Professor and the director of the Community Health Research Group, in the School of Medicine (SOM) Department of Biomedical and Health Informatics at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, Kansas City, Missouri (DMHI UMKC-KCMO).
Associate professor in the Department of Family and Community Medicine at Meharry Medical College in Nashville, Tennessee.
Mo Med. 2021 May-Jun;118(3):264-271.
The Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) is an evidence-based lifestyle intervention proven to reduce/delay diabetes onset with diet change, physical activity, and modest weight loss. However, access to the program is limited in low-resource communities. Having health profession students facilitate DPP groups as a service learning course-credit opportunity may benefit their interprofessional training while also expanding DPP access in underserved communities. We sought to use student reflections to identify themes to assist with program evaluation and to inform program refinements. Students (N=95) from the University of Missouri-Kansas City (UMKC) medical, physician assistant, and pharmacy programs led DPP groups in urban Kansas City African American churches alongside church health liaisons as part of an interprofessional service-learning course. Students reported creating satisfying, ongoing relationships with participants; developing a deeper understanding of obstacles to weight loss; and learning the role of other health professionals in the care of patients. They also identified obstacles to successful program implementation, such as needing less time in training and having equal participation from students across their interprofessional teams. Students learned important lessons by leading the DPP, but interprofessional service-learning courses have multiple obstacles to successful delivery. Still, this approach has great potential to increase access to the DPP in African American communities and promote skill development in health profession students.
糖尿病预防计划(DPP)是一项基于证据的生活方式干预措施,已被证明通过饮食改变、身体活动和适度减肥来降低/延迟糖尿病的发病。然而,该计划在资源匮乏的社区的可及性有限。让卫生专业学生将 DPP 小组作为服务学习课程学分的机会,可能有助于他们的跨专业培训,同时也扩大了在服务不足社区的 DPP 服务。我们试图利用学生的反思来确定主题,以协助计划评估并为计划改进提供信息。来自密苏里堪萨斯城大学(UMKC)医学、医师助理和药学专业的学生(N=95)与教会健康联络人一起在堪萨斯城的非裔美国教堂领导 DPP 小组,作为跨专业服务学习课程的一部分。学生们报告说,他们与参与者建立了令人满意、持续的关系;对减肥障碍有了更深入的了解;并了解其他卫生专业人员在患者护理中的作用。他们还确定了成功实施该计划的障碍,例如需要减少培训时间,以及让跨专业团队中的学生平等参与。学生通过领导 DPP 课程学到了重要的经验教训,但跨专业服务学习课程在成功实施方面存在多个障碍。尽管如此,这种方法在增加非裔美国社区对 DPP 的可及性和促进卫生专业学生技能发展方面具有巨大潜力。