
For
health care providers in areas of Virginia such as the Eastern Shore,
Big Stone Gap, Highland County or Gloucester, the miles and miles between
their practices and reliable information resources are great. Isolation
from medical libraries, continuing education programs, and colleagues
makes keeping health care providers in rural areas a challenge. AHEC understands
these challenges and works to bridge the distance between academic health
centers and practitioners so they have ready access to the information
needed to provide quality health care to their patients. Partnerships
with organizations such as the Office of Rural Health, the National Library
of Medicine, and continuing education offices at colleges and universities
help AHEC bring resources to local providers. Continuing education programs
on topics such as cultural competence and teen pregnancy prevention, teleconferencing
with academic health science centers, electronic linkages between practitioners,
and traveling librarians that assist with literature searches and software
use are just some examples of AHEC programs that support providers in
rural areas of the Commonwealth. AHEC and its partners make Virginia a
little smaller for health care providers.
Eastern
Virginia Telemedicine Network - [Eastern
Virginia AHEC]
The Eastern
Virginia Telemedicine Network (EVTN) is a regional health professions'
distance learning network established by Eastern Virginia Medical School
(EVMS) and the Eastern Shore Rural Health System, Inc. The EVTN was established
for several reasons. First, to improve the recruitment and retention of
primary care health providers in medically underserved areas of eastern
Virginia by reducing their sense of professional isolation. Second, to
provide a convenient and free opportunity for these providers to receive
the continuing medical education credit they require for re-licensure
in Virginia. Third, to improve the quality of care provided in these areas
by providing the most current medical information to providers and by
increasing the amount of professional consultation between community and
academic health center professionals. Initial funding for the development
of the EVTN was provided by the Virginia Health Care Foundation and EVMS.
Community
Health Connect Program - [Northern Virginia
AHEC]
Northern
Virginia is home to one of the most culturally diverse regions in the
country, Adjacent to the nation's capital, it is home to people from over
150 different countries who speak, among them, over 100 different languages.
English is not the primary language for approximately 15% of the population;
in some clinics, 72% of the patients are non-English speaking.
In order
to support the health care providers who serve this clientele, Northern
Virginia AHEC has developed "Community Health Connect," which
provides the following array of services:
Cultural
Competence Training Programs - These customized programs, whether
for specific groups or more general audiences, take form as workshops,
seminars, in-services or conferences. Faculty associates are bilingual/bicultural
professionals with direct experience in the field, who bring to each
program an interdisciplinary perspective and individual expertise. Hundreds
of health care professionals are touched each year by these programs.
Community
Health Interpreter Service - Opened in 1999, CHIS now provides
trained health care interpreters in over 20 languages at more than 30
locations throughout Northern Virginia. Each candidate is screened for
proficiency in both English and the non-English language and required
to pass a nationally recognized 40-hour interpreter training program
called Bridging the Gap.
Interpreter
Training Programs - In addition to operating its own interpreter
service, Northern Virginia AHEC offers interpreter training for bilingual
individuals who work for other health care organizations. Two curricula
are currently available: Bridging the Gap, which trains health care
interpreters, and Introduction to Community Interpreting, which is a
16 hour, introductory course appropriate interpreters working in the
non-clinical portions of the industry (registration, human resources,
etc.). Bridging the Gap is taught by Northern Virginia AHEC, under license
to its originator, the Cross Cultural Health Care Program, Seattle,
WA.
Provider
Training Programs - With the availability of trained health
care interpreters, it became clear that health care providers would
benefit by a course explaining the difference between trained and untrained
interpreters and clarifying roles and expectations for all parties in
an interpreted clinical encounter. Therefore Northern Virginia AHEC
also offers a very popular 1 ½ hour session entitled How to Communicate
Effectively Through an Interpreter.
Consultation
- Health care organizations seeking to improve their organizational
capacity to provide the fully array of language access services turn
to Northern Virginia AHEC for consultation on these matters.
Internet/Intranet
Information and Medical Database System- [Rappahannock
AHEC]
RAHEC has
implemented an Internet/intranet information and medical database system
at its site and 12 provider practice sites. RAHEC is providing on-line
access to biomedical information and intranet connectivity between regional
professionals. Since January 1998, a demonstration project as served as
a test-bed and model for expanded applications. The usefulness of the
information technology to rural providers has been demonstrated. Each
participating pracitioner receives a computer workstation capable of accessing
health information through in Internet and the World Wide Web, access
to an Internet provider and coverage of basic monthly charges for a one-year
period, library information services including Grateful Med and other
National Library of Medicine on-line services, document viewing and retrieval,
group and individual training, on-line communication between regional
professionals, on-line education programs, potential for advanced telemedicine
applications, and Grand Rounds on-line, a clinical practice application
of the technology whereby health professionals can interact during discussion
of a clinical case.
Community
Health Interpreter Service - [Blue Ridge
AHEC]
For hundreds of Shenandoah Valley residents, linguistic and cultural
barriers seriously compromise the quality of health care that they receive.
To address this challenge, the Blue Ridge Area Health Education Center
(BRAHEC) at James Madison University has adopted a forty-hour curriculum
titled "Bridging the Gap" to train persons in providing interpretation
in health and medical care encounters.
The
Community Health Interpreter Service program serves the LEP (Limited
English Proficient) community to improve their access to health care.
Health and human service providers benefit from professional interpreters
that improve communication and reduce risks.
Primary
Practice Opportunities - [Blue Ridge AHEC]
Primary Practice Opportunities is an online resource designed to recruit
for primary care and other various medical specialty positions throughout
Virginia, concentrating on the underserved areas of the state.
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