Addressing Community Health Needs through the Development of a Student-Led Community Health Fair

Problem: Based on a specific community benefit analysis of Greenville, South Carolina, we identified the Dunean community with its increased prevalence of health inequities with respect to access to health care, poverty burden, and disease mortality on a county, state, and national level. The Dun...

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Main Authors: Jacob Ritchie, Lauren Tyler, T.J. Wenzel, Alyssa A. Guo, Lauren Fowler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association for Medical Education in Europe (AMEE) 2020-08-01
Series:MedEdPublish
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mededpublish.org/Manuscripts/3139
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spelling doaj-773f99f9b6fd49b98d1448b1ee79a8ef2021-02-16T16:36:00ZengAssociation for Medical Education in Europe (AMEE)MedEdPublish2312-79962020-08-0191Addressing Community Health Needs through the Development of a Student-Led Community Health FairJacob Ritchie0Lauren Tyler1T.J. Wenzel2Alyssa A. Guo3Lauren Fowler4University of South Carolina School of Medicine GreenvilleUniversity of South Carolina School of Medicine GreenvilleUniversity of South Carolina School of Medicine GreenvilleUniversity of South Carolina School of Medicine GreenvilleUniversity of South Carolina School of Medicine GreenvilleProblem: Based on a specific community benefit analysis of Greenville, South Carolina, we identified the Dunean community with its increased prevalence of health inequities with respect to access to health care, poverty burden, and disease mortality on a county, state, and national level. The Dunean community's data reflect poorer health outcomes in terms of disease and unhealthy lifestyle as well as inadequate access to medical resources compared to other communities in South Carolina. Approach: Students, residents, attendings, faculty, and staff from the University of South Carolina School of Medicine Greenville (UofSC SOMG) formed a task force to engage the community and combat the root causes of diseases. This task force built partnerships with community leaders to create Root Cause, a monthly health event designed to bring community members to a unified space, share a free community dinner, and provide a wide range of health and wellness resources to educate and inspire them to make healthy lifestyle choices. Outcomes: This report describes the formation of the community engagement task force and execution of Root Cause. In five Root Cause events, we partnered with 36 community agencies and our academic health center partners who shared their resources, served 207 Dunean neighborhood members, and facilitated 1,237 total interactions between community members and partners. Conclusion: Under the Root Cause model, medical students and neighborhood partners have initiated a trusted, bidirectional dialogue to determine their specific needs with the desire to positively transform the health and wellness of the Dunean community. Our data suggests that based on our efforts, the neighborhood of Dunean, SC increased community cohesiveness and improved perceptions of access to health care. Additionally, participating medical students advanced their understanding of social health and economic challenges which helped to facilitate their development along the active citizen continuum, as well as increase empathy for their future patients in the local community. https://www.mededpublish.org/Manuscripts/3139Community outreachactive citizenshiphealth disparitiesmedical student leadership
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jacob Ritchie
Lauren Tyler
T.J. Wenzel
Alyssa A. Guo
Lauren Fowler
spellingShingle Jacob Ritchie
Lauren Tyler
T.J. Wenzel
Alyssa A. Guo
Lauren Fowler
Addressing Community Health Needs through the Development of a Student-Led Community Health Fair
MedEdPublish
Community outreach
active citizenship
health disparities
medical student leadership
author_facet Jacob Ritchie
Lauren Tyler
T.J. Wenzel
Alyssa A. Guo
Lauren Fowler
author_sort Jacob Ritchie
title Addressing Community Health Needs through the Development of a Student-Led Community Health Fair
title_short Addressing Community Health Needs through the Development of a Student-Led Community Health Fair
title_full Addressing Community Health Needs through the Development of a Student-Led Community Health Fair
title_fullStr Addressing Community Health Needs through the Development of a Student-Led Community Health Fair
title_full_unstemmed Addressing Community Health Needs through the Development of a Student-Led Community Health Fair
title_sort addressing community health needs through the development of a student-led community health fair
publisher Association for Medical Education in Europe (AMEE)
series MedEdPublish
issn 2312-7996
publishDate 2020-08-01
description Problem: Based on a specific community benefit analysis of Greenville, South Carolina, we identified the Dunean community with its increased prevalence of health inequities with respect to access to health care, poverty burden, and disease mortality on a county, state, and national level. The Dunean community's data reflect poorer health outcomes in terms of disease and unhealthy lifestyle as well as inadequate access to medical resources compared to other communities in South Carolina. Approach: Students, residents, attendings, faculty, and staff from the University of South Carolina School of Medicine Greenville (UofSC SOMG) formed a task force to engage the community and combat the root causes of diseases. This task force built partnerships with community leaders to create Root Cause, a monthly health event designed to bring community members to a unified space, share a free community dinner, and provide a wide range of health and wellness resources to educate and inspire them to make healthy lifestyle choices. Outcomes: This report describes the formation of the community engagement task force and execution of Root Cause. In five Root Cause events, we partnered with 36 community agencies and our academic health center partners who shared their resources, served 207 Dunean neighborhood members, and facilitated 1,237 total interactions between community members and partners. Conclusion: Under the Root Cause model, medical students and neighborhood partners have initiated a trusted, bidirectional dialogue to determine their specific needs with the desire to positively transform the health and wellness of the Dunean community. Our data suggests that based on our efforts, the neighborhood of Dunean, SC increased community cohesiveness and improved perceptions of access to health care. Additionally, participating medical students advanced their understanding of social health and economic challenges which helped to facilitate their development along the active citizen continuum, as well as increase empathy for their future patients in the local community.
topic Community outreach
active citizenship
health disparities
medical student leadership
url https://www.mededpublish.org/Manuscripts/3139
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