1 Comment October 10th, 2008 by Matthew Anderson

Dr. Bill as drawn by one of his patients
What does a Social Medicine doctor do? Here is Bill Jordan’s current answer:
I graduated from RPSM Family Medicine in 2007, and I’m currently finishing my MPH and serving as Chief Resident in Preventive Medicine at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York City.
While a resident at Monte, I built on community psychiatry experience from medical school, launching an HIV prevention workshop at Geel Clubhouse, a day program for people with mental illness in the South Bronx. In addition to a recent report on this work in the journal Psychiatric Services, the workshops lived on after I left Monte, led by medical students under the stewardship of Dr. Alice Fornari.
As a preventive medicine resident, I have continued my longstanding commitment to immigrant health. I volunteer with Doctors of the World, writing medical affidavits for asylum seekers, and I regularly see new refugees at my primary care clinic in Harlem, the Barbee Family Health Center. I am also spearheading the NYC DOHMH pilot program to address cervical cancer screening disparities among female immigrants.
Finally, I helped build the coalition supporting this year’s introduction of Green Carts in New York City. The new permits allow vendors to sell fresh fruits and vegetables in neighborhoods with limited economic opportunity and low availability of healthy food. I promoted adoption of the permits with a local community-based organization representing Spanish-speaking street vendors, Esperanza del Barrio, and was recently elected to the board of directors. I am currently exploring the possibility of real-time cell-phone based mapping of vendor locations as a tool for promoting microlending to vendors and healthy food consumption by local residents. After finishing residency, I hope to continue working on the intersection of economic development and nutrition as a way of addressing health disparities.
Add a comment September 5th, 2008 by Matthew Anderson
A Brief History of the Residency Program in Social Medicine (RPSM) & the Department of Family and Social Medicine:
Montefiore Medical Center / Albert Einstein College of Medicine
The Residency Program in Social Medicine (RPSM) of the Montefiore Medical Center (MMC) was founded in 1970 by Drs. Harold Wise and David Kindig, who sought to develop residency training in pediatrics and internal medicine that emphasized primary care for the underserved. In 1973 family practice was added as a third track. Residents worked in partnerships and maintained their continuity practices at the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Health Center (MLK), which Dr. Wise had begun in 1968. The RSPM was their response to the difficulty of recruiting physicians to MLK who could work effectively with the community and other members of the health care team. At the time MLK was the flagship of the neighborhood health center movement of the Office of Economic Opportunity.
In 1973 Dr. Jo Ivey Boufford, one of the RPSM’s first pediatric graduates, became the director of the RPSM and began developing the social medicine curriculum which all three disciplines shared. This included health systems skills, such as medical care organization and economics; community and organizational skills, such as medical anthropology, Spanish and community-based projects; research and evaluation skills, such as epidemiology, biostatistics, and health services research; and educational and teaching skills, including patient education and curriculum development.
In 1977 the family practice track moved its continuity practice from MLK to North Central Bronx Hospital and in 1978 Dr. Robert Massad, already a national leader in his discipline, became chairman of Montefiore’s Department of Family Medicine. Under his leadership in 1980 the Montefiore Family Health Center (FHC) was opened and became the primary site for residency training and faculty practice in family medicine.
In 1982 Dr. Boufford left the RPSM to become a Vice President of New York City’s Health and Hospitals Corporation and Dr. Massad assumed her responsibilities. That year the RPSM offered its first month-long “Core Curriculum” rotations in Medical Spanish; Understanding the Health System; and Epidemiology and Community Assessment. Because of MLK’s fiscal problems, the pediatrics and internal medicine tracks moved to St. Barnabus Hospital in 1986. In 1990 several independent community health centers affiliated with MMC were organized into the Montefiore Ambulatory Care Network (MACN) under Dr. Massad. In 1991 pediatrics and internal medicine moved to MACN, now divided between the Comprehensive Health Care Center (CHCC) in the South Bronx and the Comprehensive Family Care Center (CFCC) near the Albert Einstein College of Medicine (AECOM) campus in the East Bronx. In 1997, when CHCC moved into a newly constructed facility, the social internal medicine and pediatrics tracks were again consolidated there. CHCC, CFCC, and FHC are all federally-funded community health centers (Section 330).
