Getting INFORMED and living well: A demonstration project to facilitate pandemic recovery among Asian Americans in California

One in six Californians is Asian American. The prolonged COVID-19 pandemic, compounded by the unprecedented increase in anti-Asian hate-related incidents, has devastating impacts, including increased concerns in mental well-being among our diverse Asian American communities.

The Project INFORMED team is leading the “INFORMED and Living Well Project” to facilitate pandemic recovery among Asian Californians. Project INFORMED (Individual and Family Oriented Responsive Message and Education) is an academic-community collaborative partnership, co-led by investigators at multiple University of California campuses (San Francisco, Davis, and Merced), and community partners (Chinese Community Health Resource Center, the Fresno Center, and Immigrant and Resettlement Cultural Center). By utilizing text messaging and lay health worker (LHW) remote outreach to deliver COVID-19 related education, INFORMED has shown high retention (95%) and high engagement (94% completed educational sessions; 71% viewed or commented on the study website) with 247 Chinese, Hmong, and Vietnamese participants.

Leveraging INFORMED’s infrastructure, we are expanding INFORMED to promote emotional wellness and to include Korean language. The new intervention “INFORMED-Living Well” includes a 6-week program in which participants may choose to receive text only or text + LHW outreach targeting 600 self-identified Asian Americans residing in California who speak/read English, Chinese, Korean, Hmong or Vietnamese.

Through this projedct, we are evaluating improvements in:

  1. confidence of making well-informed decisions on seeking mental health care when needed;
  2. mental health-related symptoms; and
  3. perceived capability of managing emotional wellness.

We are studying the factors at individual, interpersonal and community levels that are associated with the outcomes. Findings will guide large-scale intervention and policy directives to effectively address mental health-related disparities among Asian Americans. 

Collaborators

  • UC Davis
  • UC Merced
  • Chinese Community Health Resource Center (CCHRC)
  • Immigrant Resettlement and Cultural Center Inc
  • The Fresno Center
  • Healthwise

Other Children and Adolescents Funded Projects

Identifying the effect of housing policy on mental health outcomes among low-income renters and their children during the COVID-19 pandemic

Qingfang Wang headshot
Qingfang Wang
UC Riverside, School of Public Policy
Bruce Link headshot
Bruce Link
UC Riverside, Department of Sociology
Wei Kang headshot
Wei Kang
University of North Texas, Department of Geography and the Environment
Active

Mental Health

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Assessing the sustainability of peer programs in addressing social isolation and loneliness in older adults: Implications for California COVID-19 recovery efforts

Carla Perissinotto headshot
Carla Perissinotto 
UCSF, Department of Medicine
Ashwin Kotwal headshot
Ashwin Kotwal
UCSF, School of Medicine, Division of Geriatrics
Active

Mental Health

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