|
Outlook Newsletter, Winter 2012 [NEI Education Programs]In This Issue:
Letter From the Chair of the NEHEP Planning CommitteeThe National Eye Health Education Program (NEHEP) was established to make vision a health priority for the Nation. One strategy for advancing this goal is through public health education programs built around themes of eye health. NEHEP is able to draw on a multitude of resources to help with educating people at higher risk on the need for early detection and treatment of eye diseases to prevent vision loss and blindness. An example of the role NEHEP plays in eye health education is provided by the January observance of Glaucoma Awareness Month. Over time, NEHEP has developed a range of educational materials that underscore the importance of early detection and treatment of glaucoma in preventing vision loss. These resources draw on the available evidence base, have been tested with target audiences, and are available in English and Spanish. Further, they can be adapted and tailored to meet the education needs of the communities you serve. This issue of Outlook describes NEHEP resources that you can use to educate people about glaucoma, including e-cards and social media resources such as “vodcasts” (or video podcasts available for download or streaming). There is also information on other glaucoma resources, including public service announcements and educational materials, as well as strategies on how you can use them. Linking health providers with resources is an important role for NEHEP. A story in this issue of Outlook highlights a project by the Colorado Coalition for the Homeless that set out to provide no-cost primary and preventive eye care and other services to homeless families and individuals. Healthy Vision Community Awards program funding helped this organization address the eye health education needs of the unique population it serves. Underlying all of these efforts is the goal of making eye health a public health priority. As health professionals, we know that comprehensive dilated eye exams play an essential role in detecting eye disease in the early, treatable stages. We also know that if people at higher risk of eye disease were to draw on available healthcare resources and receive comprehensive dilated eye exams, the public health benefit would be enormous. As we enter the New Year, I am hopeful that we can build on professional networks to reach further into our communities and expand the reach of the NEHEP program. Building on this idea, in an era when health costs are rising, it is incumbent on us as a community of eye care professionals to make effective use of the limited resources available for blindness prevention. To this end, we invite your ideas for allocating NEHEP resources in ways that will achieve a maximum impact. I will look forward to hearing from you and send best wishes for a healthy and successful 2012. Anne Louise Coleman, M.D., Ph.D. January Is Glaucoma Awareness Month
You can educate others about glaucoma by distributing information to your community, family, friends, and colleagues. The National Eye Health Education Program (NEHEP) provides a variety of materials in English and Spanish, including public service announcements, e-cards, brochures, teaching resources for health professionals, and more. The following are a few examples of materials and how to use them. You can find these materials, as well as additional ideas on how your efforts can make a difference on the NEHEP Glaucoma Program page. Glaucoma Education Website Glaucoma Vodcast Glaucoma Eye-Q Test Medicare Benefit Card Don’t Lose Sight of Glaucoma Brochure Radio and Print Public Service Announcements (PSAs) Visit the NEHEP Glaucoma Program page to find these materials and to learn about additional community activities you can do to increase awareness about glaucoma. Effective Strategies for Educating African Americans About Glaucoma
While there are in-place communications vehicles that target African Americans, the African American community is still considered to be hard to reach with health promotion messages. Cultural and other lifestyle factors must be considered as you begin to plan your outreach. Whom do they trust? Where do they seek their information? Where are they exposed to messages? Consider the following: Characteristics of African American Culture African Americans tend to have large extended families and strong family ties. The role of family in medical decisionmaking is important. Spirituality and faith are integral to the culture and should not be overlooked in the development of outreach programs and materials. Incorporating these concepts as well as nontraditional learning tools are effective ways to reach this