Safety net hospitals play an important role in stemming the racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic disparities in obesity incidence. Research indicates that people with low income and low-education levels and racial and ethnic minority populations, which comprise the safety net hospital patient base, experience obesity and the correlated negative health effects more frequently than wealthier non-minority patients.
To ascertain innovative approaches to providing obesity treatment for minority and low-income groups and populations with low health literacy, the National Public Health and Hospital Institute (NPHHI) conducted a study of obesity treatment programs in 123 public safety net hospitals. This presentation will indicate the barriers encountered in providing treatment for traditionally underserved populations, and reveal innovative approaches used by successful obesity programs to address those challenges. Furthermore, it will provide specific replicable strategies that can be used in implementing new or enhancing existing health care programs with diverse populations.
Study Design
NPHHI conducted a survey of obesity treatment program managers in 123 public hospitals. Fifty-four respondents identified the most common barriers to providing obesity interventions for uninsured, low-income and diverse patients in safety net hospitals, as well as successful strategies to address these challenges. Major themes from this qualitative data were ascertained using content analysis.
Findings
Safety net hospitals face numerous barriers in providing adequate obesity treatment for vulnerable populations. For example: 60% report high attrition rates, 57% complain that their patients lack access to adequate and safe exercise facilities, 54% note that patients lack adequate access to healthy foods in their communities; and 22% report having communication problems with their patients.
Specific components of model obesity programs have proven effective at overcoming these challenges. The most successful programs tailor treatment to members of specific demographic groups (e.g., providing group sessions with culturally similar patients, promoting healthy diets that incorporate or even rely on culturally-accepted foods, and educating providers about cultural norms of their patients). Strategies to provide care for low-income patients include partnering with community resources to ensure access to safe exercise areas, working with local farmer’s markets to provide healthy foods, and offering vouchers for transportation to the program site. Strategies to assist patients with low health literacy include offering educational materials that use pictures, designing food label tools and videos to help patients read food labels, and offering multiple modalities for learning about obesity treatment.
Lessons Learned
No single obesity treatment intervention will prove successful for patients in all demographic groups, and this study determines which interventions and factors lead to the best outcomes for certain patients. Although the study focused exclusively on safety net hospital obesity programs, the strategies used to provide successful treatment for vulnerable populations can be implemented in other health care settings.
Presentation Information:
Program: Poster PresentationsPrimary Category: Culturally Competent Care
Subtopics: Methods - patient and staff surveys, organizational and patient measures, data collection and analysis, Program/intervention evaluations, Obesity, Disease specific focus, Access in underserved communities, eg, rural, urban, Patient education, Clinical interactions
Region Addressed by Presentation: National
Organization: Hospital
Population/Demographic: minority, low-income, uninsured
Keywords: obesity, low-income, racial and ethnic minority, uninsured, obesity treatment
Website: www.nphhi.org
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