In 1992 the Department of Family Medicine at Montefiore, which administers the RPSM, became a full academic department at AECOM with a Division of Research, a required third year clerkship for medical students, and its first geographic inpatient ward on Rosenthal D. Dr. Massad became the first Unified Chairman of Family Medicine at AECOM with affiliated residencies at Bronx-Lebanon Hospital Center. In 1993 Dr. Massad received national recognition awards from both the National Association of Community Health Centers and the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine. In 1995 the RPSM itself became the first organization to receive the National Primary Care Achievement Award in Education from the Pew Charitable Trust (in collaboration with the U.S. Public Health Service, the Pew Health Professions Commission, and the Primary Care Organizations Network). The award cited RPSM’s success in having more than two-thirds of its graduates enter practice in underserved communities.
In 1996 MACN was merged with the older Montefiore Medical Group and a former RPSM graduate, Dr. Kathryn Anastos, was recruited as its first Medical Director. Family practice residents began work at Castle Hill and Valentine Lane Family Practices, where medical students had been rotating since 1993.
In 1998 Dr. Massad announced his retirement, and in 1999 he was succeeded by another RPSM graduate, Dr. Peter Selwyn, as Chair of the Department of Family Medicine and Community Health. Dr. Selwyn extended the Research Division and initiated a Palliative Care Service, including hospice beds on Rosenthal D.
In 2000 the Valentine Lane Family Practice was transferred to the St. John’s Riverside Hospital System in Yonkers, and half of the family practice residency moved to the Williamsbridge Family Practice. In 2001 member of the department established the first Hispanic Center of Excellence in New York State at the medical school. In 2003 the department established the Bronx Center to Reduce and Eliminate Ethnic and Racial Health Disparities, the first and only such NIH Center of Excellence in a department of family medicine. After the AECOM Department of Epidemiology and Social Medicine became the Department of Epidemiology and Population Health in 2004, we became the Department of Family and Social Medicine in 2005.
This brief history was written by Dr. Hal Strelnick for the 2005 RPSM Alumni Reunion. Posted by Matt Anderson, MD
5 Comments July 27th, 2008 by Matthew Anderson
On Tuesday, July 22nd we had the pleasure of hearing Dr. Roberto Belmar, the current Director of Santiago Chile’s Public Health Zone, speak at the RPSM. Dr. Belmar has a special relationship with our Department. In the 1970′s he came to Montefiore as a political refugee and worked for many years in the Social Medicine Department. His personal story is quite compelling, although his talk on Tuesday was devoted to his current work as a public health Official.
In the 1960′s and 1970′s Dr. Belmar was a Professor of Community Medicine in Chile. President Salvador Allende named him as the Director of a primary health care network of 45 health centers providing care to more than 3 million Santiago residents. Following the military coup of 9/11/1973, Dr. Belmar fled Chile in the face of a military order to execute him if he attempted to enter a hospital.
Dr. Belmar took political asylum at the USA with support from Montefiore Hospital, Dr. Victor Sidel, Dr. Jack Geiger and the APHA; see, for example, the APHA’s 1977 report on the Chilean Health Care system. Dr. Belmar led the Chilean exile community in the US, creating the “Emergency Committee to Help the Chilean Health Workers.” The Committee was supported by more than 10,000 physicians and health workers in the US.
Dr. Belmar returned to Chile with his family in 1985 to help organize resistance to the military dictatorship. In 1989 Patricio Alwyns became the first democratically-elected President of the post-coup period. Dr. Belmar was named the Chief of a newly created Department of Primary Care. In 1990 he was instrumental in establishing a “Statute of Primary Care” which secured free primary care for all Chileans. He later developed the Division of Environmental Health (1995-2000) which is the Chilean equivalent of CDC, FDA, OSHA & NIH. He was instrumental in creating the regulatory bodies for foods, occupational and workplace regulation, air quality, water quality, industrial waste, home and city waste, and mine industry sanitation.
