Modern wooden house with a simple design, surrounded by grassy field and small trees, overlooking a large body of water with mountains in the background, during sunset or sunrise with soft lighting.
At Relational Ground, Dominick  explores how men’s health, relationships, and societal change intersect through stories, research, and global perspectives. 
This work examines how cultural norms and systemic barriers shape men’s experiences with reproductive health, family planning, and emotional well-being. From global fertility trends to fathers’ roles in sexual health and the NFL’s platform for men’s health, Relational Ground challenges outdated narratives and offers practical solutions. 
Its relational approach emphasizes connection—between partners, families, communities, and health systems—as a catalyst for stronger public health and healthier lives. 
Click the link to visit the Relational Ground Substack. Exemplary blogs are shared below. 
From Talk to Transfer

From Talk to Transfer

By consolidating ten male-engagement curricula into an implementation-ready learning sequence (RAST) with explicit safeguards, artifacts, and service linkages, this paper moves the field from attitude change to behavioral transfer. It operationalizes men’s own health-seeking—especially in SRH—through rehearsable micro-skills and measurable clinic pathways, yielding generalizable design standards that enhance effectiveness, external validity, and participant safety (autonomy, confidentiality, GBV risk mitigation).

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Infographic: Insights on Young Men’s Connection and Belonging
Dominick Men's Health Dominick Men's Health

Infographic: Insights on Young Men’s Connection and Belonging

“Up to 40% of young men now belong to no organized group. Belonging is breaking down—and the data shows why.”
“Digital spaces aren’t replacing community for young men. They’re the only community many have left.”
“Peer invitations work. Adult outreach doesn’t. Recruitment is relational—not institutional.”
“The least connected young men aren’t disinterested—they’re under-supported. Context, not character.”
“To rebuild belonging, start small: peers doing something together.”

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