Department of Family and Community Health

Marshall University School of Medicine
Project Director: Richard Crespo, PhD
Project Coordinator: Sally Hurst, BA
1600 Medical Center Drive, Suite 1400
Huntington, WV 25701
shurst@marshall.edu
http://wvhelpyourself.org/
The Advancing Diabetes Self Management Program (ADSM) is a partnership of rural health centers and churches in Rural West Virginia working to promote innovative ways to help people experience the benefit of taking control of their diabetes. The lead organization for this project is the Department of Family and Community Health (FCH) at Marshall University’s School of Medicine. Its goals have been to: 1) Equip and support partner agencies to lead ongoing Help Yourself self management workshops; 2) Disseminate self management communication materials using social marketing strategies; 3) Integrate changes into health care systems that facilitate self management education and support; and 4) Promote expansion of medical group visits through mentoring and consultation.
The six-week Help Yourself Chronic Disease Self Management Course, co-taught by clinic staff and lay leaders, is designed to teach people how to deal with the symptoms and frustrations of living with diabetes and other chronic conditions. The program is skills-based and centers on goal setting and problem-solving. Sessions are highly interactive, where mutual support and success builds participants’ skills and confidence to self manage.
Self management health communication materials were developed using the stages of change constructs of the Transtheoretical Model. They focus on three messages: Balance Your Plate, Choose to Move and Kick the Habit, and they provide information that enables patients to make action plans for behavior change. The materials are being marketed to three key audiences: 1) primary care centers, especially those that are new members of a Health Disparities Collaborative; 2) community organizations such as support groups and diabetes coalitions; and 3) the Partnership of African American Churches.
Medical group visits (MGVs) take place in a supportive group-setting and include the same services that are delivered during routine individual office visits. However, they provide several advantages over traditional patient visits: improved follow up; more time for self management education and problem solving; more time for patients and their care team to interact and build collaborative partnerships; opportunity for patients to learn from and support each other; greater patient and provider satisfaction; and fewer urgent care visits.
To facilitate the spread the MGV model, a Group Visit Resource Manual was developed, and New River Health Association has hosted over a dozen visits from other West Virginia community health centers. Experienced MGV staff are available to do demonstration presentations and provide support for the teams from other health care organizations.
The scenic, but isolated environment of Southern West Virginia coupled with the somewhat fatalistic culture of the rural Appalachian people presents a considerable challenge to improving access to health care and resources that support healthy lifestyles. However, the ADSM project has helped diabetes health care professionals in the area to become advocates, not only for individual patients, but also for the system changes needed to provide the resources and support people need for healthy self management.
DOC News Feature -- What it Takes to Make Group Visits Work. Support Staff, Planning Prove Key to Group-Visit Success in Primary Care. DOC News. Dec 2007. Vol 4(12): 8
Summary
Key Interventions
- Help Yourself Chronic Disease Self Management
workshops and leader trainings in multiple community
settings
- Are you ready? materials to assess patients readiness to
change and help them make action plans
- Medical Group Visits (MGVs) to enhance education and
collaborative learning among patients and the patient care
team
- Collaboration with local Partnership of African American
Churches for outreach activities
- Nurse case management to improve care coordination
- Diabetes Support Groups that incorporate self
management skill-building
Key Accomplishments
- Successfully spread the Help Yourself course through
training of leaders in clinics, health departments and
community organizations to offer classes throughout
Appalachia (view website)
- Developed a toolkit designed to provide community partners with the resources necessary to implement the “Help Yourself” (Chronic Disease Self Management) program, particularly in rural communities. Read more>>
- Developed, tested and disseminated a theory-based
set of
materials—Balance Your Plate, Chose To Move, and Kick
the Habit—to support healthy self management behaviors
- Expanded the MGV model to eight teams who are
providing monthly group visit
Lessons Learned
- The Help Yourself course and health communication
materials are strategic tools for successful diabetes self
management.
- Overcoming barriers to self management requires system
changes in primary care practices
- Medical group visits have a positive impact on self
management and clinical outcome
Grantee Presentations
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