Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Second Annual Native American Diabetes & Wound Care Conference


Dr. Warne presented as a keynote speaker on this year’s conference to discuss the prevention and treatment of diabetes as well as the proper techniques for treating wounds. 

ArgusLeader.com

Please see the following article by Peter Harriman:

Better Indian health may hinge on power of tribes themselves

Head of NDSU program says Alaska network offers model for success

June 12, 2013

The average life expectancy of a Native American in South Dakota is 58.

Incidence of diabetes among tribal members is 208 percent that of non-Indians.

And the incidence of alcoholism among tribal members is 526 percent that of non-Indians.
These statistics came Tuesday courtesy of Dr. Donald Warne, director of the Master of Public Health Program at North Dakota State University. He was among the speakers at the first-ever Collaborative Research Center for American Indian Health Summit in Sioux Falls.
The conference, which drew about 350 participants Tuesday, concludes today at the Sanford Center. Its goal is to bring together tribal communities and health researchers from multiple disciplines to talk about health disparities experienced by Native Americans in South Dakota, North Dakota and Minnesota.
In his presentation, Warne was not despairing of Indian health care. Conditions that contribute to such poor health outcomes for Indians all are preventable, he said, and a theme running through the conference is that the best solutions come from tribes themselves.
“For thousands of years, the tribes took care of their own. They survived and thrived,” said Dr. Siobhan Wescott, a Sanford Research scientist.
The health summit is a consortium of Sanford, state universities in North Dakota and South Dakota, several other health care providers, the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe, Oglala Sioux Tribe and the Great Plains Tribal Chairmen’s Health Board. Other regional tribes are expected to join in the next two years. The group was paid for by a grant from the Helmsley Charitible Trust.
If a community of clinical providers and researchers that is focused on Indian health issues emerges this week, the initial summit will have been a success, said Jen Prasek, Sanford Research project manager.
“The biggest success will be opening more conversations, more dialogue. A lot of the people in this room have never met before today,” she said.
The summit includes national speakers, panel discussions and training on topics such as community engagement in research, regulatory knowledge and research ethics.
In a summit session today, participants will take a detailed look at the Southcentral Foundation Nuka System of Care, the health care network owned and managed by Alaskan Natives. In his presentation Tuesday, Warne was clear that this is a preferred template for Indian health care everywhere — a situation where the tribes take more responsibility for their health care and essentially run the system.
The model is “the flagship” of how Native American health care should be run, Warne said.
But the model is not widely used in the Aberdeen Region of the Indian Health Service, which includes South Dakota, North Dakota, Nebraska and Iowa. And in the Aberdeen region, the state that uses it least is South Dakota, Warne said.
Of the state’s nine tribes, only the Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribe operate a health care facility.
After passage of the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act of 1975, tribes gained the ability to subcontract with federal agencies for the delivery of services guaranteed by treaties, including health care.
The federal government seriously underfunds IHS, Warne said. Its average expenditure per person is $2,600 annually, compared to $11,000 for Medicare recipients, he said.
But by contracting with IHS as a health care provider, tribes can leverage the federal appropriation to the greatest degree.
Where federal agencies such as IHS are prohibited from carrying forward money from one fiscal year to the next, a tribe contracting with IHS is under no such restriction. Federal agencies cannot lobby for additional money, nor can they seek grants. Tribes can do both. Tribes that subcontract as health care providers also can bill Medicare and Medicaid.
In addition, Warne said, if a tribe simply allows IHS to provide its health care, it receives only the value of the direct appropriation — Warne used the example of $2 million. But if a tribe subcontracts with IHS, it not only gets the direct appropriation but recovers indirect costs. So $2 million of health care provided directly by IHS could become a $2.6 million payment from IHS to the tribe.
Indians taking charge of their affairs are shaping other aspects of health care. Joseph Gone, a University of Michigan psychology professor, discussed in a summit presentation the interface of evidence-based medical mental health treatment and traditional tribal healing.
“Creative hybridity,” he called treatment approaches that borrow from both modes.
By overseeing genetic and other medical research involving Indians, “we want to make research mean something for us. We have not been getting anything back,” Cecelia Big Crow said
She was instrumental in establishing the Oglala Sioux Research Review Board. Founded on the principle of tribal sovereignty, it works in parallel with institutional review boards that traditionally have sought to make research in various disciplines adhere to ethics.
“We are asserting co-ownership over data collected on our tribe,” she said.

Dakota Conference on Rural and Public Health

Please see pictures from this year's 

Dakota Conference on Rural and Public Health.



Mission

  • Provide quality education for rural and public health professionals.

Vision

  • Improve the health and well-being of North Dakota Communities.

Objectives

  1. Provide continuing education to health and human service administrators, managers, researchers, and clinical providers in the areas of:
    • Health care administration,
    • Health promotion and disease prevention,
    • Environmental health and occupational health, and
    • Diverse populations and health disparities.
  2. Create an environment of learning that is informative and educational to an interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary audience of health and human service professionals.
  3. Provide conference participants with the opportunity to formally present community-based solutions to common rural and public health issues.
  4. Provide conference participants with the opportunity to informally network with others to share skills and strategies meant to address access, financial, and quality-of-care issues found in rural and public health.
  5. Foster an environment that is conducive to collaboration between different organizations, health and human service disciplines, and communities.

The Nation's Health

In this month's edition of the APHA's publication, The Nation's Health, NDSU MPH was highlighted for the work done during National Public Health week.
 Here's what is says:
"Fargo Cass Public Health in Fargo, N.D., worked during National Public Health Week to show how the department makes a difference throughout the community. On April 3 at the West Acres Mall, the agency conducted free blood pressure checks, gave away refrigerator thermometers and distributed information on emergency preparedness, pool safety and health promotion. Staff and nurses also oversaw volunteers who made sandbags for flood preparation. Meanwhile, local media attended nurse family partnership appointments to learn how the program helps families who are expecting their first children. Health promotions staff and nutrition students from North Dakota State University gave nutrition presentations to local fourth- and fifth-graders, who had the opportunity to have their pictures taken while sporting milk mustaches.
During National Public Health Week at North Dakota State University in Fargo, N.D., faculty in the master of public health program provided insight about their current research and gave ideas for future research collaborations. Also, North Dakota State Health Officer Terry Dwelle, MD, MPH, an APHA member, spoke about integrating public health and primary care and how those with an MPH degree can help lead the way. The week’s events also featured a panel discussion on school wellness policies and local foods."
You'll find us about 2/3 of the way down the page.