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Community-based participatory research (CBPR) focuses on building relationships between academic and community partners. Indigenist CBPR (ICBPR) expands CBPR to elevate Native voices and center Native priorities in research. This approach, however, has historically been grounded in in-person connection and collaboration. Native WYSE (Women, Young, Strong, and Empowered) making CHOICES (NWC) is an alcohol-exposed pregnancy (AEP) prevention mobile health intervention designed with and for urban Native young women nationally in the U.S. NWC was designed prior to the pandemic and planned to leverage social media and other technological resources to engage this population in AEP prevention. NWC was delivered via mobile app and evaluated within a virtual randomized controlled trial (RCT), administered fully through technology, including recruitment, intervention administration, and data collection. We pursued four main ICBPR-informed research strategies for meaningful virtual connection with urban Native young women and their communities within this RCT: social media presence, Native oversight and review, urban Native young women's participation in all phases of research, and partnership with Native-serving organizations. We assessed the alignment of these virtual research strategies with the ICBPR framework. Each strategy aligns with several ICBPR elements and overall suggests virtual research can be meaningful and community-centered with appropriate planning. Planning for leadership turnover and long-term engagement are two elements not accommodated by our strategies, but discussed. Building an authentic social media presence proves to be an important virtual strategy in research with Native communities and may have the ability to empower commonalities of Native people's intergenerational strengths and their cultural and scientific methodologies. Finally, CBPR-informed virtual research approaches may amplify reach and create spaces for Native youth to feel safe and supported to give voice in research efforts. Trial registration number: NCT04376346 (May 5, 2020).
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s42844-023-00114-z | DOI Listing |
J Therm Biol
September 2025
Department of Integrative Biology, University of South Florida, St. Petersburg, FL, USA. Electronic address:
Urbanization and climate warming have contributed to global amphibian declines in recent decades, and amphibians are particularly vulnerable to warming because temperature influences their physiological processes across all life stages. Tadpole responses to warming in tropical climates are relatively understudied, and previous studies demonstrated species-specific responses to warming temperature. Warming ponds may quicken tadpole development and increase thermal tolerances, but increasing local temperatures push populations towards their physiological limits.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Plant Biol
September 2025
Department of Botany and Microbiology, Faculty of Science, Alexandria University, Alexandria, Egypt.
Background: Because of their ecological, aesthetic, and beneficial characteristics, native desert plants are highly significant. They can also be utilized in landscape architecture, particularly in environments with harsh conditions. The present study aims to evaluate the potential utilization of the wild desert plants Pancratium maritimum L.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Ethn Subst Abuse
September 2025
Department of Psychology and Center on Alcohol, Substance use, And Addiction (CASAA), University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, USA.
Background: American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) communities experienced a disproportionate increase in opioid-related fatal and non-fatal poisonings during the COVID-19 pandemic. Access to treatment, such as medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD), became even more critical, although research among this population is limited. We completed qualitative interviews with substance use disorder (SUD) treatment providers (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Environ Manage
September 2025
A.P. Leventis Ornithological Research Institute (APLORI), Centre of Excellence, University of Jos Biological Conservatory, P.O.Box 13404, Laminga, Jos, 930001, Plateau State, Nigeria. Electronic address:
Urban green spaces serve as critical refugia for bird conservation in an increasingly urbanized world. To understand how these spaces support avian communities in Afrotropical cities, we investigated bird assemblages across 40 urban green spaces in Jos-Plateau and Abuja-FCT in central Nigeria, covering a total of 91 transects (45.5 km), to examine how green space typologies and attributes influence avian biodiversity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBull Entomol Res
September 2025
Department of Agricultural, Forest and Food Sciences, University of Turin, Grugliasco, Italy.
True bugs (Hemiptera: Acanthosomatidae, Coreidae, and Pentatomidae) include harmful crop pests affecting global agriculture, with different species displaying distinct optimal conditions for development and using different habitats. Over a 2-year period, this research investigates how habitat variation and altitude can influence the species composition of true bugs and their egg parasitoids in South Tyrol (North Italy), unveiling different trends in their population and diversity across habitats: apple orchards, urban areas, and forests. A total of 25 true bug species were sampled.
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