46 research outputs found
THE HEART OF NEW ULM PROJECT: COMMUNITY SYSTEMS MODEL OF PREVENTION SHOWS EARLY INDICATIONS OF REDUCING EVENT AND MORTALITY RATES OF ACUTE MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION
The Use of Telehealth Technology in Assessing the Accuracy of Self-Reported Weight and the Impact of a Daily Immediate-Feedback Intervention among Obese Employees
Objective. To determine the accuracy of self-reported body weight prior to and following a weight loss intervention including daily self-weighing among obese employees.
Methods. As part of a 6-month randomized controlled trial including a no-treatment control group, an intervention group received a series of coaching calls, daily self-weighing, and interactive telemonitoring. The primary outcome variable was the absolute discrepancy between self-reported and measured body weight at baseline and at 6 months. We used general linear mixed model regression to estimate changes and differences between study groups over time.
Results. At baseline, study participants underreported their weight by an average of 2.06 (se = 0.33) lbs. The intervention group self-reported a smaller absolute body weight discrepancy at followup than the control group.
Conclusions. The discrepancy between self-reported and measured body weight appears to be relatively small, may be improved through daily self-monitoring using immediate-feedback telehealth technology, and negligibly impacts change in body weight
Changing the restaurant food environment to improve cardiovascular health in a rural community: implementation and evaluation of the Heart of New Ulm restaurant programme
Sex-stratified Genome-wide Association Studies Including 270,000 Individuals Show Sexual Dimorphism in Genetic Loci for Anthropometric Traits
Peer reviewe
Affordances and Constraints of Virtual Healthcare: Students' Experiences Accessing Online Physician
THE HEART OF NEW ULM PROJECT: COMMUNITY SYSTEMS MODEL OF PREVENTION SHOWS EARLY INDICATIONS OF REDUCING EVENT AND MORTALITY RATES OF ACUTE MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION
Supporting Herbal Resource Needs for Health Plan Members: Complementary and Alternative Medicine by Telephone
We describe a health plan-based herbal resource program designed within the framework of a systems approach to population health improvement. The setting is a not-for-profit, consumer-governed health plan in the Midwestern US. Telephone-based, centralized services facilitate a process of access, communication, documentation and intervention in the area of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) use. A herbal-trained resource pharmacist is employed to provide evidence-based information on CAM products, when available, to patients and healthcare providers, educate patients who have chosen to self-medicate with CAM products for chronic conditions, and assist patients in the selection of quality CAM products prescribed by a physician. Three case studies are presented as examples of how the program is accessed, the intervention is tailored to individual needs, communication is established, documentation is organized and support is facilitated. In the year 2002, of the 61 An herbal resource support program appears to effectively provide access to timely information for both patients and providers. This approach, designed to meet the CAM information needs of both patients and providers, appears well positioned within the context of a health plan as the service is supportive to all users.Disease-management-programmes, Herbal-medicines