population. Using a “surround sound” approach to reach African Americans where they live, work, play, and worship is recommended. Use of Media Did you know that 86 percent of African Americans watch TV for most of their news? The media research company, Nielsen, indicates that entertainment and sports shows are preferred among this population, so information that taps these areas can be more effective. Older adults are heavier television viewers during daytime and early evening—when public service announcement time is more likely to be available—than African Americans in other age groups. Don’t forget new media. Use of the Internet and social media is also an effective way to reach this community. An estimated 71 percent of African Americans use the Internet, according to a Pew Internet & American Life survey. Research has also shown that adults are the most active users of the mobile web. Community Locations Patient-centered and experiential approaches are also highly effective, particularly if the family component is involved. Whether health education takes place in a church or community-based setting, African Americans prefer the group support and community sense of learning, versus one-on-one or clinical settings. Plan an event in the community you are trying to reach. Encourage them to bring their loved ones and do group activities; they’ll be more likely to attend. Go beyond health fairs and consider hair salons, barber shops, supermarkets, or retail stores to conduct eye health education. Communication How do you contact this population? Peer educators, trained lay health workers, and the clergy can be instrumental in building trust within the community, particularly among older adults, and delivering the message in a trustworthy environment. In a series of focus groups with African Americans ages 50 and older, participants felt that some of the most effective communication channels included churches, eye care professionals’ offices, pharmacies, hospital clinics, senior citizen retirement clubs, and laundromats. In need of ideas? There are many opportunities for increasing awareness about glaucoma among the African American population. Just remember that in order to ensure your glaucoma strategies are effective, it is all about delivering the right message in the right package and in the right place. For additional glaucoma education ideas and resources you can use in your community, visit the National Eye Health Education Program Glaucoma page. NEHEP Public Service Announcements Help Get the Word Out
Use the NEHEP ready-made scripts to record PSAs that your organization can play on your hold line, download an audio PSA and distribute it to local radio stations, or use one of the print PSAs in your newsletters or send it to local newspapers or magazines. The print PSAs can be downloaded in different sizes suitable for both magazines and newspapers in either color or black and white. NEHEP PSAs appear in a variety of outlets. In fact, one of the NEHEP glaucoma print PSAs recently appeared in the December issue of Cooking Light magazine. Audio PSAs are really easy to use and can be personalized for your organization. Here is an example of one audio PSA you can use:
Find more for radio PSAs here. Now Hear This!—ReadSpeaker Now Available on NEI Website
“We are hoping that this new tool will make our content even more accessible to our web visitors,” said Kym Collins-Lee, NEI Website manager. There is no need to download or install any additional programs so it is available to all users and from anywhere. You do not need to make adjustments to your web browser. However, you can adjust the volume and reading speed, if you choose. You may also have the text highlighted as it is read. “In addition to helping those with visual impairments, the tool may be useful to people who simply do not read well,” said NEHEP director Neyal Ammary-Risch. “Finding more effective ways to provide health information to people with low literacy skills may help them better manage chronic conditions such as glaucoma.” You will find the ReadSpeaker “Listen” button on the “Facts About” pages in the English and Spanish Health Information sections as well as on the NEHEP consumer information pages. To test out the tool, visit http://www.nei.nih.gov/glaucoma and look for the “Listen” button. Send a Glaucoma E-card
Send an e-card to someone you care about or put a link to the e-cards on your website or in newsletters. Each of these cards provides a link to the NEI Glaucoma Education Web page for recipients to get more information about glaucoma and what they can do to protect their vision. Send an English E-card. Attention Organizations and Individuals Interested in Eye Health and Vision Research!
