Published on February 10, 2012
National Jewish Health Receives Grant to Improve Care of Asthma Patients in the San Luis Valley
National Jewish
Health has received a grant for $950,308 from GlaxoSmithKline to improve care
of asthma patients in Colorado’s San Luis Valley with educational materials for
patients and hands-on training for primary health care teams. Asthma is the
most common chronic illness in children and adults, and is the greatest cause
of missed school days. The San Luis Valley
has one of the highest asthma rates in the state.
The two-year
Independent Medical Educational Program Grant will allow National Jewish Health
to provide primary health care teams in Colorado’s San Luis Valley with
hands-on training to help physicians and healthcare teams better diagnose and
manage asthma.
"This is a
great opportunity for our providers and nursing staff to help patients and
families learn about asthma and develop the skills that will help them control
their disease," said Denise Trujillo, MSN, RN, Director of Nursing at
Valley Wide Health Systems. “With well-controlled asthma they are much more
likely to stay active and healthy.”
Children in the San Luis
Valley are among the hardest hit by
asthma. In the San Luis
Valley, Alamosa and Rio Grande counties have some of the highest
rates of hospitalizations for pediatric asthma. Reports show that 14-percent of
school-aged children in the San
Luis Valley
have been diagnosed with asthma by a health care provider, compared to a
national average of 9.5 percent.
In response to
this need, Conejos County Hospital,
the San Luis Valley Regional Medical Center and Valley-Wide Health Systems Inc have
partnered with National Jewish Health to develop a program known as “Quality Asthma Care in the San Luis Valley.”
The National
Jewish Health program seeks to provide sustainable improvements in asthma care
to two hospitals and a network of provider clinics in the rural San Luis
Valley, all of which provide care to a
population at risk for significant disparities in health and high asthma
burden. The population is a rural community with high rates of poverty, and is a federally
designated health professional shortage area, as well as a medically
underserved area.
“The San Luis
Valley Regional Medical Center and Physician Services is delighted to have this
opportunity to collaborate with National Jewish Health and providers in the San
Luis Valley to provide this level of expertise and care to members of our
community,” said Helen Lester, MSN, RN, Chief Nursing Officer at San Luis
Valley Regional Medical Center. “It is working together as a team that provides
the best of care and outcomes.”
The educational
grant provides funding for the primary health care teams throughout the San Luis
Valley to receive hands-on training
related to asthma as well as tools for their clinics to help care for children
and adults with asthma and other breathing problems. In addition to training
for health care providers, asthma education materials are being developed in
English and Spanish to help individuals and families manage their asthma
successfully. Asthma QuickFacts are an example of these materials, and are
being used with patients in clinics at Conejos County
Hospital, the San Luis
Valley Regional Medical Center and Valley-Wide Health Systems Inc. Each
participating clinic has “Asthma Champions” that were provided additional
training and work with staff at National Jewish Health to provide the best
asthma care. The program kicked-off in the spring of 2011, and the training and
development phases of the program will be completed by December 2012.
The goal of this
program is to build and provide sustainable infrastructure, education and skill
development that supports health care teams to provide quality asthma care that
includes assessing, treating and managing asthma as directed by the National
Heart Lung and Blood Institute’s evidence-based asthma guidelines. The success
of the educational program will be determined by evaluating the participating
clinics’ practices for key quality asthma care activities, such as coaching patients
to use proper inhaler technique. The Rocky
Mountain Prevention
Research Center
in Alamosa, which is part of the University
of Colorado, is working with the
Quality Asthma Care Program for the San
Luis Valley
team to gather and analyze the data to determine the success of the program. NJH has partnered with a Denver-based
educational outcomes provider, Healthcare Research, Inc., to provide an
educational outcomes report for this initiative.
National Jewish Health is known worldwide for treatment of
patients with respiratory, cardiac, immune and related disorders, and for
groundbreaking medical research. Founded in 1899 as a nonprofit hospital,
National Jewish remains the only facility in the world dedicated exclusively to
these disorders. Since 1998, U.S. News & World Report has ranked
National Jewish the #1 respiratory hospital in the nation. National Jewish
Health is accredited by the Accreditation Council of Continuing Medical
Education (ACCME) to provide continuing medical education for physicians.
Valley Wide Health Systems, is a non-profit
community/migrant health center, governed by a volunteer community board. It
has thirteen primary health care delivery sites strategically located
throughout southern Colorado.
These full-service clinics are joined by five dental clinics and a milieu of
ancillary health services to address the needs of our patient population.
Valley-Wide Health Systems is committed to providing quality, comprehensive
health care services with special consideration for medically underserved
populations. Fueled by a passion to provide safe and effective health care for
all people, Valley-Wide has become a national leader in the health care field
and a model for comprehensive, community-based health care. San
Luis Valley Regional Medical Center is a 49-bed facility who added a
Physician Services division, in 2003, bringing primary and specialty care
providers under the umbrella of services
at SLVRMC. The hospital currently
operates a level IV trauma center. The
Alamosa County Ambulance Service, stationed at SLVRMC and is staffed with a
predominantly Paramedic level ambulance crew. SLVRMC, and other Valley health care facilities have the advantage of a
locally stationed fixed wing air flight service to expedite patient transfer to
higher trauma level care as needed. SLVRMC is committed to be a fully integrated healthcare facility who is physician
led and professionally managed. SLVRMC is an affiliate of Centura
Health.
Conejos
County Hospital
is a critical access hospital providing healthcare access to the most southern San Luis Valley and northern New
Mexico. CCH
has a full service ER providing emergent care to the area. A 17 bed facility, CCH prides themselves in
providing quality care with a personal touch.
CCH has two clinic locations in Conejos County
staffed with primary care providers and strong relationships for upstream specialty
care. CCH is an affiliate of Centura
Health.
Rocky Mountain Prevention Research Network,
established in 1998, is one of 37 Prevention Research Centers in the United States
funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The mission of all
PRCs is to "work as an interdependent network of community, academic, and
public health partners to conduct prevention research and promote the wide use
of practices proven to promote good health.
Healthcare Research, Inc, provides
quantitative and qualitative marketing research and consulting services to the
health care industry, including outcomes assessments, patient satisfaction,
social marketing, advertising effectiveness and strategic positioning.
Expertise focuses on health care delivery systems.