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Comprehensive Analysis: 3 Steps to Community Engagement for Diabetes

Webinar Presenters: 

 

Many times having a close partner helps your clinic do more to improve patient support. The Association of Asian Pacific Community Health Organizations (AAPCHO) hosted a series of webinars focused on diabetes management strategies for care teams. In part 3 on Nov. 9, speakers spoke on the importance of leveraging community engagement and partnerships to extend a clinic’s reach and capabilities. Here are three pillars of community engagement for successful diabetes management in a patient population. 

 

Pillar One: Data

“Community engagement is a key component of an effective diabetes management strategy for community health centers,” said Emily Kane from the National Nurse-Led Care Consortium (NNCC). 

 

Kane said that data and management are also at the core of successful diabetes management strategies. Key data health centers should consider collecting includes: 

 

 

By collecting the information above, health centers can build a strategy considerate of its findings. 

 

Within this pillar, there are also four steps to ensuring the strategy will be effective: Plan, Do, Study, Act.

 

Plan: 

 

Do: 

 

Study (Improvement Measures):

*But only those meaningful to your patient population

 

Act: 

 

Pillar Two: Cultural Humility

With so many diverse stories and faces behind health center patients, it’s normal that every situation wouldn’t be handled the same. Cultural differences, if left unaddressed, can cause disaccord between patient and provider, which renders whatever diabetes strategy that is in place promptly ineffective. The following practices can lessen disaccord and build a mutually respectful patient-provider relationship. 

 

 

“Culture is first and foremost an expression of self,” said Albert Ayson from AAPCHO during the webinar. 

 

Culturally appropriate diabetes interventions include taking a non-expert approach to care. These interventions can include methods of motivational interviewing, as well putting the patient in the driver seat of recounting what they learned and where they want to go. 

 

 

“Self-proclaimed cultural expertise (among clinicians) can lead to prejudice, can lead to stereotyping, which then leads to a power imbalance between patients who may feel really vulnerable,” Ayson said. 

 

 

Consider hiring a workforce with shared lived experiences similar to those of your patient population. Employees such as community health workers and patient navigators, Ayson said, have the skill of coming from the community and can help clinicians overcome barriers to patients accessing care. 

 

Pillar Three: Partnerships

Finally, choose a partner that can help fill in gaps in patients’ needs. For example, if patients of a health center don’t have adequate resources to obtain better food for their health, partnering with a food bank helps bridge that gap. 

 

“We feel strongly that partnership engagement is most effective when done in conjunction with robust data analysis, which identifies the needs and gaps that patients are experiencing, as well as a real, full commitment to cultural humility, which then opens a path to engaging diverse community partners,” said Jillian Hopewell from Migrant Clinicians Network. “Fundamentally, partnership engagement is the process of identifying and engaging with existing community resources.” 

 

Though, these do not always have to be full-fledged partnerships. Health centers can still mutually collaborate with organizations on a more casual level and still reap the benefits of partnering with others. 

 

Hopewell recommends following a continuum in the process of forming a partnership and defines the continuum as follows: 

 

  1. Coordination: Learn about services and clients served by the other organization. 
  2. Cooperation: Brings increased understanding of target audiences and motivations
  3. Collaboration: Brings increased recognition of the values of each organization 
  4. Partnership: The two organizations finally engage on a high level of trust and communication. The roles of each party are clearly defined.

 

 

Conclusion: 

In all, community engagement for diabetes management will require thoughtful interventions. Bringing in the help and experiences of others ensures a diverse and holistic approach to care that meets the patient where they are.

 


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