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Health Professions Students at the U.S. - Mexico Border: Decreasing Barriers to Accessing Care Marylyn McEwen, MS, APRN, BC Marion K. Slack, Ph.D. University.

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Presentation on theme: "Health Professions Students at the U.S. - Mexico Border: Decreasing Barriers to Accessing Care Marylyn McEwen, MS, APRN, BC Marion K. Slack, Ph.D. University."— Presentation transcript:

1 Health Professions Students at the U.S. - Mexico Border: Decreasing Barriers to Accessing Care Marylyn McEwen, MS, APRN, BC Marion K. Slack, Ph.D. University of Arizona

2 Purpose To present a model for preparing interdisciplinary students (pharmacy, nursing, public health, medicine, social work, and nutrition) to provide culturally relevant care that results in decreasing barriers to accessing care for residents in a rural U.S. - Mexico border community.

3 Barriers to Accessing Care Providers not prepared to provide culturally relevant care –Lack of familiarity with: Cultural values and beliefs of clients served Community resources Eligibility requirements for care / services Language Immigration and Immigrant health policies Client unfamiliar with U.S. health care system Cultural, financial, linguistic barriers

4 Promotoras Community Health Workers Community members Share clients’ culture and language Cultural brokers –Connectors between client, provider, & student –Promote health to groups that have lacked access to care –Facilitate student cultural self-awareness –Provide social support –Build student cultural self-efficacy

5 Students Graduate and Undergraduate students from the disciplines of: –Pharmacy –Nursing –Public Health –Nutrition –Social Work –Medicine

6 Clients Residents of a rural U.S. - Mexico border community Primarily Hispanic (Mexican) who maintain connections with family in Mexico At risk of / diagnosed with diabetes, primarily diabetes type 2 and gestational diabetes Age range 14 months - 95 years Primarily undocumented residents, below poverty level, underemployed or unemployed Spanish speaking / limited English language skills with less than a high school education Uninsured / underinsured receiving care at private provider, community health center, and in Mexico

7 Interdisciplinary Case Management Model Structure –Interdisciplinary rural health training grant –Curriculum modules introduce critical concepts –Two universities partner with local community health center –Promotoras, local providers, students, and faculty are members of the interdisciplinary team (IDT) –Client caseload maintained by promotoras –Weekly case management seminars

8 Model cont’d Process –Students have weekly client / promotora encounters (home visits) –Students / promotoras present clients to the IDT in weekly seminar –Problem solutions identified in an interdisciplinary context Disciplinary knowledge and skills shared Cultural knowledge shared –Social support for students

9 Interdisciplinary Case Management Model - Outcomes Client –Receives interventions that increase access to care: Teaching / Counseling / Guidance Case Management / Surveillance –Increased knowledge and skills for accessing community resources –Increased knowledge of diabetes and increased self-care abilities related to diabetes –Increased self-efficacy related to self and family health issues

10 Outcomes cont’d Student –Knowledge of an interdisciplinary case management model –Knowledge of rural / border health issues –Knowledge of cultural self-efficacy / cultural values and beliefs –Knowledge of relationship between immigration and immigrant health policy and access –Increased Spanish language skills

11 Outcomes cont’d Promotora –Knowledge of an interdisciplinary case management model –Increased knowledge of client health care needs –Increased knowledge of health professions disciplines –Increased English language skills

12 Outcomes cont’d Provider –Increased knowledge of community health care systems and resources –Increased awareness of cultural barriers –Formalized knowledge of immigration issues –Increased expertise in using interdisciplinary models –Increased knowledge of other disciplines

13 Conclusions Decreasing barriers to accessing care requires a multidimensional approach that must address health professions education, education of local providers, and the health care delivery system. We maintain an interdisciplinary approach for health professions education and an interdisciplinary case management delivery model facilitates decreasing barriers to accessing care along the U.S. - Mexico border. Nuestra Comunidad, Nuestra Salud Project (Spanish for “Our Community, Our Health”) is funded by HRSA Grant No. 2D36 HP 10033-08.


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