PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Community health workers improved homebound care during pandemic

Hospitalizations and ER visits were reduced by integration of promotores into supportive care

2023-07-24
(Press-News.org) SAN ANTONIO (July 24, 2023) — Staying healthy and connected was difficult for everyone during the COVID-19 pandemic, but especially so for homebound older patients and their caregivers. Fortunately, a program developed by the geriatrics and supportive care team of The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio effectively integrated community health workers (promotores de salud in Spanish) into patient outreach to improve health. Thanks to the program, annual visits to older adults with type 2 diabetes, dementia and other health issues in underserved areas of Bexar County, Texas, doubled from pre-pandemic levels.

The program, described July 24 in Annals of Family Medicine, resulted in a 17% reduction in inpatient hospital admissions and an 11% decline in emergency room visits among the homebound patients served. Most of the patients seen by the practice are older than 85.

“Promotores act as a bridge,” said Neela K. Patel, MD, MPH, CMD, FAAFP, associate professor of family and community medicine at UT Health San Antonio and chief of the Division of Geriatrics and Supportive Care. “They communicate to the patient who we are and what our role is, and how we are trying to support the patient, and they communicate the family’s and the patient’s concerns to us. It helps us to respect the patient’s choices and values and provide care that is respectful from a patient’s perspective and not from our perspective.”

Visits typically aren’t made by a promotora (a female CHW) and a physician together. When the doctor sees that a patient needs help beyond medical care, such as with various kinds of community resources, a promotora is assigned to help with those issues.

“The patients we serve may need help with caregivers, with getting benefits sorted out, with medications, with transportation or with starting Meals on Wheels,” Patel said. “We ask the promotora to either go before us or between our visits to the home.”

Patel, senior author of the research, holds two endowed faculty chairs at UT Health San Antonio: the Joe R. and Teresa Lozano Long Chair in Geriatrics and Community Senior Care and the Glenn and Ann Biggs Distinguished Chair in Alzheimer's Patient Care.

Older patients may have difficulty remembering and following a physician’s advice.

“If the individual’s diabetes isn’t getting any better, or the caregiver for a person with dementia is having problems with behavior and all that, then the promotora goes and visits with them and gets us the inside story,” Patel said. “It really helps us take better care of our patients.”

Preventing ER visits and hospital stays is one of the community health worker’s biggest roles.

“Basically, promotores have the trust and the relationship, and they reinforce with the patients and caregivers that they are available to them 24/7,” Patel said.

When a patient or caregiver has difficulty reaching the office, he or she has a direct line with the promotora.

“A caregiver may let us know that the patient is very sick but doesn’t want to go to the ER,” Patel said. “The caregiver asks if we can do a same-day visit with them. We have three physicians and four nurse practitioners, one of whom will then be assigned to make the visit.”

Older patients who are homebound don’t want to go to the hospital. “In fact, when it is really needed, we have to tell them, ‘You know, I really wish I could give you all the treatment here, but I cannot,’” Patel said. “‘The best thing for you is to go to the hospital, and I will get you directly admitted, or I will talk to the ER doctors so you don’t have to wait so long.’”

The Division of Geriatrics and Supportive Medicine began the integration of community health workers into older patient care by partnering with a San Antonio not-for-profit called the House of Neighborly Service that had two CHWs. A grant called Impact San Antonio assisted the process.

Over time, the division added its own promotores as well as nurse practitioners. A grant from the Nancy Smith Hurd Foundation enabled the hiring of the first promotores.

The Glenn Biggs Institute for Alzheimer’s and Neurodegenerative Diseases at UT Health San Antonio helped the division to hire another promotora.

Patients who need supportive care are seen frequently.

“They are very frail and burdened with advanced dementia, heart disease, heart failure or COPD, and they really don’t want to go to the hospital,” Patel said.

“That’s why we see them frequently admitted to our supportive care program,” she said. “After we have a care plan, the promotora makes sure that they follow it.”

Each promotora follows about 10 to 12 patients monthly. When a patient’s care stabilizes, she moves on to other patients who need more frequent visits.

Visits by promotores are documented in the practice’s electronic medical record. This reflects the integration of promotores into the geriatric and supportive care team.

The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio (UT Health San Antonio) is one of the country’s leading health science universities and is designated as a Hispanic-Serving Institution by the U.S. Department of Education. With missions of teaching, research, patient care and community engagement, its schools of medicine, nursing, dentistry, health professions, public health and graduate biomedical sciences have graduated more than 42,200 alumni who are leading change, advancing their fields and renewing hope for patients and their families throughout South Texas and the world. To learn about the many ways “We make lives better®,” visit UTHealthSA.org.