Dr. Belmar now serves as the Health Officer of Santiago Health Zone. In this role he is responsible for overseeing the health care and public health of the (now) 6 million residents of the Chile’s capital city, Santiago. During his talk Dr. Belmar emphasized a broad conception of public health. To take the single example of air quality, his office was involved at the community level, where it worked to upgrade wood-burning stoves in individual homes; at the city level, where his greatest dream was to put a cap on the number of cars in Santiago; and at the national level, where he negotiated with large corporations to get cleaner burning woods and fuels. He told us, with a rueful smile, that he was the only one in the government who liked the idea of a cap on cars, “even the President is against it.”
His conception of public health also involved community participation. He had recruited retired people to work as community inspectors. They would issue sanitary warnings modeled on the red and yellow penalty card system in soccer. Occupational health was supervised by joint factory committees made up of workers and management. “We are lucky to have an increasingly strong Union movement to work with,” he noted in a comment that would seemed unthinkable for a US public official.
He spoke about the clinical programs run by the public health service and told a particularly poignant story about their program for the survivors of torture. During his exile, Dr. Belmar had come to know Senator Edward Kennedy. Senator Kennedy had queried him regarding how much money the US had spent overthrowing Allende. This was estimated to be about $10 million dollars. Kennedy made sure that the US allocated $10 million in aid for a Chilean program to treat survivors of torture. (For Kennedy’s role in combating torture, see the Torture Victim Protection Act of 1989).
Dr. Belmar is an active teacher and innovator in medical school teaching, participating in the Introduction to Community Medicine, Behavioral Sciences in Medical Schools, the Summer Field Work in Chile, a Rural medicine clerkship, The Evening School of Medicine for workers, and the Sophie Davies School of Biomedical Education at CUNY.
Posted by Matt Anderson
2 Comments July 24th, 2008 by Matthew Anderson
What does a social medicine doctor do?
“One of the things I have done that I am most proud of (and feel it would be of interest to the Social Medicine Alums) is become a trustee for the Global Aids Interfaith Alliance (www.thegaia.org). This organization was founded in 2000 by a retired Episcopal priest (Bill Rankin) and a neurosurgeon at UCSF (Charles Wilson) as a response to the AIDS crisis in Sub-saharan Africa. The organization partners religious groups of any affiliation with village level projects in Malawi (one of the poorest countries on earth with a 15-40% HIV positive rate). These projects promote women’s empowerment, orphan care, home based care of AIDS patients and income generation activities tailored to the village needs. GAIA also trains nurses in Malawi and supports AIDS support organizations and infant crisis centers for orphaned infants requiring formula. I have done volunteer work in Malawi the past two summers in an Anglican mission hospital in Nkhota-kota, a Catholic parish in Mchinji, and a Baptist clinic with mobile clinics in remote villages. I am interested in promoting Global Health in medical schools and bringing medical students there in the future. I also give many talks on the status of HIV/AIDS in Malawi to churches, hospitals, schools, nursing homes and even a local Rotary club in order to help raise awareness of the crisis and how easy it is for us to help. Anyone with an interest in this subject or to learn more should go to the website and feel free to contact me by email or phone. I will be returning to Malawi in two weeks with a group of high school students and their parents for more clinical and youth oriented activities. (July 8-22). Thanks for the opportunity to talk about this worthy organization (they count Paul Volberding and Jay Levy among their advisors!)”
Etta Eskridge MD
Assistant Professor of Medicine
NY Medical College and the Westchester Medical Center
eskridgee@aol.com
(914) 6462799
559 Gramatan Ave
Suite 202
Mount Vernon, NY 10552
5 Comments June 24th, 2008 by Matthew Anderson
We wanted to share an article we just published in Public Health Reports on using Google Earth for community mapping. We have found Google Earth a very useful tool that allows non-experts to make maps illustrating the community context for health problems. This post contains two of the maps created by our residents and medical students.
Using Google Earth as an Innovative Tool for Community Mapping
SYNOPSIS
Maps are used to track diseases and illustrate the social context of health problems. However, commercial mapping software requires special training. This article illustrates how nonspecialists used Google EarthTM, a free program, to create community maps. The Bronx, New York, is characterized by high levels of obesity and diabetes. Residents and medical students measured the variety and quality of food and exercise sources around a residency training clinic and a student-run free clinic, using Google Earth to create maps with minimal assistance. Locations were identified using street addresses or simply by pointing to them on a map. Maps can be shared via e-mail, viewed online with Google Earth or Google Maps, and the data can be incorporated into other mapping software.
