Community Health Worker Certificate Program Instructors

CHWs Promote Community Wellness
Dr. Antonette Francis Shearer

Dr. Antonette Francis-ShearerDr. Antonette Francis-Shearer, PhD, CCHW, holds a PhD in Public Health with a specialization in Community Health while maintaining health allied certifications as CCHW.  She is the Health Education Manager at the USA Health Center for Healthy Communities, where she acts as the project lead for the CHW clinical integration pilot. She is also a practicing CHW and CHW Trainer.

Before joining USA, she honed her expertise in serving low-resource, historically marginalized populations, to achieve improved mental and physical health outcomes as the Community Prevention Manager attached to Newark, NJ, for the RWJBH system. Her public health career has seen her function as an E-facilitator in Science, Medicine, & Technology with the University of the West Indies in her native Rep. of Trinidad & Tobago, as well as participate in and complete primary care prevention and screening project initiatives for the European Union and the Pan American Health Organization. She is a member of the National Association of Community Health Workers, the Alabama Public Health Association, and also a member of the American Public Health Association.  There, she has acted as a reviewer for research papers at the national APHA annual conference for several years in the fields of CHW Integration, Community Health & Participatory Research, Community Health Development, Health Promotion, and Health Inequities Research. Her focus on community health promotion has fueled her efforts in advocacy for health equity and the importance of providing tools to empower the person on the street to understand the access and prevention paradigm.

 

Janel Lowman
Janel Lowman

Janel Lowman, MHA, Senior Manager of Community Outreach, University of South Alabama Health, Mitchell Cancer Institute. She is also a practicing CHW and CHW Trainer.

Janel Lowman, MHA has over a decade’s worth of experience in community outreach and education at the University of South Alabama. Ms. Lowman served as Assistant Director for several major grants totaling $7.3 million in external funding. The largest of these grants is the Community Health Workers Training Project funded by the Gulf Region Health Outreach Program as part of the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill Medical Settlement. This program is designed to enhance health care capacity and strengthen communities in coastal Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida, by training Community Health Workers in areas affected by the spill.  Ms. Lowman received her certification to train Community Health Workers from Houston Community College in 2011.  Currently, Ms. Lowman’s current role is Senior Manager of Community Outreach with the University of South Alabama’s Mitchell Cancer Institute. Her role encompasses developing and implementing cancer screening initiatives throughout the region, conducting training to volunteers and Community Health Workers throughout the region.     

Ms. Lowman regularly collaborates with community leaders and organizations to help identify and meet the needs of underserved communities. She has been extensively involved in developing training curricula, creating and organizing training materials, recruiting program participants, planning and facilitating training sessions.

Ms. Lowman maintains an active academic research agenda, presenting papers at conferences and publishing in outlets such as the Journal of Applied Social Science. She has served as co-chair of the American Public Health Association’s Community Health Workers Award Committee. Her professional memberships include the American Public Health Association and the Alabama Comprehensive Cancer Control Coalition.  She has also completed the Dr. Harold P. Freeman Patient Navigation Training in New York, New York.    

 

Kim-Lien Tran
Kim-Lien Tran

Kim-Lien Tran, CCHW, is a recent recipient of the Mobile Medical Museum Community Health Leadership Award 2024.  She is a Gulf States Community Health Research Fellow, and Mental Health First Aid Instructor.  In her current role as a Community Health Worker (CHW) for Boat People SOS, in Bayou La Batre, Alabama, she helps patients navigate the healthcare system to ensure the language barrier doesn’t inhibit them from receiving the care they need. Additionally, Kim uses her bilingual skills in both Vietnamese and English to provide other community health education to her patients.  In 2013, she re-established the Mobile Advisory Board, a collaboration of community organizations, to link available resources to individuals and families struggling to cope in the aftermath of both manmade and natural disasters. Between 2020 - 2023, Kim expanded her community service to include COVID-19 tests, vaccination, and education.  These efforts have reached over 10,000 community members in rural and underserved communities.