The UT Health San Antonio Joe R. and Teresa Lozano Long School of Medicine is listed among U.S. News & World Report’s best medical schools, ranking in the top 30% nationwide for research. To learn more, visit https://uthscsa.edu/medicine/.

Stay connected with The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram and YouTube.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Stretchy integrated electronics may be possible with sandwiched semiconductor

Stretchy integrated electronics may be possible with sandwiched semiconductor
2023-07-24
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — There’s a barrier preventing the advent of truly elastic electronic systems, the kind needed for advanced human-machine interfaces, artificial skins, smart health care and more, but a Penn State-led research team may have found a way to stretch around it.  According to principal investigator Cunjiang Yu, who holds is the Dorothy Quiggle Career Development Associate Professor of Engineering Science and Mechanics and of Biomedical Engineering at Penn State, fully elastic electronic systems require flexibility and stretchability in every ...

Water-scarce cultures value long-term thinking more than their water-rich neighbors do

2023-07-24
Water is the world’s most valuable natural resource. Although a human can survive weeks or even months without food, going as little as three days without water could spell the end. The effects of water scarcity aren’t limited to immediate survival situations, however. Recently published research in Psychological Science suggests that cultures from water-scarce environments tend to be more likely than cultures from water-rich areas to value long-term thinking and to scorn short-term indulgence.  “Individuals from historically water-scarce climates tend to be ...

New method for noninvasive detection of circulating tumor cells in blood

New method for noninvasive detection of circulating tumor cells in blood
2023-07-24
Metastasis occurs when cancer cells acquire the ability to spread and form new tumors in different places in the body, usually by traveling within blood or lymph vessels. Since metastasis is a hallmark of advanced cancer and severely complicates treatment, its early diagnosis is essential. One way to do this is by looking for circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in blood samples. However, CTCs can be very rare, and they might be completely absent in small blood samples despite being present in a patient’s bloodstream. To address this problem, researchers have developed a technique called diffuse in-vivo flow cytometry (DiFC). It involves labeling CTCs with ...

Colorado River Basin has lost water equal to Lake Mead due to climate change

Colorado River Basin has lost water equal to Lake Mead due to climate change
2023-07-24
American Geophysical Union  Release No. 23-28 24 July 2023  For Immediate Release  This press release and accompanying multimedia are available online at: https://news.agu.org/press-release/colorado-river-basin-has-lost-water-equal-to-lake-mead-due-to-climate-change/ Colorado River Basin has lost water equal to Lake Mead due to climate change A rapid rate of reductions in runoff associated with the Colorado Basin’s snowpack region, quantified here for the first time, is largely responsible for the water loss. AGU press contact: Rebecca Dzombak, news@agu.org +1 (202) 777-7492 (UTC-4 hours) Contact ...

Beyond protected areas: Novel method shows promise for monitoring biodiversity on working lands

Beyond protected areas: Novel method shows promise for monitoring biodiversity on working lands
2023-07-24
New research led by Adam Dixon, a conservation scientist with the World Wildlife Fund, describes the successful pilot of a novel method to study how well grassland birds are faring on croplands. The study, published in Ecological Applications, looked at 44 pockets of non-crop vegetation in the gaps between crop rows and at the edges of fields on lands under intensive agricultural cultivation in Iowa. The study may serve as a model for monitoring wildlife on working lands more generally, which can include crop fields, cattle ranches, and logged forests. The researchers analyzed satellite imagery data to determine each pocket's area and “texture,” ...

Is snacking bad for your health? It depends on what and when you eat

2023-07-24
Snacking is becoming increasingly popular, with more than 70% of people reporting they snack at least twice a day. In a new study involving more than 1,000 people, researchers examined whether snacking affects health and if the quality of snack foods matters.   “Our study showed that the quality of snacking is more important than the quantity or frequency of snacking, thus choosing high quality snacks over highly processed snacks is likely beneficial,” said Kate Bermingham, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow at King's College London. “Timing is also important, with late night snacking being unfavorable for health.”   Bermingham ...

One way to reduce medical errors? Connect doctors with other doctors

One way to reduce medical errors? Connect doctors with other doctors
2023-07-24
We trust our doctors with our lives, but the sad and scary fact is that doctors can get things wrong. Approximately 100,000 Americans die each year due to medical errors and recent studies have found that 10 to 15% of all clinical decisions regarding patient diagnosis and treatment are wrong. A team of researchers led by Damon Centola, Professor and Director of the Network Dynamics Group at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania, has found a simple, effective way to reduce errors in patient diagnosis and treatment — use structured networks to connect clinicians with other clinicians. In a study published today in the journal ...

