底特律家庭医学住院诊所应对食品不安全的新冠肺炎影响课程评估

Amrien Ghouse, W. Gunther, Matthew Sebastian
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引用次数: 1

摘要

迄今为止,许多项目表明,获得营养丰富的食物的机会持续有限(即“粮食不安全”)对低收入风险人群的整体健康和福祉起着关键作用。方法在这个2019-2020年的试点项目中,住院医生作者首先创建并实施了一个简单的五项问卷筛查过程,以系统地识别底特律大都市住院诊所的食物不安全患者。随后,向被确定为食物不安全和糖尿病前期的患者样本提供了获得健康食物的改善途径,补充了为期六周的营养教育课程,使用国家认可的“烹饪很重要”六周课程,由有执照的厨师和营养教育家授课。结果在机构审查委员会批准后,作者招募了10名成年人作为样本。作者成功地测量了项目前和项目后的血红蛋白A1c所有完成所需课程和随后的诊所随访的参与者的水平。使用一系列初始非参数Wilcoxon符号秩匹配对检验,三个月的项目后随访显示,六名入选患者(W=1,Z=-2.226,p=0.026)和六个月的随访(即项目完成后四个月以上)(W=1、Z=-2.060,p=0.039)记录的HbA1c水平较基线有统计学意义的降低。在项目后调查中,每个受访者都表示,他们发现课堂内容通常有利于增加他们的营养知识。结论在作者的环境中,这种粮食不安全计划随后导致了一个更正式的筛查过程,以评估和识别粮食不安全患者。作者讨论了他们在新冠肺炎大流行中为样本患者所经历的日程安排困难。然而,这些试点结果表明,长期的益处可能需要与糖尿病前期患者进行持续的“虚拟”教学,以解决在类似的市中心环境中发现的影响粮食不安全水平的复杂因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Evaluation of a COVID-influenced Curriculum to Address Food Insecurity in a Detroit Family Medicine Residency Clinic
CONTEXT To date, numerous projects have demonstrated that an ongoing limited access to nutritionally dense food (i.e., “food insecurity”) plays a key role in the overall health and wellbeing of lower income at-risk populations. METHODS For this 2019-2020 pilot project, the resident physician authors first created and administered a simple five-item questionnaire screening process to systematically identify food insecure patients in their metropolitan Detroit residency clinic. A sample of patients who had been identified as food insecure and pre-diabetic were then provided improved access to healthy foods, supplemented by a six-week program of nutritional education classes using a nationally recognized “Cooking Matters’’ six-week long curriculum with a licensed chef and nutrition educator RESULTS After institutional review board approval, the authors enrolled a sample of 10 adults. The authors successfully measured both pre- and post-program Hemoglobin A1c (HbA1C) levels for all participants who completed the required course and subsequent clinic follow up visits. Using a series of initial non-parametric Wilcoxon Signed Rank matched pair tests, post-program follow-up at three months revealed statistically significant reductions in documented HbA1c levels from baseline for six enrolled patients (W=1, Z = - 2.226, p = 0.026) and six-month follow up (i.e., more than four months after completion of the program) (W = 1, Z = - 2.060, p = 0.039). In post-program surveys, each respondent indicated that they found the class content to be generally beneficial to increase their nutritional knowledge. CONCLUSIONS In the authors’ setting, this food insecurity program has subsequently led to a more formal screening process to evaluate and identify food insecure patients. The authors discuss the scheduling difficulties they experienced from the COVID-19 pandemic for their sample patients. However, these pilot results suggest that prolonged benefits may require ongoing “virtual” teaching sessions with pre-diabetic patients to address the complex factors influencing food insecurity levels identified in similar inner-city settings.
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