Authors: Theodore B. Lefer, Matthew R. Anderson, Alice Fornari, Anastasia Lambert, Jason Fletcher and Maria Baquero
Source: Public Health Reports, July-August 2008, 123: 474-480, Available at www.publichealthreports.org

Sources of Food and Exercise around the Montefiore Comprehensive Health Care Center; Legend: Red cross = Comprehensive Health Care Center; Grocery cart = Grocery Store (n =10); Fork and Knife = Restaurants (n=16); Red dot = Fast Food outlet (n=32); Yellow dot = Bodegas (small variety stores, n=44); Green tree = Exercise site (n=11). Note the old Yankee stadium on the lower left of the map.

Food stores around ECHO Free Clinic, ranked by variety and quality of produce for sale; Legend: Red Cross = ECHO Free Clinic; Small red icon of shopping cart = “no variety” (n=33) ; Yellow cart = “Poor variety” (n=67); Blue cart = “Limited variety” (n=50); Darker green cart = “Better variety” (n=11); Larger, lighter green cart = “Good variety” (n=15) ; Blue -shaded area = Study area
If you are interested, you can also download the original KMZ file.
posted by: Matt Anderson
Add a comment May 31st, 2008 by Matthew Anderson
Residents in the Montefiore Residency Program in Social Medicine are required to produce a social medicine project in the course of their 3 year residency. These projects can involve community service, advocacy or research (and often a combination of all three). These projects are presented to the Department in the last Social Medicine Rounds before graduation in June. Here are the abstracts from the presentations by the 2008 graduating class:
Rashiah Elam, MD & Robert Roose, MD, MPH
Increasing Uptake of Buprenorphine Among HIV Physicians and Non-Physicians
Office-based buprenorphine places health care providers in a unique position to combine HIV and drug treatment in the primary care setting. Despite this, few physicians prescribe buprenorphine. Our first study examined barriers to obtaining waivers to prescribe buprenorphine and found that physicians with waivers were less likely to be male (51.1 vs 63.7%, p<.05), more likely to be in New York (51.1 vs 29.5%, p<.01), less likely to be infectious disease specialists (25.5 vs 41.6%, p<.05), and more likely to be general internists (43.6 vs 33.5%, p<.05). Adjusting for physician characteristics, confidence addressing drug problems (adjusted odds ratio [AOR]=2.05, 95% confidence interval [95% CI]=1.08 – 3.88) and concern about lack of access to addiction experts (AOR=0.56, 95% CI=0.32 – 0.97) were significantly associated with having a buprenorphine waiver. Understanding and remediating barriers HIV physicians face may lead to new opportunities to improve outcomes for opioid-dependent HIV-infected patients.
Furthermore, federal legislation restricting nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs) from prescribing buprenorphine may limit its potential for uptake and inhibit the role of these nonphysician providers in delivering drug addiction treatment to patients with HIV. Our second study aimed to examine the level of interest in prescribing buprenorphine among nonphysician providers and found that, overall, 48.6% (n = 92) of nonphysician providers were interested in prescribing buprenorphine. Compared to infectious disease specialists, nonphysician providers (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 2.89, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.22 – 6.83) and generalist physicians (AOR = 2.04, 95% CI = 1.09 – 3.84) were significantly more likely to be interested in prescribing buprenorphine. To improve uptake of buprenorphine in HIV settings, the implications of permitting nonphysician providers to prescribe buprenorphine should be further explored.
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Kim Nguyen, MD
Screening for depression in elderly Vietnameses at Family Health Clinic Bronx, NY.
A recent depression screen for elderly Asians in New York City in 2003 concluded that more than 40 % are considered to be depressed. Our hypothesis is that the percentage is much higher for elderly Vietnameses at the Family Health Clinic as this unique group seems to be more socially and cultural isolated than others. A validated GDS screen tool for Vietnameses was used. Approximately 40 % of elderly Vietnameses over 65 who came to clinic between January 2008 and April 2008 were found to have GDS score > 5, which is suggestive of depression. In conclusion, using the same GDS screen, this study has the same result as in the previous study.