Study finds new, unexpected mechanism of cancer cell spread

Study finds new, unexpected mechanism of cancer cell spread
2023-07-24
A surprising finding from USC reveals key details about how cancer cells metastasize and suggests new therapeutic approaches for halting their spread. The research, supported by the National Institutes of Health, centers on a cellular chaperone protein known as GRP78, which helps regulate the folding of other proteins inside cells. Previous studies from the same team, led by Amy S. Lee, PhD, professor of biochemistry and molecular medicine at the Keck School of Medicine of USC, have shown that when cells are under stress (due to COVID-19 or cancer), GRP78 gets hijacked, allowing viral invaders to replicate, ...

Sahara dust can enhance removal of methane

Sahara dust can enhance removal of methane
2023-07-24
The study by Maarten van Herpen et al., entitled “Photocatalytic Chlorine Atom Production on Mineral Dust-Sea Spray Aerosols over North Atlantic,” was funded in part by the NGO Spark Climate Solutions. It incorporates a proposed new mechanism whereby blowing mineral dust mixes with sea-spray to form Mineral Dust-Sea Spray Aerosol (MDSA). The results suggest that MDSA is activated by sunlight to produce an abundance of chlorine atoms, which oxidize atmospheric methane and tropospheric ozone via photocatalysis. Largely composed of blowing dust from the Sahara Desert combined with sea salt aerosol from the ocean, MDSA is the dominant source of atmospheric ...

Unlocking secrets of the elusive ghost shark

Unlocking secrets of the elusive ghost shark
2023-07-24
Researchers from the University of Florida and the Seattle Aquarium are exploring 100 meters underwater in the Pacific Northwest this summer to learn more about mysterious ghost sharks, one of the strangest beasts from the depths of the ocean. Using remotely operated underwater vehicles, or ROVs, the scientists searched for nesting grounds of the Pacific spotted ratfish, Hydrolagus colliei, a ghostlike fish that lurks on the ocean floor. “We know very little about these elusive relatives of sharks and even less about their spawning habits and embryonic development,” said ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Global advances and future trends in cervical cancer research from 2013 to 2022

Inspired by Spider-Man, a lab recreates web-slinging technology

Applied Microbiology International’s 2024 Honorary Fellowship goes to Dr Chikwe Ihekweazu

Pitt scientists validate new lab test platform for blood biomarkers of Alzheimer's disease

No bolts about it: New technology improves structural strength

Medical professionals must lead the fight against climate misinformation

Should doctors be suspended for unlawful climate activism?

Extreme rainfall linked to heightened risk of death

New research highlights the overlooked dangers of subtle and covert abuse in intimate relationships

Snowflake dance analysis could improve rain forecasts

ASPB welcomes Hong Ma as Society President

Can advanced AI can solve visual puzzles and perform abstract reasoning?

West Health-Gallup poll: Healthcare may be sleeper issue in U.S. presidential campaign

UC Irvine scientists track and analyze lofted embers that cause spot fires

Uncovering pandemic inequities

Microbiome researcher awarded NIH Transformative Research Award to pursue personalized treatment for gut diseases

Teresa Bowman, Ph.D., named Chair of Developmental & Molecular Biology at Albert Einstein College of Medicine

Legal system fails to protect people from malicious copyright cases at the cost of sexual privacy, study warns

Ancient climate analysis reveals unknown global processes

Gene therapy shows long-term benefit for patients with a rare pediatric brain disease

Do people with MS have an increased risk of cancer?

New research on octopus-inspired technology successfully maneuvers underwater objects

Newly discovered Late Cretaceous birds may have carried heavy prey like extant raptors

Bat species richness in San Diego, C.A. decreases as artificial lights, urbanization, and unconserved land increase, with Townsend's big-eared bat especially affected

Satellite data shows massive bombs dropped in dangerous proximity to Gaza Strip hospitals in 2023

Predatory birds from the same fossil formation as SUE the T. rex

Sexist textbooks? Review of over 1200 English-language textbooks from 34 countries reveals persistent pattern of stereotypical gender roles and under-representation of female characters across countri

Interview with Lee Crawfurd, Center for Global Development, United Kingdom

Scientists show accelerating CO2 release from rocks in Arctic Canada with global warming

The changing geography of “energy poverty”

[Press-News.org] Community health workers improved homebound care during pandemic
Hospitalizations and ER visits were reduced by integration of promotores into supportive care