Title: The Health Trainers Initiative: Learning from the USA
1The Health Trainers Initiative Learning from
the USA
- Shelina Visram
- Postgraduate Research Associate,
- Health Improvement Research Programme
2Health Improvement Research Programme
Part of the Community Health and Education
Studies (CHESs) Research Centre at Coach Lane
Campus
3Background
- Health Trainers are the personalised strand of
the 2004 Choosing Health white paper, which
states that they will - Offer tailored advice, motivation and practical
support to individuals who want help to adopt
healthier lifestyles - Act as message-bearers between professionals and
communities - Be recruited from, and representative of, their
local communities - Work in local organisations, including the
private, public and voluntary sectors - Be funded in the 88 Spearhead PCTs from April
2006 and throughout the country from 2007. - More than 1,200 Health Trainers have now been
trained, including around 50 in the prison
population.
4Implementation of the Initiative
- Twelve early adopter partnerships were identified
in 2005 to test the recruitment, training and
employment package, and local models of service
provision for Health Trainers. - Three of these partnerships were located in the
North East of England - Gateshead Health Economy
- Northumberland, Tyne Wear Public Health Network
- County Durham Tees Valley Public Health Network.
5Previous HIRP Projects
- A review of the evidence to support the
implementation of Health Trainers (August 2005). - Evaluation of the early adopter phase of the
Health Trainers project in the North East (April
2006). - Hosting a national Health Trainers evaluation
meeting, in collaboration with Leeds Met
University (May 2006). - Further evaluation of the initiative in County
Durham Tees Valley / a phenomenological study
of what it means to be a Health Trainer
(September 2007).
6What was the evidence to support Health Trainers?
- Most published examples come from North America
and fall loosely into three categories - Lay health workers unpaid natural helpers who
are trained to offer a community-based system of
care. - Peer educators often used to deliver health
education to adolescents and young people. - Advocates mediate between clients and
professionals to ensure they are offered an
informed choice of health care. - Tend to be used as a bridge between the formal
health care system and typically marginalised or
disadvantaged populations.
7Key Findings from the Evidence
- Programmes tend to have a particular disease or
population focus, e.g. cancer prevention,
cardiovascular health, diabetes, sex education. - Advantages potentially reduce costs, provide
cultural linkages with communities, increase
communication and sensitivity. - Challenges can be labour intensive, difficulty
in recruiting from target communities, concerns
about quality, high staff turnover.
8Targeted
Community
Individual
Generic
9Targeted
Sunderland
Easington
South Tyneside
Sedgefield
North Tyneside
Newcastle
Community
Individual
Langbaurgh
Gateshead
Northumberland
Generic
10Key Examples from the Literature
- Project REACH, led by Dr Pattie Tucker
- Racial and Ethnic Action for Community Health
- Coordinated by the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, Georgia. - NC-BSP, led by Professor Jo Anne Earp
- The North Carolina Breast Cancer Screening
Programme - Coordinated by researchers at the University of
North Carolina (UNC) at Chapel Hill.
11Week 1 Atlanta, Georgia
12 13(No Transcript)
14Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
- One of the major operating components of the US
Department of Health and Human Services. - CDC consists of the Office of the Director, the
National Institute for Occupational Safety
Health, and six coordinating centres. - The Coordinating Center for Health Promotion
incorporates the National Center for Chronic
Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
(NCCDPHP), which coordinates Project REACH.
15Project REACH www.cdc.gov/reach
- Created in 2001 to address widespread health
disparities among members of racial and ethnic
minority populations. - Members of these groups are more likely than
whites to have poor health and die prematurely. - CDC funded 40 projects to deliver practice and
evidence-based programmes and culturally-based
community activities to eliminate racial and
ethnic disparities in health.
16REACH Target Areas
- Racial and ethnic groups
- African American
- American Indian / Alaskan Native
- Asian American
- Native Hawaiian / other Pacific Islander
- Hispanic / Latino
- Health priority areas
- Breast and cervical cancer
- Cardiovascular disease
- Diabetes mellitus
- Adult / older adult immunisation
- Hepatitis B
- Tuberculosis
- Asthma
- Infant mortality
17(No Transcript)
18Evaluating Project REACH
- CDC helps communities to develop, implement and
sustain effective interventions. - It also supports them to evaluate programmes and
disseminate strategies that work. - Evidence from such evaluation demonstrates that
health disparities can be reduced and the health
status of groups traditionally most affected by
these disparities can be improved.
