March 30, 2016 • NorTex
The North Texas Primary Care Research Network Newsletter
WORKPLACE ENHANCEMENT HEALTHY AGING AND INDEPENDENT LIVING (WE HAIL)
NorTex is excited to be a part of the Workforce Enhancement Health Aging and Independent Living (WE HAIL) initiative. In Tarrant County, adults 65 years and over are projected to increase by more than 26% from 2013 to 2018. By 2018, individuals 65 and over will make up nearly 12% of the total population compared to almost 10% in 2013. The increase in this population is expected to have a dramatic impact on the amount and types of services required by the community, especially due to the fact the most people in the age group will need to manage more than once chronic condition by 2030. This is compounded by he fact that across the region, access to care due to provider shortage and capacity was highlighted as a core issue in Tarrant County in the John Peter Smith (JPS) Community Health Needs Assessment. Furthermore data from the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) show Health Professional Shortage Areas (HPSAs) in Tarrant County and surrounding rural counties. The recruitment and retaining of qualified geriatric healthcare professionals is key to the development of a highly trained workforce in our community.
To address these issues, Dr. Janice Knebl at the UNT Healthand Dr. Elizabeth Carter at JPS Health Network recently received a $2.55 million HRSA grant. The purpose of this project, titled “Workplace Enhancement Health Aging and Independent Living” (WE HAIL), is to increase the number of healthcare workers in Tarrant County and surrounding rural counties to address and meet the needs of older adults at individual, community, and population levels. Essential, WE HAIL is designed to break down silos in the area od health for older adults through building collaborations. Through five areas of innovation, the project aims to focus on the training of healthcare professionals (undergraduate, graduate, residents, and practicing) in geriatrics, and to take leadership roles in geriatric care. NorTex will primarily be involved in distributing materials to practicing clinicians and offering maintenance of certification and quality and improvement opportunities to our practices. WE HAIL will ultimately provide training in health literacy, chronic disease self-management, falls prevention, medication management, and dementia care.
WE HAIL includes multiple community and academic partners. Institutional partners include the UNTHSC, JPS Health Network, Texas Christian University, and United Way of Tarrant County. Community partners include Meals on Wheels Inc. of Tarrant County, Senior Citizen Services of Greater Tarrant County Inc., James L West Alzheimer’s Center, and the Alzheimer’s Association of North Central Texas.
For more information about WE HAIL, please contact Dr. Jennifer Severance at Jennifer.Serverance@unthealth.edu or Subhada Prasad at Subhada.Prasad@unthealth.edu
NORTEX RESEARCH PROJECTS
FEATURED CURRENT NORTEX PROJECT
Improving Birth Outcomes: The Essential Role of Primary Care Providers in Reproductive Life Planning
NorTex is collaborating with Tarrant County Public Health Department, ForHER, the
Office of Professional and Continuing Education (PACE) at the UNT Healthto study reproductive
life planning in primary care practice. At 6.87 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2012,
the Tarrant County infant mortality rate (IMR) was higher than the rates of Texas
(5.98 per 1,000) and the United States
(5.82 per 1,000). The first goal of our collaboration is to identify primary care
providers’ educational and behavioral needs for incorporating reproductive life planning.
The second goal is to identify, quantify, and clarify barriers to providing reproductive
life planning in primary care settings. There are several components to the overall
project including a continuing medical education event (CME), focus groups, and surveys
for physicians, physician assistants, nurse practitioners, and nurses from primary
care clinics.
The survey portion of the project was completed by 149 primary care clinicians. Survey results revealed providers’ obstacles to providing reproductive life planning in their practice included factors such as lack of time with patients (37%) and inadequate / insufficient information (brochures, posters, flyers, etc.) to provide to the patient (31%). Additionally, providers indicated the need for educational materials on reproductive life planning (57%) and believed inclusion of reproductive life planning questions into the electronic medical record (47%) would be helpful. Of the providers who completed the survey, 83% were unaware of the Texas Department of State Health Services “Someday Starts Now” public awareness campaign.
This project is funded by Tarrant County Public Health Department through a grant received from the Texas Department of State Health Services.
FEATURED COMPLETED NORTEX PROJECT
Development and Validation of a Clinically Practical Patient Assessment: Engagement, Literacy, and Adherence (P-ELA)
NorTex collaborated with the Kentucky Ambulatory Network to develop a clinical tool
useful to primary care physicians. The three constructs of: patient engagement in
care, health literacy, and medication adherence are especially impactful to health
outcomes. The application of a brief and accurate measure of these concepts could
contribute enormously to improved patient-centered primary care. The objective of
our collaboration was to address the lack of measures for these three important constructs
by developing an ultra-brief battery, called the Patient-ELA (Engagement, Literacy,
Adherence) tool that will equip primary care clinicians with patient-level information
so that they can approach and interact with their patient at an individualized level.
Using data collected from 200 primary care patients, item response theory (IRT) analysis
identified discriminant items from among seven existing scales targeting engagement,
literacy, and adherence. Seven items were selected for inclusion in the P-ELA, including
one engagement; three literacy items; and three adherence items. These items were
highly informative at low levels of engagement, literacy, and adherence (as measured
by the full existing instruments) and demonstrated moderate to strong concordance
in identifying patients “at-risk” in each of these areas. A rapid screening tool may
accurately identify patient characteristics that act as barriers to a clinical treatment
plan. With further evidence of validity, adoption of P-ELA could allow clinical practices
to rapidly identify and monitor high-risk patients.