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Teryn Edwards, MD
Creating and Evaluating a Peer-Developed Exercise Program for Overweight Inner-City Girls
Obesity is an ever-increasing national epidemic that we see mirrored in urban settings and in urban adolescents. While exercise is a proven method of weight reduction, overweight teen girls from ethnic minorities are less likely to exercise. While numerous programs have been devised for this population, they have been designed by the investigators, based upon their perceptions of the target population’s needs. The goal of this project is to design an exercise program for overweight inner city girls using their input. Using a focus group model, we aimed to determine what overweight inner-city teen girls perceive as the most important and desirable components of an exercise program for their peers. Additional goals were to determine the effects of a peer-developed exercise program on the girls’ utilization and satisfaction with the class.
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Adam Richards MD, MPH
Public Health & Human Rights Praxis in Burma: Training Internally Displaced People to Control Malaria & Document Associations between Human Rights Violations & Health
Civil war has ravaged Eastern Burma for over 40 years and displaced hundreds of thousands of villagers. Adam discusses over eight years of experience training internally displaced people (IDPs) to document and take action to ameliorate the deplorable health status of their own communities. The discussion will focus on data presented in four primary- or co-authored research papers published in or submitted to peer-reviewed journals, including exclusive estimates of 1) mortality rates and 2) malaria prevalence from eastern Burma; 3) the successful reduction of malaria transmission among over 40,000 IDPs; and 4) novel methods to document associations between exposure to human rights violations and health outcomes. We will conclude with a discussion of the uses of data to inform policy and advocacy at the US and international levels.
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Minesh Shah, MD
Interfaces With The Law: Criminal Justice Involvement Among Patients Presenting For Primary Care
Background: In 2005, almost 72,000 arrests were made in Bronx County, NY, a 45% increase from 1990. From the time of arrest, individuals are navigated through a complex process, which includes arrest, detention, arraignment, plea bargain or trial, and if convicted, sentencing and incarceration in jail or prison. Each of these stages poses various potential health risks, particularly the disruption of continuity care. There are also several health risks related to incarceration, including exposure to high rates of HIV, Hepatitis C, and TB infection, and inadequate mental health care. Upon release, individuals return to their families and communities, often ill-equipped to manage the re-entry process. Although it is suspected that many patients from underserved populations have a high burden of criminal justice involvement, this has not been well quantified. In a pilot study, our goal was to describe the extent and nature of criminal justice involvement of patients and their family members presenting to a community-based, primary care clinic in the South Bronx.
Methods: The sample consisted of consenting patients who presented to a single resident-physician for primary care at a community clinic in the South Bronx during a 4 week period. Patients were asked to participate in a standardized survey to explore current and past legal involvement of themselves and their family members. Legal involvement was divided into trials, arrests, and incarceration in jail or prison. In addition to criminal involvement, patients were also asked about civic legal proceedings involving housing, child support, employment and immigration. The data were analyzed using Microsoft Excel spreadsheet software. Results: Of 44 patients completing the survey, 30 (68%) were women and 22 (50%) were foreign-born. At the time of the interview, 17 (39%) were currently participating in active legal proceedings, of which 10 were criminal charges. In addition, 8 respondents (18%) had been incarcerated in jail or prison in the past 2 years, and 11 (25%) had a spouse or significant other who had been incarcerated during that time. More than half of all respondents (24, 55%) had themselves or had a family member (including 12 children) who had been arrested in the past 2 years. Furthermore, 7 respondents (16%) currently had a family member in jail or prison. Finally, 30 respondents (68%) felt that they would utilize legal services if they were available at the clinic. Conclusions: Questions about criminal justice involvement are not typically asked at intake or as part of routine medical visits. Our study found that, when asked, patients will agree to share this information. In our South Bronx population, we found a high burden of criminal justice involvement among primary health care patients. Although not specifically elicited, some respondents also described how this involvement affected their health care. Better integration of health and legal services could be of significant benefit to providing health care to similar patient populations. Further research is needed to better delineate the type of involvement and its impact on the health of individuals, families, and communities.