19REACH Risk Factor Survey
- The BRFSS assesses improvements in health-related
behaviours in 27 REACH communities. - Survey results from 2001-04 include
- ? cholesterol screening amongst African Americans
to above the national average. - Narrowing gap in cholesterol screening rates
between Hispanics and the national average. - ? use of medication for high blood pressure
amongst Native American Indians. - ? cigarette smoking amongst Asian American men.
20The Use of Lay Workers
- 20 REACH programmes involve the use of some form
of lay health workers or patient navigators. - These workers are community members trained to
deliver outreach or educational activities at
local venues, or to act as patient advocates. - Programmes often utilise the natural helper
model, drawing on resources that already exist
within local communities.
21Visit to University of Alabama
22Alabama REACH
- The Alabama Breast and Cervical Cancer Control
Coalition consists of 18 local, state,
university, faith-based and healthcare
organisations. - Breast cancer mortality is higher among African
American women than white women, despite a lower
incidence rate. - African American women suffer more than twice the
number of cervical cancer deaths per 100,000
population compared with white women. - Lay community advisors represent one strategy
used to encourage women to access cancer
screening services.
23Alabama REACH Methods
- This programme is based on empowerment theory and
uses community-based participatory research to
best meet the needs of local people. - The Alabama REACH methods involve
- Coalition building
- Formation of a volunteer network
- Conducting a needs assessment
- Developing a population-specific cancer screening
and cancer management Community Action Plan.
24Community Action Plan (CAP)
- Coalition members decided the CAP should have the
following components - Address the barriers to screening identified
during the needs assessment with local
communities. - Include activities directed at targeted women,
the community system and health care providers. - Activities should be conducted by community
health advisors, assisted by representatives from
the health care system and local churches
(forming the Core Working Group). - The Core Working Group consists of 169 community
health advisors, 49 clergy representatives and 23
health professionals.
25Implementation Framework
Community Health Advisors
REACH Coalition
Individual level intervention Community level
health fairs, church activities Agents of change
community leaders
Mini-grants Individual level Community
level Agents of change
Technical support, training, facilitation
Investigators
26Role of the CHAs
- Conduct baseline surveys with women in local
communities. - Contact women before and after their scheduled
mammogram and Pap smear appointment. - Conduct follow-up assessment with an assigned
group of women. - Disseminate cancer awareness messages in the
community.
27Accomplishments and Outcomes
- Identified and surveyed gt3,000 women to assess
their screening behaviour. - Maintained contact with 2,500 to remind them of
appointments and address barriers to screening. - 1,539 remain active in the study after 4.5 years.
- The disparity between mammography screening has
reduced from 14 in 2001 to 6 in 2006, based in
part on the efforts of the REACH coalition and
Community Health Advisors.
28Lessons Learned
- Appreciate and respect individual differences and
commonalities. - Maintain open lines of communication address
unspoken and uncomfortable issues. - Be flexible and open to change foster an
environment of mutual learning and sharing
skills, resources and experiences. - Keep commitments and follow through with plans.
- Address problems in a calm, non-judgemental
fashion.
29Week 2 Chapel Hill, North Carolina
30Promoting and Cultivating Health Disparities
Research Conference
- Hosted by North Carolina Central University, in
conjunction with the University of North
Carolina. - Bringing together researchers and activists
working in the field of health disparities. - Showcasing research related to HIV/AIDS, mental
health, womens and childrens health, and
nutrition and physical health. - Interventions target four levels personal,
interpersonal, institutional and cultural.
31Workshop on Evaluation
32Recommendations for Evaluation
- Collaborative and community-based participatory
approaches can enhance the utility of evaluation
and project monitoring. - Tools used in data collection should be
culturally appropriate and fit for purpose. - There should be some measure of wider impact,
e.g. policy or systems change. - Assess fidelity as well as effectiveness.
- Logic models can be useful as evaluation plans.