This project was funded through a University of Kentucky Center for Clinical and Translational
Sciences (CCTS) small grant award.
STEVEN DEKOSKY, MD, INTERNATIONALLY RECOGNIZED PHYSICIAN AND ALZHEIMER RESEARCHER TO BE KEYNOTE AT THE ALZHEIMER’S ASSOCIATION ANNUAL SPRING SYMPOSIUM
Dr. Steven DeKosky was destined to lead the way in Alzheimer’s disease research. He
began working with Alzheimer’s in 1980, when very few people in the United States
knew what it was or how widespread it was going to become. “As somebody who early
on was educated about Alzheimer’s, when determining my area of research, I realized
I would love to work in memory because that is one of the primary things that disintegrates
with Alzheimer’s disease.” After medical school, Dr. DeKosky tailored his post-doctoral
work to ensure he could continue to conduct brain research while taking care of people.
His primary focus was to learn all he could about how the brain controls and relates
to language, memory and the integration of visual and perceptual information.
Physicians and scientists, as well as family and healthcare professional caregivers
will have the opportunity to hear Dr. KeKosky’s keynote address at the 13th Annual
Alzheimer’s Association Spring Symposium, Moving Forward in Care, Research and Treatment.
This educational event will be held at the Arlington Convention Center (1200 Ballpark
Way, Arlington, Texas 76011) on Thursday, March 31, 2016 starting at 8:30 am. The
physician’s and scientist’s half-day educational track will be offered in the morning,
and the family and healthcare professional caregiver tracks will encompass a full-day
of education. DeKosky will kick off the day with his keynote address, Progress in
Alzheimer’s Diagnosis and Treatment. Physicians and scientists will also learn about
the following topics:
- Cognitive Assessment during Annual Wellness Visit -Janice Knebl, DO and Nicky Brown, LMSW
- National Registry’s Impact on Local Dementia Research – Sid O’Bryant, PhD and Keith Fargo, PhD
- Differential Diagnosis of Dementing Diseases – Steven DeKosky, MD, FACP
Steven DeKosky, M.D., currently serves as interim executive director of the Evelyn
E. and William L. McKnight Brain Institute of the University of Florida and is a professor
of neurology in the College of Medicine. “We are proud to have Dr. DeKosky here to
talk to caregivers, physicians and scientists about the latest findings in Alzheimer’s
research and the latest treatments for the disease,” said North Central Texas Chapter
President and CEO Theresa Hocker. “Dr. DeKosky has served in leadership roles at the
National Institutes of Health and is a member of the American Board of Psychiatry
and Neurology, and he definitely is one of the foremost experts for the latest information
about Alzheimer’s.”
The physician’s and scientist’s educational track offers 4.25 hours of AOA Category
2A CME credits. Healthcare professionals including nurses, social workers, activity
professionals, licensed nursing facility managers, etc., are eligible for six units
of Continuing Education. The fee for all professional attendees seeking CEUs or CMEs
is $100 per person. Family caregivers are welcomed at no charge.
To view session details and register, please visit our chapter website at www.alz.org/northcentraltexas or call 800-272-3900.
MEMBER HIGHLIGHT:
Janice Knebl, DO
Dr. Knebl received her medical degree at the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine,
after which she completed an Internal Medicine Residency at Geisinger Medical Center
in Danville, Pennsylvania and a Geriatrics Medicine Fellowship at the Philadelphia
Geriatrics Center. In 2002, Dr. Knebl completed an MBA at Texas Christian University.
She is the Director of the Center for Geriatrics within the Institute for Healthy
Aging and the Chief, Geriatrics Service Line and the Dallas Southwest Osteopathic
Physicians Endowed Chair in Geriatrics at the UNT HealthTexas College of Osteopathic
Medicine (TCOM). She is the Director for the Reynolds Interprofessional Geriatrics
Education and Training in Texas Program and the Medical Director for several long
term care communities in Fort Worth, including James L. West Alzheimer’s Center, Silverado
Assisted Living and the Stayton Continuing Care Retirement Community. More recently,
under her leadership as Project Investigator, UNT Healthexpanded unique partnerships
with JPS Health Network, Texas Christian University and the United Way’s Area Agency
on Aging of Tarrant County to create the Workforce Enhancement in Healthy Aging and
Independent Living (WE HAIL) Program. As the only HRSA Geriatric Workforce Enhancement
Program (GWEP) awarded in Texas and one of only 44 awardees in the nation, Dr. Knebl’s
vision for strategic and cross-sector innovations will transform clinical training
environments for geriatric health care professionals. “It’s an honor to be awarded,”
said Dr. Knebl. “We are collaborating across academic institutions, a county hospital
and the aging network to improve the quality of care for older adults in Tarrant County
and its surrounding rural communities,” said Dr. Knebl.
Dr. Knebl’s dedication to healthy aging and Alzheimer’s care for over 25 years has
gained professional and community recognition. She has been named as a “Fort Worth
Top Doc”, received the distinguished “Internist of the Year” Award from the American
College of Osteopathic Internists, and has been awarded the 2013 TCOM Dean’s Research
Award. She has been the recipient of aging research grants from agencies such as American
Federation for Aging Research, Bureau of Health Professions, Alzheimer’s Association,
Texas Consortium on Alzheimer’s disease (TARC) and Texas’ Department of Health and
Human Services. Her lengthy list of publications and articles are on subjects including
understanding Alzheimer’s disease, primary care and geriatrics, stages and evaluation
of dementia, delirium and dementia in the hospitalized elderly.





