Academy Of Family Physicians Foundation Will Launch New Model Of Peer Support To Drive Behavior Changes In People With Diabetes
06/21/07
The American Academy
of Family Physicians Foundation today announced that is has received a $15
million gift from the Eli Lilly and Company Foundation to help the diabetes
community establish a new model of peer education for people with diabetes.
The program will be rooted in peer-to-peer interactions, mentoring and
role- modeling to create sustainable individual behavioral changes that
will improve long-term outcomes.
The grant, distributed over five years, will fund Peers for Progress, a
program that will identify and train lay volunteers who have diabetes and
certify them to be "Diabetes Mentors." These mentors will then assist other
people with diabetes in better managing the emotional, social and daily
self- care demands of the disease.
"We need a new approach if we are going to successfully fight this
debilitating disease," said Craig Doane, Executive Director of the American
Academy of Family Physicians Foundation. "We believe that better patient
outcomes can occur through grassroots, community-based programs that
empower patients to help each other lead healthier lives."
This new approach comes at a time when the healthcare system is facing
a diabetes pandemic without a parallel increase in the number of healthcare
professionals. Additionally, traditional diabetes education is under
scrutiny.
"We believe that engaging people with diabetes to help and inspire
other diabetics and those affected by their diabetes is a viable path,"
said Larry Ellingson, president and chief executive officer, Peers for
Progress. "The explosion in obesity, cardiovascular disease and diabetes
has prompted the health care system to look at other models that can
support care in these chronic conditions. People helping people can be very
beneficial to patients and health care providers. This approach will ensure
appropriate cost effective supportive care for people affected by
diabetes."
The goal of the initiative is to empower one percent of the people with
diabetes in America, or 200,000 patients, to become Diabetes Mentors and to
expand globally to include two million mentors around the world by 2020.
The Diabetes Mentors will help other people with diabetes and become an
integral part of the healthcare system by serving as a social resource for
physicians and diabetes educators. Some will also contribute to the
expansion and self- sustainability of the program by training other
patients to become Diabetes Mentors.
"Since 1923, the diabetes community has relied on Lilly to deliver an
answer for one of the world's most challenging diseases," said Jose Caro,
M.D., Lilly vice president of Global Diabetes Care Outcomes. "One of the
ways we do that is to help organizations like the AAFP provide solutions
that treat the whole person, not just the disease."
About Diabetes
Diabetes currently affects 246 million people worldwide and is expected
to affect 380 million by 2025. It is the fourth leading cause of global
death by disease. The humanitarian, economic, and social costs of diabetes
are immense: Some 3 million people die annually from diabetes-related
causes - one death every 10 seconds and in the same 10 seconds 2 people
develops the disease, according to the International Diabetes Federation.
About the American Academy of Family Physicians Foundation
The Foundation serves as the philanthropic arm of the American Academy
of Family Physicians. Its primary goal is to enhance health care delivered
to the American people by developing and providing philanthropic resources
for the promotion and support of family medicine.
For more information, please visit
(Author: http://www.aafpfoundation.org)
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