Cal Poly Professor Receives Grant to Improve Healthcare Access for Hispanic and Indigenous Women in Santa Maria and Guadalupe – Cal Poly News

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Cal Poly Professor Receives Grant to Improve Healthcare Access for Hispanic and Indigenous Women in Santa Maria and Guadalupe – Cal Poly News

Mobile Health Unit Clinic and Staff - Medical Director Vicki Charbonneau, nurse;  Phlebotomist Rubi Solano, CPT-1;  Director of Operations Suzanne Phelan, Ph.D.;  kinesiology major Elena Kraemer, a Cal Poly Health Ambassador;  Mobile Health Unit Coordinator Cristina Macedo, MSW;  Dignity Health Resident Anthony Reyes, MD;  public health major Nathalie Zamora, a Cal Poly Health Ambassador;  public health major Isabella Araoz, a Cal Poly Health Ambassador;  and Mixtec interpreter Paola Ligario.

SANTA MARIA – Cal Poly Kinesiology and Public Health Department Professor Suzanne Phelan recently received $30,000 in grants from the Santa Barbara Foundation to improve the Cal Poly Mobile Health Clinic’s services for women in northern Santa Barbara County.

Launched in 2018, the Mobile Health Clinic provides free medical and preventive health care services to uninsured women and serves approximately 250 patients a year, including ongoing care and follow-up visits. Spanish is the most common language among the clinic’s patients, but about 20% speak the Mixtec or Zapotec Indigenous languages, which are not often translated into medical forms and literature.

The staff at Phelan and Mobile Health Clinic aim to change that. Clinic staff includes SLO NOOR Foundation clinicians and Cal Poly students, who serve as phlebotomists, health advocates, interpreters and medical assistants, and perform other support duties.

The grant funding is specifically aimed at making health care literature – such as intake forms, health history surveys and other materials – accessible to uninsured Hispanic and Native women who were never taught to read or write effectively.

These communication tools are not limited to translating forms into text, Phelan said. A client might be able to access a digital health history form that is read aloud via audio playback and accompanied by images that represent the content of the questions being asked.

Since the populations served by the Mobile Health Clinic often struggle with the trust of the medical community, research into what kinds of informational images instill trust and understanding among patients is also being done to make these tools as successful as possible. Phelan plans to distribute these materials to other healthcare community partners who serve these patients.

“One of the most rewarding aspects of working with our women’s mobile health program is seeing the cultural exchange between our staff and patient populations,” she said. “It is wonderful to hear expressions of gratitude from patients who are sometimes receiving care for the first time in their lives. Our staff and students are amazing, speak multiple languages ​​and manage multiple competing tasks sometimes at the same time during peak times of the clinic.”

In addition to this recent grant, the Mobile Health Clinic has also received funding and support from the Santa Barbara Foundation, the National Association of Free and Charitable Clinics, and donations from Dignity Health and other private donors.

The clinic is made possible through a partnership between Cal Poly, the SLO NORTH Foundation, and Marian Regional Medical Center. The NOOR Foundation provides free medical care to the uninsured, and Marian Medical Center’s medical residents rotate on the Mobile Health Clinic as part of their underserved rotation. Marian’s laboratories also process many of the Mobile Health Clinic’s patient biospecimens.

To learn more about the grant funding and the services offered by the Mobile Health Unit, visit: Mobile Health Unit Improves Access for Hispanic and Indigenous Women in Santa Maria and Guadalupe – Corporate Engagement and Innovation.

To find clinic hours, locations and to make an appointment, visit Women’s Mobile Health – Center for Health Research – Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo.

This project was made possible by the work of the units in the Cal Poly Division of Research, Economic Development and Graduate Education to support student research, Learning-by-doing, the Teacher-Scholar model, proposal submission, grant negotiation, compliance review, support, and manage after the award. See more at research.calpoly.edu.

December 19, 2022
Contact: Ken Kienow
[email protected]; 805-756-5976

Suzanne Phelan
[email protected]; 805-756-2087

Above: MHU Clinic and Staff. From left to right are Medical Director Vicki Charbonneau, nurse practitioner; Phlebotomist Rubi Solano, CPT-1; Director of Operations Suzanne Phelan, Ph.D.; kinesiology major Elena Kraemer, a Cal Poly Health Ambassador; Mobile Health Unit Coordinator Cristina Macedo, MSW; Dignity Health Resident Anthony Reyes, MD; public health major Nathalie Zamora, a Cal Poly Health Ambassador; public health major Isabella Araoz, a Cal Poly Health Ambassador; and Mixtec interpreter Paola Ligario.

Cal Poly's Mobile Health ClinicCal Poly’s Mobile Health Clinic

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