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Anagha Loharikar, MD
Mental Health Care Needs of Latino Families in the South Bronx: Perspectives of Parents and Pediatricians
Background: Latino communities in the United States suffer disparities in access to adequate mental health (MH) care, which has been attributed to systemic barriers and coordination between health care providers and community based organizations. While some studies have reported on perspectives of the Latino community on MH, no studies have reported perspectives of pediatricians working in such communities. We present data collected as part of an AAP CATCH grant to develop a MH home for Latino families in the South Bronx, where 63% of the population is Latino.
Objective: To understand and compare the perceptions of Latino parents and practicing pediatricians regarding 1) the causes of MH problems, 2) barriers to MH services, and 3) MH needs. Design/Methods: We conducted a qualitative study. Parents of children with a history of MH services referral, use or need were recruited at a federally-qualified community health center to participate in a focus group. We conducted two 90-minute groups with parents. Next, we conducted one 90-minute focus group with pediatricians at the same health center. Focus groups were audio-taped and transcribed. Two investigators independently coded each transcript for thematic content. Differences in coding were resolved via consensus.
Results: Causes: Parents and pediatricians both identified familial disruption as well as poverty/violence as etiologies of MH problems in Latino children. Parents also emphasized a causal relationship between the actions of God and the devil on MH. Barriers: Both parents and pediatricians acknowledged stigma associated with MH disorders. Parents described distrust of authority and public institutions and incompetence among MH providers, including lack of caring. Pediatricians attributed lack of access to systemic barriers, such as lack of insurance. Needs: Both groups described a need for preventive services in the community. Parents described consequences of MH problems on self, family, and community. Parents emphasized a need to be heard and for community awareness about MH. Themes distinctive to the pediatricians included the high prevalence and range of MH problems of their patients and discomfort with personal experiences in managing MH. Conclusions: Parents and pediatricians gave differing perceptions of the MH needs of the Latino population in this inner-city setting. Further exploration can inform the intervention-design of the CATCH initiative to improve access to MH care.
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Giliane Joseph, MD
Prevalence of isolate Hepatitis B core antibody positivity in the MMG population
A descriptive study looking at the various serology results in our patient population; and looking for a pattern in the patients who lose or never develop protective immunity.
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Sara Doorley, MD
The underutilization of Comprehensive Health Care Center (CHCC) services by the foreign-born population in the South Bronx
Objectives: Increase utilization of health care services by the uninsured immigrant population in the South Bronx. Create a collaborative team of Community Health Workers (CHW), resident physicians, and Community Based Organizations (CBO) to facilitate access to care among new immigrants.
The Montefiore CHCC is federally qualified health center in the Highbridge-Morrisania (HM) section of the South Bronx where 30% of the population is foreign born and 45% do not have a personal doctor. The CHCC established the OPEN-IT Clinic (Opportunities Pro-Immigrant Elderly Newcomers-International Travel) to provide culturally appropriate clinical services to immigrants, and educate resident physicians in immigration/travel medicine. The multiple barriers for HM residents to access available health care services include language, cultural differences, fear of retribution (for undocumented residents), and lack of knowledge regarding available services. To address these barriers, the CHW-OPEN-IT clinic collaboration recruited and trained Community Health Workers (CHWs). The training began with bilingual health classes led by Montefiore medical residents and progressed to a biweekly “health promoter certification” for interested participants. In collaboration with CBOs, the CHWs conducted outreach to places of worship, businesses, immigrant organizations, and schools. The CHWs accompanied interested new immigrant patients to the OPEN-IT clinic to facilitate the registration, visit, and follow-up processes. The CHWs also arranged for home visits to clients by physicians when necessary and conducted follow-up phone calls to the patients. The CHWs were available to assist residents in providing cross-cultural care and facilitate communication between patient and physician.
Findings to Date: 1) Increased utilization of health care services by the foreign-born population. Via our collaboration, 57 new immigrant patients have received health care at the Montefiore CHCC OPEN-IT clinic. 2) Discovery of barriers to receiving health care services at the CHCC. We learned that uninsured patients erroneously received bills from the clinic and were hesitant to return for follow up. Although prescriptions are available to uninsured patients on a sliding-fee basis, we learned that some OPEN-IT clinic patients were charges full prices for medications. 3) Novel feelings of provider trust and service satisfaction by the new patients
Key Lessons Learned: Community Health Workers can link the health care sector with the community, improve utilization of existing services, provide valuable feedback regarding patient care, and dissolve existing barriers to access.
