• J Gen Intern Med · Apr 2020

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    Integrating Community Health Workers into Safety-Net Primary Care for Diabetes Prevention: Qualitative Analysis of Clinicians' Perspectives.

    • Radhika Gore, Ariel Brown, Garseng Wong, Scott Sherman, Mark Schwartz, and Nadia Islam.
    • NYU School of Medicine, New York, NY, 10016, USA. radhika.gore@nyulangone.org.
    • J Gen Intern Med. 2020 Apr 1; 35 (4): 119912101199-1210.

    BackgroundEvidence shows community health workers (CHWs) can effectively deliver proven behavior-change strategies to prevent type 2 diabetes mellitus (diabetes) and enhance preventive care efforts in primary care for minority and low-income populations. However, operational details to integrate CHWs into primary care practice remain less well known.ObjectiveTo examine clinicians' perceptions about working with CHWs for diabetes prevention in safety-net primary care.SettingClinicians are primary care physicians and nurses at two New York City safety-net hospitals participating in CHORD (Community Health Outreach to Reduce Diabetes). CHORD is a cluster-randomized trial testing a CHW intervention to prevent diabetes.DesignGuided by the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research, we studied how features of the CHW model and organizational context of the primary care practices influenced clinicians' perspectives about the acceptability, appropriateness, and feasibility of a diabetes-prevention CHW program. Data were collected pre-intervention using semi-structured interviews (n = 18) and a 20-item survey (n = 54).ApproachBoth survey and interview questions covered clinicians' perspectives on diabetes prevention, attitudes and beliefs about CHWs' role, expectations in working with CHWs, and use of clinic- and community-based diabetes- prevention resources. Survey responses were descriptively analyzed. Interviews were coded using a mix of deductive and inductive approaches for thematic analysis.Key ResultsEighty-seven percent of survey respondents agreed CHWs could help in preventing diabetes; 83% reported interest in working with CHWs. Ninety-one percent were aware of clinic-based prevention resources; only 11% were aware of community resources. Clinicians supported CHWs' cultural competency and neighborhood reach, but expressed concerns about the adequacy of CHWs' training; public and professional emphasis on diabetes treatment over prevention; and added workload and communication with CHWs.ConclusionsClinicians found CHWs appropriate for diabetes prevention in safety-net settings. However, disseminating high-quality evidence about CHWs' effectiveness and operations is needed to overcome concerns about integrating CHWs in primary care.

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