A regional health collaborative formed By NewYork-Presbyterian aims to improve the health of a largely Hispanic community |
| |
Authors: | Carrillo J Emilio Shekhani Nida Shabbir Deland Emme Levin Fleck Elaine M Mucaria Jaclyn Guimento Robert Kaplan Steven Polf William A Carrillo Victor A Pardes Herbert Corwin Steven J |
| |
Affiliation: | NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, New York City, NY, USA. ecarrill@nyp.org |
| |
Abstract: | Communities of poor, low-income immigrants with limited English proficiency and disproportionate health burdens pose unique challenges to health providers and policy makers. NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital developed the Regional Health Collaborative, a population-based health care model to improve the health of the residents of Washington Heights-Inwood. This area is a predominantly Hispanic community in New York City with high rates of asthma, diabetes, heart disease, and depression. NewYork-Presbyterian created an integrated network of patient-centered medical homes to form a "medical village" linked to other providers and community-based resources. The initiative set out to document the priority health needs of the community, target high-prevalence conditions, improve cultural competence among providers, and introduce integrated information systems across care sites. The first six months of the program demonstrated a significant 9.2?percent decline in emergency department visits for ambulatory care-sensitive conditions and a 5.8?percent decrease in hospitalizations that was not statistically significant. This initiative offers a model for other urban academic medical centers to better serve populations facing social and cultural barriers to care. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|