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Sara Lorenz, MD
A Descriptive Epidemiology Of Locus Of Control (Loc) Among Participants In The South Bronx Obesity Reduction Initiative (Sobori)
Despite the serious consequences associated with obesity, prevention and treatment continue to be difficult to achieve in part because there is little known about the factors affecting engagement in weight loss programs. The objective of this study was to assess beliefs and weight-related attitudes among a group who agreed to participate in a weight reduction program. We used internal-external locus of control as a personality construct to describe engagement in a weight reduction program among obese urban population. In our population we found that administering a full Multidimensional Health Locus of Control survey was not practical. However, particular items related to weight loss locus of control were feasible to administer and provided valuable data. These items revealed that patients have an external locus of control with regard to family understanding and availability of exercise infrastructure but an internal locus of control with regard to understanding of personal behavior as causes of obesity and perceived ability to change their health status. These scores predicted responses to weight-related measures and may be used in planning a new weight reduction program to specifically address the population’s needs.
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Bernice M. Vicil, MD
CAM use among children hospitalized with asthma
Children in New York State have substantially higher rates of asthma hospitalizations as compared to children in the U.S. This becomes even more notable in the borough of the Bronx, where pediatric asthma hospitalization rates have consistently towered above the rest. Since hospitalizations are a major marker of morbidity for asthmatic patients, it seems important to quantify, and analyze, CAM use among patients in this specific setting. A better understanding of the prevalence, and types, of CAM usage among children hospitalized with asthma can further enhance patient care by allowing the medical team to communicate more effectively with families regarding their child’s asthma, and its management. This study investigates the prevalence of CAM use among hospitalized children with asthma.
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Sharon Welch, MD
Spirituality, Religion and Medicine: A needs assessment survey
Research has shown that most patients would like for their physicians to inquire about spiritual issues especially in times of serious illness. However, many physicians have not done so for a variety of reasons including their comfort level, time and inadequate training. I wanted to assess residents reasons for not inquiring about spiritual issues and whether they think that this can be improved by formal training.
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Yadiera Brown, MD & Eric Churchill, MD, MPH
Spirituality, trust in the medical system and preferences for end of life care in two Bronx clinic populations
There are significant differences among ethnic groups in the utilization of hospice and palliative care services. This discrepancy persists even when sex, access to health care, income, marital status and existence of a living will are controlled for (Greiner 2003). There are many possible reasons for this discrepancy including a lack of trust in the medical system and a greater prevalence of strong religious beliefs or a general preference for more aggressive care. While many studies have shown that these traits exist in ethnic minority populations there has been little research attempting to correlate these beliefs specifically with preferences for end of life care (Brandon 2005). We have conducted a study of two MMG2 clinic populations, assessing religiosity, trust in the medical system and preferences for care at the end of life.
Refrences: Greiner KA. Perera S. Ahluwalia JS. Hospice usage by minorities in the last year of life: results from the National Mortality Followback Survey. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society. 51(7):970-8, 2003 Jul.
Brandon DT, Isaac LA, MS, LaVeist TA. The Legacy of Tuskegee and Trust in Medical Care: Is Tuskegee Responsible for Race Differences in Mistrust of Medical Care? J Natl Med Assoc. 2005; Vol 97 No 6 p951-56.
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Gabriella Gellrich, MD
Falling through the Cracks- stories of struggles and small victories within the current U.S. healthcare system
Inspired by her work at a community health center in the Bronx, Dr. Gellrich has created a short film that takes us on a journey in a culture where healthcare seems to be a privilege and not a right. Dr. Gellrich brings a special perspective to the film- she grew up in Canada- a country that affords its citizens universal health care at the expense of their tax dollars. She hopes this will serve as another inspiration for us to continue to rally for change, while also serving as a resource for both patients and providers. It reminds us of some of the strings that help make up the safety net for a health care system in need of major repair.
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Lisa Rubin Hartman, MD
Assessing the Needs of Adolescents in the South Bronx
A focus group study exploring the community needs of and access of services by teenagers living in the South Bronx.