Telehealth News

Baylor Professor to Use Telehealth to Help Counsel Young Women At Risk

Baylor University Professor Danielle Parrish is using a $3.1 million National Institutes of Health grant to launch a platform that will use telehealth and mHealth to help young women 14-17 years old who've already had contact with the juvenile justice system.

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Source: ThinkStock

By Eric Wicklund

- A Baylor University researcher is launching a federally funded project that will use telehealth and mHealth to improve risk reduction education for young women.

Danielle Parrish, PhD, a professor in the Diana R. Garland School of Social Work, is using a $3.1 million grant from the National Institutes of Health to study how connected health can be integrated into a program that helps women between the ages of 14-17 avoid risky behaviors. The program targets young women who’ve been referred by the local juvenile justice system, a population 3.5 times more likely to become pregnant and 30 percent of which have already been pregnant, as well as one that’s much more likely to use drugs and alcohol.

"I think it's important that it is clear that this is a very high-risk, underserved population," Parrish said in a press release. "We just haven't made many gains in offering services that are empirically supported that actually improve the wellbeing of these young women and their health. Our short-term goals will be to look at the outcomes of the intervention to see if it's efficacious."

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