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Preliminary Results: MOHR Reach This presentation was supported by Cooperative Agreement Number CDC/NCI U48DP001934/SIP09-022 from the Centers for Disease.

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Presentation on theme: "Preliminary Results: MOHR Reach This presentation was supported by Cooperative Agreement Number CDC/NCI U48DP001934/SIP09-022 from the Centers for Disease."— Presentation transcript:

1 Preliminary Results: MOHR Reach This presentation was supported by Cooperative Agreement Number CDC/NCI U48DP001934/SIP09-022 from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Additional funding provided by NCI R01Supplement to CA154549. The findings and conclusions in this presentation are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the official position of the funders. María Férnandez, PhD My Own Health Report (MOHR) Project Panel CPCRN Fall Meeting October 3, 2013

2 Number of new users per week

3 MOHR Reach by Fielding Strategy

4 Results based on MOHR assessments completed as of ≈ September 1, 2013: 1,381 patients  40% from FQHC clinics (n = 548)  60% from PBRN clinics (n = 833) Sample

5 Demographics FQHCPBRNTotal Gender%% Female716064 Age 18-34211617 35-50342529 51-64373435 > 6582518 Marital Status Married/Living as married515553 Divorced/Separated212221 Widowed67 7 Single231719

6 Demographics (cont) FQHCPBRNTotal Education%% Less than high school281922 High school382631 Some college/associate2526 College degree or higher102922 Employment Full time373133 Part time141011 Unemployed151112 Homemaker/Student127 9 Disabled1319 17 Retired820 15

7 Race/Ethnicity FQHCPBRNTotal Ethnicity%% % Hispanic/Latino35417 Race White5878 70 African American3917 26 Asian/Pacific Islander232 American Indian/AN22 2 English fluency Well/Very well8199.692

8 Data from MOHR Assessment Tool: Patient-Reported Health Behaviors and Psychological Status This presentation was supported by Cooperative Agreement Number CDC/NCI U48DP001934/SIP09-022 from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Additional funding provided by NCI R01Supplement to CA154549. The findings and conclusions in this presentation are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the official position of the funders. Beth Glenn, PhD My Own Health Report (MOHR) Project Panel CPCRN Fall Meeting October 3, 2013

9 Unhealthy Behaviors: % Positive Screens FQHCPBRNTotal Diet, Physical Activity, BMI%% Poor fruit/vegetable consumption (<5 svgs/day) 868183 Excess fast food intake (> 1 time/week) 615055 Excess soda/sugary beverage intake (> 1/day) 503446 Insufficient physical activity (<150 mins/week) 989798 Elevated Body Mass Index (>25 kg/m 2 ) 847076 Alcohol/Tobacco/Other Substance Use Excess alcohol intake (> 1 binge/year) 272224 Current smoker or smokeless tobacco user (any) 2425 Illegal drug/inappropriate prescription use 344 Sleep Problems Sleepy often or always/snoring 8384

10 Mental Health & Perceived Health % Positive Screens FQHCPBRNTotal %% High Stress (>5 on 10 pt scale)58 Anxiety/worry (score >4)122017 Depression (score >4)611 10 Self-reported health (fair/poor)5038 43

11 Distribution of Patients by Number of Positive Screens Mean positive screens = 6.09 Overall FQHC Patients = 6.2 PBRN Patients = 6.0

12 Patient Readiness to Change & Discuss Health Topic with Provider # Screened Positive Ready to Change (%) Want to Discuss (%) Insufficient physical activity1029159 Fruit & vegetable intake 9922310 Daytime sleepiness/Snoring 98467 High BMI 9102820 Stress level 6912124 Fast food intake 659199 Overall health 5062015 Soda/SSB intake 488137 Tobacco 2911917 Excessive alcohol intake 2811611 Anxiety/Worry 1942239 Depression 1053149 Illegal drug/Inappropriate prescription use 4221 1 2 3 98% of screened 83%

13 Top Patient Priority FQHC (%) PBRN (%)Total (%) High BMI363435 Insufficient physical activity1317 15 Overall health1810 13 Stress level1112 11 Fruit & vegetable intake89 9 Tobacco417 5 Anxiety/Worry34 4 Daytime sleepiness/snoring13 2 Fast food intake22 2 Depression22 2 Soda/SSB intake1.8 1 Excessive alcohol intake2.4 1 Illegal drug/inappropriate prescription use 01.5 1 22 3 3

14 Summary Patients screen positive for many domains Few motivated to make changes at this time Despite FQHC and PBRN sample differences, same level of need Some interesting differences between FQHC and PBRN patients –Anxiety more commonly reported in PBRN pts –Fewer FQHC patients want tobacco cessation Results highlight need for prioritization and involvement of care team vs. reliance on provider


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