Making Our Community Healthier: The Alliance Wellness Program

                  Daily, our providers take the time to counsel our patients on the proper choices to achieve better health outcomes: eat more fruits and vegetables, cut out fast foods, exercise more, take your medication, check your sugar levels, etc. We have found that it’s better to show our patients how to make healthy choices than to simply tell them. Alliance Medical Ministry provides a Wellness Programs that, when combined with our comprehensive medical home, gives our patients the tools they need to make lifestyle changes to improve their overall health. These pieces include the community garden, diabetes education, nutrition classes, exercise classes and group visits.  By incorporating these options with our clinical care, we are not only increasing access to care, we are giving our patients the education and tools to change health behaviors and overcome social and economic factors.

                  COMMUNITY GARDEN: The 2013 Wake County Community Health Needs Assessment

Digging deep in the community garden!

Digging deep in the community garden!

shared that 74% of our residents do not eat enough fruits and vegetables, and if your household earns less than $50,000 the likelihood of eating fresh foods decreases immensely.  The average Alliance patient earns $19,907 for a household of three.  Cost is an economic barrier to healthy eating. That is why we collaborated with the Inter-Faith Food Shuttle (IFFS) in 2009 to establish a community garden on the Alliance campus to offer fresh vegetables to our patients. Produce harvested from the garden is individually bagged, combined with healthy recipes, and handed directly to patients by their provider or nurse. We are able to offer fresh vegetables to our patients, but more importantly teach them about healthy eating options. This reinforces the advice of providers and increases compliance.

                  DIABETES EDUCATION CLASSES: To promote health behavior change and improve long-term outcomes for patients with chronic disease, Alliance started diabetes education classes to address both the educational and behavioral changes necessary to promote lasting change.  In a typical office visit, our providers spend 20 to 30 minutes with a patient. That is not much time when you must address a variety of complex issues. By offering extra health education classes, our patients can learn about diabetes and how to manage their health on a limited budget.  The added benefit is the peer support that occurs in a group setting.  Patients see that they are not alone and learn from other patient’s questions.  We also incorporate garden activities into our curriculum.  Our Certified Diabetes Educators utilize the garden by preparing class meals, offered recipes, nutritional information and providing fresh vegetables to participants. Classes occur on Saturdays and are offered in English and Spanish.  To incorporate the whole family in this program and to ensure that childcare is not a barrier, we are working with the Poe Center to offer a pilot kids program, “Growing Healthy Gardens,” while the Diabetes Education Class is occurring. This program will educate kids on where their food comes from and healthy choices.  We are starting this pilot with three initial sessions with the hopes of incorporating it with all of our Diabetes Classes.

                  NUTRITION CLASSES: In the fall of 2013, we started nutrition classes that are fully kicking into action in 2014.  Once again in partnership with Inter-Faith Food Shuttle we are incorporating their “Cooking Matters” curriculum into our Wellness Program.  This program is an interactive nutrition education program that teaches families how to get the most nutrition on a limited budget. These courses provide a long-term strategy to address hunger by ensuring that families can prepare nutritious meals that are balanced, tasty, and economical. We have trained an AmeriCorps Member and other volunteers to offer classes at Alliance.

                  EXERCISE CLASSES: Recently we also started a partnership with Dr. Howie Shareff of You Call This Yoga to offer adaptive yoga classes to our patients 20 times in 2014. His chair yoga classes allow all individuals to participate regardless of their athletic ability.  The goal is to increase strength and flexibility while reducing stress.

                  GROUP VISITS: The group visit is an extended doctor’s visit where not only physical and medical needs are met, but educational, social and psychological concerns can be dealt with effectively. Patients normally spend 1.5 to 2 hours at Alliance for a typical visit. With the group visit, patients spend the same amount of time at Alliance, but now get to participate in an educational component and interact with other patients. A typical group visit starts with 12 to 15 patients learning about a specific health topic as led by the provider or educator. It is an interactive setting where patients benefit from hearing each others questions and offer up their own advice.  After the education session, the discussion continues with a facilitator while the provider sees patients individually. Our patients get increased health education and the benefits of a peer group setting. At the first group visit conducted at Alliance, the most popular saying from the interaction was, “me too,” after hearing other patients comments and questions. We have completed our pilot phase of this program focusing on our diabetic patients and are now seeking to expand with other providers in our practice and to add a group for obese patients. The pilot has shown improved clinical numbers for those that participated in the group visit verses those that did not.  Participants reported a higher understanding of their disease, increased confidence to manage their health and increased exercise.