33Evaluation Planning Logic Models
34Ongoing Projects at UNC
- On Our Terms (OOT) use of Lay Health Advisors to
reach out to African Americans with end-stage
cancer and other terminal illnesses. - ALMA use of promotoras to offer coping skills,
knowledge and support to other Latinas, with the
aim of reducing mental health stress. - Body Soul church-based initiative aiming to
increase fruit and vegetable intake, based on the
principles of Motivational Interviewing. - BEAUTY and TRIM interventions delivered in
beauty salons and barber shops, dealing with
multiple early detection and screening
behaviours.
35NC-BCSP http//bcsp.med.unc.edu
- Goal to reduce breast cancer mortality among
rural African American women in eastern North
Carolina by - Increasing use of mammography and
- Increasing early detection and treatment of
cancer. - The intervention involves
- Outreach primarily through trained lay
advisors - Inreach provider education and training
- Access mobile mammography vans, cost reduction,
transport assistance.
36NC-BCSP (2)
- Lay health advisors are identified by community
members as being natural helpers. - Complete 12 to 15 hours of training, informed by
focus groups involving around 250 women. - Provide one-to-one support, organise events and
deliver group presentations. - Raise awareness through careful branding of the
programme, using t-shirts and necklaces.
37NC-BCSP Evaluation
- Aim to assess the effectiveness of the
intervention. - Did it increase mammography use?
- Did it reduce racial disparities in health?
- Design quasi-experimental community trial.
- Baseline survey (1993-1994), first follow-up
(1996-1997) and second (1999-2000). - Four cohorts black, white, intervention,
comparison. - Systematic random sample 2,296 eligible women
were approached 1,316 completed the second
follow-up. - Found improvements in screening amongst all
groups, but some of the greatest benefits were
for women whom other types of interventions
usually fail to reach.
38NC-BCSP Intervention Effect (1)
Had a mammography in the last two
years. Overall increase Intervention 23.3
Comparison 17.4 Difference of
differences 5.9
39NC-BCSP Intervention Effect (2)
40NC-BCSP Conclusions
- A LHA outreach strategy can have a positive
impact on health disparities. - Community-based strategies are likely to be a
necessary component of interventions targeting
behaviour change amongst disadvantaged
populations. - The next step is to institutionalise the
programme within local organisations.
41Challenges
- Tight funding for long-term staffing costs.
- Undervalued role of social networks in promoting
health. - Professional culture that equates real work
with office work and paperwork. - Strong emphasis on treatment, de-emphasising
outreach and education. - Low commitment to building culturally sensitive
community partnerships.
42Implications for Health Trainers
- Peer education is known to be a successful
technique to provide information and facilitate
behaviour change in a culturally competent way. - The use of lay workers can also be a sustainable
model when funding for projects ends. - Multi-level interventions are likely to have the
most significant impact on health disparities. - Evaluation should address fidelity and
effectiveness at all levels of the intervention,
as well as seeking wide stakeholder participation
in order to enhance utility.
43Ongoing and Future HIRP Projects
- An evidence synthesis seeking to examine the
effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of different
versions of the health-related lifestyle adviser
format. - Funded by the Health Technology Assessment (HTA)
Programme. - 18-month project, commencing 1st November 2007.
- In collaboration with colleagues at Newcastle
University and University College London. - A scoping exercise of the implementation of the
Health Trainers initiative on a national scale. - Funded by the Department of Health (proposal
submitted 27th September). - In collaboration with colleagues from Newcastle
Uni and UCL.
44Ongoing and Future Projects (2)
- An in-depth study to explore the experiences and
outcomes for clients as they progress through the
Health Trainers service in the North East. - Funded by the Research for Patient Benefit
programme. - In collaboration with local Health Trainer Hub
leads. - A PhD proposal to investigate the processes of
engagement and behaviour change amongst clients
of Health Trainers. - Funded by the Medical Research Council (MRC).
- Proposal to be submitted by 12th October, to
commence September 2008. - In collaboration with Newcastle University, UCL
and UNC.
45Contact Details
- Shelina Visram (Postgraduate Research Associate)
- Health Improvement Research Programme
- Address H011, CHESs Research Centre,
- Northumbria University,
- Coach Lane Campus East,
- Newcastle-upon-Tyne,
- NE7 7XA.
- Tel. (0191) 215 6682
- Email shelina.visram_at_unn.ac.uk
46Any Questions?