NEHEP-Sponsored Webinars Help Educate People About Eye Diseases
As part of Glaucoma Awareness Month in January, the National Eye Health Education Program (NEHEP) hosted a Webinar on glaucoma, entitled “Eye Health Knowledge and Information Preferences of People at Risk for Glaucoma. Results from Nationwide Focus Groups.” On January 11, 2012, Dr. James Tsai, chair of the Glaucoma Subcommittee for NEHEP, and Neyal J. Ammary-Risch, director of NEHEP, spoke on the prevalence of glaucoma, results of national focus groups with people at higher risk for glaucoma, and materials available from NEHEP that can be used to increase awareness about the importance of comprehensive dilated eye exams in detecting glaucoma early. Missed the live Webinar? No problem. Just visit the NEHEP Webinar Archive Page. From there, you will be able to find presentation slides, transcripts, and recordings of past Webinars, such as the one on diabetic eye disease from October 2011. The glaucoma Webinar will be added soon. Stay tuned for more NEHEP Webinars throughout the year. CDC Releases Resource on Developing Materials To Meet the Health Literacy Needs of Older Adults
AHRQ Releases New Spanish-Language Medication Tracking Tool
To download a copy of the tool, visit http://www.ahrq.gov/consumer/safemedsp/yourmedssp.pdf. To order copies, contact the AHRQ Publications Clearinghouse at AHRQPubs@ahrq.hhs.gov. PBA Provides Vision and Eye Health Complement to National Prevention Strategy
In response to this initiative, Prevent Blindness America (PBA) has developed “Vision Preservation and the National Prevention Strategy: A Call to Action.” This comprehensive plan emphasizes how the effects of vision impairment cut across chronic comorbid conditions, injuries, and quality of life. It further demonstrates the importance of prevention services and programs in promoting eye health and provides addenda to the four Strategic Directions promoted by the National Prevention Council. PBA strongly encourages organizations to take on some of these recommendations to help lead the United States to become a healthier country, one that embraces prevention and promotes eye health. The complete “Vision Preservation and the National Prevention Strategy: A Call to Action” plan can be found at http://www.preventblindness.org or by calling 1–800–331–2020. HVCA Spotlight: Colorado Coalition for the Homeless
As a recipient of a 2011 Healthy Vision Community Award (HVCA), the Colorado Coalition for the Homeless created the Blindness Prevention Program, which was designed to provide no-cost primary and preventive eye care and other services to homeless families and individuals. The Coalition took the HVCA funding and expanded the services provided by the Stout Street Eye Clinic in Denver, CO. The goals were to increase the hours of the health educator at the clinic to four days a week from three days a week and provide one-on-one blindness prevention education to 42 homeless patients with glaucoma and 70 patients with diabetes or diabetic retinopathy. Developed by a Stout Street Clinic nurse and volunteer ophthalmologist in 1999, the clinic provides basic eye exams and referrals along with eyeglass repairs and adjustments. It is supported solely by financial contributions from local foundations, clubs, businesses, and the local medical community. More than 3,000 hours per year are donated by an all-volunteer team of 50 ophthalmologists, opticians, and support staff. In 2010, the Eye Clinic provided vision services to 901 patients during 1,400 visits, including eye exams, ordering of eyeglasses (frames provided) and prescription lenses, repairs, adjustments, and referrals to specialists or to other eye care providers. With the help of HVCA funding, in a six-month period the clinic provided 703 pairs of eyeglasses, 161 referrals, 576 eye exams, 65 referrals for advanced treatment, diabetes education to 115 people with diabetes, glaucoma education to 70 individuals with glaucoma, and 99 visual field exams. The clinic diagnosed 42 patients with cataracts and 368 with refractive errors; provided 1,515 optical visits; and increased volunteer hours to 1,848, support staff to 40, doctors to 20, and student volunteers to six. It also added a pediatric eye clinic one night per month for an additional 64 pediatric patients under the age of 18. As to the specific goals of the program, the health educator at the clinic provided services 40 hours per week, four to five days per week during this six-month period. She provided one-on-one blindness prevention education to 65 people with glaucoma and 100 people with diabetes or diabetic retinopathy. For more information on the Blindness Prevention Program of the Colorado Coalition for the Homeless, visit http://www.coloradocoalition.org or contact Judi Day at jday@coloradocoalition.org. To learn more about other community-based eye health education activities or to submit a project you have in your community, visit the Healthy Vision Community Programs Database. On the Road With NEHEP
2012 Aging in America Conference
Let Us Know What You Think About Outlook
Please contact us. We look forward to hearing from you! |