New from the @EmoryCSHH News Team:
New option for schizophrenia patients, investigating RSV vaccine uptake among minorities, doubling available bird flu vaccines, improving access to HIV prevention in low-income countries, rising breast cancer rates among younger women.
Editor’s Note: This summer, Exploring Health will feature posts from students within the Health 1,2,3,4 program’s Health 497 course – Community Health Education Strategies. This piece describes the paths offered in the 2021-2022 academic year and serves as an introduction to the upcoming student blog posts on their experiences participating in the course.
Health 1,2,3,4 is an academic program housed within the Center for the Study of Human Health at Emory University. The four-course series aims to provide students with strategies and resources to play an active role in their own health, while also equipping them with the skills to promote the health of their peers. In addition to growing their knowledge of the science of health, students who complete courses within the Health 1,2,3,4 program walk away with tangible skills that prepare them for a wide range of careers or educational programs after graduation.
Recognizing the need for students to apply the skills and knowledge acquired in the Human Health courses, the Health 1,2,3,4 program developed a hands-on classroom-to-community course, known as Health 497 – Community Health Education Strategies. In this two-part course (fall and spring), students apply their understanding of health education principles and strategies to deliver health education programming with collaborative partners in the Atlanta and Emory communities. Students who participate in the course are provided with the opportunity to develop professional skills and play an important role in community health promotion. This year, Health 497 offered two paths for the students to pursue: group coaching to support Healthy Emory’s Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) and health education lessons for Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School (“King Middle”).
Healthy Emory’s Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) Group Coaching Path
Developed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Healthy Emory’s Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) enables Emory employees with prediabetes or who are at risk of developing type 2 diabetes to modify their behaviors to reduce their risk of type 2 diabetes. Partnering with Healthy Emory, Health 497 provided optional, student-led group coaching sessions to support DPP participants in maintaining healthy behaviors and reaching their health goals. Students within the Health 497 DPP path trained to?become student health coaches, developing and facilitating group coaching support sessions on six different topics, such as stress management and positive self-talk. By participating in the group coaching support sessions, DPP participants revisited key components of the DPP curriculum, discussed personal health barriers, and developed specific goals to promote their well-being.
Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School Health Education Path
The Health 1,2,3,4 program maintains a collaborative partnership with Atlanta’s Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School to provide health education to its 6th-8th grade student population. Students who pursued the Health 497 King Middle path developed?and facilitated?lesson plans on several topics, including nutrition, positive mental health, and health goal setting. The middle school students who participated in the health lessons expanded their understanding of health and health-promoting behaviors.
It is with great pleasure that we share the personal experiences and reflections of our Health 497 students within their specific paths to highlight the impact this course has had on their academic and professional growth. Stay tuned for the student pieces as they are posted in the Exploring Health blog this summer.
To learn more about the Health 1,2,3,4 program, visit the program webpage. For more information about collaborative partnership opportunities, contact program director Lisa DuPree at madupre@emory.edu.