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Project Trinity Aims to Better Understand Mental, Physical Health of African Americans

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In Memoriam

In Memoriam

Adam Alexander, Ph.D., leads the program Project Trinity.

The COVID-19 pandemic and social unrest in the United States have disrupted the economic stability and daily routines of African Americans in Oklahoma and across the nation. This year, researchers at the TSET Health Promotion Research Center at Stephenson Cancer Center launched a statewide cohort study called Project Trinity to investigate how these socioeconomic factors affect the physical and mental health of African Americans.

Researchers fear that these disruptions not only cause a decline in mental and physical health, but may lead to detrimental health choices such as greater tobacco and alcohol use, sedentary behavior and poor dietary choices. Adam Alexander, Ph.D., a health disparities researcher with a specialty in tobacco research at the TSET Health Promotion Research Center, leads the program. Alexander said Project Trinity aims to provide data and insights that can be used by policymakers, public health professionals and researchers in Oklahoma. This information can be used to inform public policy and research to promote health equity and to restore trust between African Americans, law enforcement and other public institutions. More broadly, the study will support grant applications that focus on reducing tobacco use, increasing physical activity, and addressing other modifiable health risk behaviors among African Americans.

Alexander believes that this study will “document and illustrate the harmful health and economic effects of the pandemic and unprecedented social unrest on the lives of African Americans in Oklahoma. Each African American adult who participates in this cohort study will contribute to the broader discussion about identifying policies and interventions that are needed to mitigate the secondary health and economic consequences of these traumatic events.”

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