals are more likely to die from colorectal cancer (CRC) and experience more treatment-related side effects compared to White individuals. Physical activity (PA) participation has been associated with decreased side effects, improved CRC treatment completion rates and responses, and survival. However, Black CRC survivors are...
Article
Full-text available
Religiosity is an important factor in the lives of many African Americans, who suffer a greater health burden than their White counterparts. In this study, we examined associations between dimensions of religiosity with health behaviors and depressive symptoms in a sample of African American adults in the United States. Participants (N = 2086) comp...
Article
Purpose: To explore how Black adults who have been diagnosed with cancer perceive and interpret the term ‘cancer survivor’. Procedures: This study is a secondary analysis of qualitative data from a project identifying physical activity determinants among Black U.S. residents living past a cancer diagnosis. Semi-structured telephone interviews began...
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Full-text available
Family or caregiver engagement has the potential to support healthy dietary changes among cancer survivors. However, little is known about these family- or caregiver-involved dietary interventions and their effects. This systematic review aimed to identify the behavior change techniques (BCTs) used in dietary interventions for cancer survivors and...
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Full-text available
Background Structural racism is how society maintains and promotes racial hierarchy and discrimination through established and interconnected systems. Structural racism is theorized to promote alcohol and tobacco use, which are risk factors for adverse health and cancer-health outcomes. The current study assesses the association between measures of...
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Full-text available
Purpose While community engagement has been a longstanding aspect of cancer-relevant research in social and behavioral sciences, it is far less common in basic/translational/clinical research. With the National Cancer Institute’s incorporation of Community Outreach and Engagement into the Cancer Center Support Grant guidelines, successful models ar...
Preprint
Full-text available
Neighborhood change (NC) is a social determinant of health with direct psychosocial and economic impacts. Our objective was to assess the association between perceptions of NC and self-perceived mental health in a community experiencing intense neighborhood change. We conducted a cross-sectional study using random and convenience sampling from Sept...
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Full-text available
It is well-established in the field of implementation science that the context in which an intervention is delivered can play a crucial role in how well it is implemented. However, less is known about how organizational context or capacity relates to efficacy outcomes, particularly with health promotion interventions delivered outside of healthcare...
Article
Community health advisors (CHAs) play a key role in promoting health in medically underserved communities, including in addressing cancer disparities. There is a need to expand the research on what characteristics make for an effective CHA. We examined the relationship between CHA personal and family history of cancer, and implementation and effica...
Article
Objectives: African American women below screening age disproportionately face greater mortality from breast cancer relative to peers of other races and African American women of screening age. The current study examines breast cancer knowledge and health information seeking of African American women below screening age. Methods: We collected su...
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Full-text available
The present study builds on prior research by examining the moderating relationships between different types of capital on physical functioning, emotional functioning, and depressive symptoms using a 2.5‐year longitudinal design with a national sample of African–American adults. Results indicated a significant T1 social capital × T1 religious capit...
Article
Training lay community members to implement health promotion interventions is an effective method to educate medically underserved populations. Some trainings are designed for individuals who already have a health-related background; however, others are developed for those with no previous health promotion experience. It is unknown whether those wi...
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Full-text available
While health promotion is not the primary mission of many community organizations (e.g., libraries, religious organizations), it is well documented that many still engage in health promotion activities, even when their resources may be constrained. What is less understood are the driving forces that spur community organizations to divert finite res...
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Full-text available
Implementation evaluations have increasingly taken into account how features of local context help determine implementation outcomes. The purpose of this study was to determine which contextual features of organizational capacity led directly to the RE-AIM Framework implementation outcomes of intervention reach and number of days taken to implement...
Preprint
Full-text available
Purpose: Community health advisors (CHAs) play a key role in promoting health in medically underserved communities, including in addressing cancer disparities. There is a need to expand the research on what criteria makes for an effective CHA. We examined the relationship between CHAs’ personal and family history of cancer, and implementation and e...
Article
Although statistically unlikely, early-onset breast cancer tends to be more aggressive and leads to greater mortality than breast cancer among women of screening age. Young African American women are disproportionately impacted by early-onset breast cancer compared to women of other races. Given the racial disparities and because young women are ty...
Article
Lay Summary Researchers have become interested in studying how health promotion activities fit within the organizational setting where they are delivered. Health activities that are integrated into the host setting’s structures and routine operations are more likely to be fully executed, effective, and sustained. Unfortunately, we know little about...
Article
African American women are disproportionately impacted by breast cancer, including triple-negative disease, at a young age. Yet most public health research in breast cancer focuses on women of screening age. This study identified the specific breast cancer educational needs of African American women below the recommended screening age. Data were co...
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Full-text available
Though many African American churches offer health promotion activities to their members, less is known about organizational factors that predict the availability of this programming. This study examines organizational capacity as a predictor of the amount and type of health programming offered by a convenience sample of 119 African American church...
Article
Institutionalization of health promotion interventions occurs when the organization makes changes to support the program as a component of its routine operations. To date there has not been a way to systematically measure institutionalization of health promotion interventions outside of healthcare settings. The purpose of the present study was to d...
Article
There has been increasing attention in implementation science to optimizing the fit of evidence-based interventions to the organizational settings where they are delivered. However, less is known about how to maximize intervention–context fit, particularly in community-based settings. We describe a new strategy to customize evidence-based health pr...

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