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The Appalachian Rural Health Institute (ARHI)
recently received a $200,000 grant under the three-part
Appalachian Diabetes Initiative, which was announced by
Gov. Bob Taft. The three-part initiative was for
$460,000, which comes from Ohio’s master tobacco
settlement funds, and is part of Taft’s Healthy Ohioans
Initiative. The Appalachian
Diabetes Initiative focuses on heightening awareness and
improving care and self-management, with the aim of
preventing or delaying the onset of diabetes and its
related complications. The three-part grant will be used
to establish and bolster diabetes treatment and
education services in 11 Appalachian counties.
“Too many people in Ohio’s Appalachian
counties are developing Type II diabetes. And too many
people,” says Taft, “including many who don’t even know
they have diabetes, are not receiving the tools and
information they need.”
The populations of the Appalachian
counties have disproportionate numbers of Ohioans with
diabetes. According to the Ohio Department of Health,
approximately 110,000 Ohioans in Appalachian counties
have been diagnosed with diabetes and an additional
30,000 remain undiagnosed.
These counties report the highest
poverty rates in the state, and studies show that people
with lower levels of income and education are stricken
with diabetes at much higher rates, says Frank Schwartz,
M.D., director of ARHI’s Diabetes/Endocrine Center. The
center was established in 2003 to spearhead the
university’s diabetes research, clinical training and
treatment, and educational outreach efforts in
Southeastern Ohio under the larger umbrella of ARHI.
“Within Appalachia there are clusters
of counties that are at risk; they tend to be more
devastated economically and have lower group
socioeconomic status,” says Schwartz.
Although the total diabetes picture in
Appalachia doesn’t seem as critical if all Appalachian
counties are lumped together, he says, “when you look at
specific counties you find populations at real risk.”
“For instance, Vinton County has a
12.8 percent prevalence, which approaches what you see
in African Americans and Hispanics, who are affected
more by diabetes than the majority population,” says
Schwartz, who is a member of the advisory board of the
Ohio Department of Health’s Diabetes Prevention and
Control Program. The program is a joint project funded
by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and
the Appalachian Regional Commission.
About half of the $200,000 will be
used to complete surveys in the 11-county region. Four
counties have been surveyed, he says.
“The other $100,000 will be used for
more screening, to increase our presence and identity
and, hopefully, to recruit county health leaders — those
in health departments, school systems, etc. — who can
help us build and implement our overall diabetes
initiative outreach plans.” Schwartz adds that the CDC
sees the center’s initiative potentially as a model for
a 13-state program.
“And it’s possible that the grant
could be refunded next year. The funding will help
coordinate and collaborate with partners — old and new —
of our existing diabetes initiative for Southeastern
Ohio.”
“The (Appalachian Diabetes)
initiatives,” says Ohio Department of Health Director J.
Nick Baird, M.D., “will have a great impact on helping
residents self-manage their diabetes, prevent related
complications and increase the number of Healthy Ohioans
across the Appalachian region.” |