OUTCOME

                  At Alliance we offer compassionate care.  We do not judge, but instead offer a medical home model that builds a relationship with our patients. By offering access to health education, peer support, fresh foods and exercise in addition to primary care, we can take away barriers in making lifestyle changes. The different pieces of our Wellness Programs give our providers options to respond to each patient’s individual needs and achieve greater clinical outcomes.  Without this program, our patients would not have access to diabetes educators, nutrition experts or even exercise classes. With 78% of our patients dealing with at least one chronic health issues, these options help to affect positive health behaviors and overcome social and economic barriers.

A Weekend for all of our Busy Bees!

Spring is around the corner, and we hope you will be a “Busy Bees” for Alliance!  Join us Friday, March 21 anytime from 5-7 pm for a Busy Bee Social as we kick-off the Alliance Busy Bees Volunteer Club.  Then buzz over to Alliance Saturday morning, March 22 to help launch the Community Garden.  Calling all of our “Busy Bees!”

“CELEBRATE SPRING!” @ Alliance Medical Ministry 

busy beeFriday, March 21, 5-7 pm:
“Busy Bees” Social
Alliance “Busy Bees” @ The Busy Bee, 225 South Wilmington Street, Raleigh, NC.
Let’s toast Alliance Volunteers, past, present and future, with the launch of our new Volunteer Club, the “Busy Bees!” Learn how you can volunteer at Alliance. RSVP to edaniel@alliancemedicalministry.org.

Saturday, March 22, 9-11:30 am:  Garden Launch & Dedication
Come join the “Busy Bees” as we bless our seeds, plant our vegetables, and dedicate our garden. This will be a fun morning for Busy Bees of all ages.  Bring your friends and family and install our spring plants. To volunteer, contact us at garden@alliancemedicalministry.org.garden

On-going Garden Work Days:  “Busy Bees” in the Community Garden
Once a month we will have standing garden workdays throughout the year to harvest, plant, and nurture the garden that works hard year round to nurture our patients.  Make plans to join us on any of the following days: April 26, May 17, June 28, July 26, August 23, September 27, October 25, and November 22.  Come dig with us!  Contact our Garden Coordinator (garden@alliancemedicalministry.org) to learn more.

Alliance Medical Ministry continues to be grateful for your support of our mission.  We look forward to hearing from you!

Elizabeth Daniel
Director of Community Outreach
edaniel@alliancemedicalministry.org

Alliance Salutes our Boy Scouts!

Alliance Medical Ministry wants to thank our local Boy Scout troops for collaborating with us to DSC09903improve our garden!  The Boy Scouts are one of our many partners without whom our garden would not be able to flourish!  The Boy Scouts have worked on projects like the construction of wooden benches that were recently installed in the garden.  This project was led by Ryan MacRae.  The benches are a wonderful addition to the community garden and will be great help in future garden activities.

DSC09907Adam Huggins with Troop 395 is leading another Boy Scout project that will convert 4 of our garden rows into raised beds.  This will improve the yield of our garden and increase accessibility to the garden for those with physical limitations.  Thank you Boy Scouts for helping our garden grow!

 

 

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Can you Dig it? Growing Nutritional Tools one Squash at a Time!

Here at Alliance Medical Ministry, our community garden is buzzing with the “busy bees” that grow fresh, healthy produce for our patients.  The community garden plays an essential role in our mission to provide medical care to the uninsured working adults of Wake County.  The garden allows us to highlight the importance of healthy eating in a very real way to our patients who see the garden and receive its bounty on a regular basis.  By incorporating produce from our garden into the patients’ clinical experience through “produce prescriptions” and in our wellness programs, patients are able to see the impact nutrition plays on their overall health and are empowered to improve their nutritional well being.

photoAlliance is starting the year off by participating as a host site for the “Dig In” volunteer workday for AHA’s (Advocates for Health in Action) “Dig In” Conference on March 8th.  After the conference participants can come to Alliance to gets hands on experience in our community garden.

On March 15th Crossroads Fellowship is coming to Alliance for a workday to begin planting for the spring.

Everyone is invited on March 22nd to our Spring Garden Kick-off and Open House.  We’ll be having a garden workday from 9:30-11:30 and finish with a garden blessing in hopes that our harvest will be a bountiful one for our patients!  This is a great chance to come see what Alliance is about and help us start the year off strong.

We will have additional garden workdays throughout the year to harvest, plant, and nurture the garden that works hard year round to nurture our patients.  Make plans to join us on any of the following days:

photo[1]April 26
May 17
June 28
July 26
August 23
September 27
October 25
November 22

 

Come dig with us!  Contact our Garden Coordinator (garden@alliancemedicalministry.org) to learn more.