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Blazing "a" New Trail to Address Lupus
Health Disparities
LEAP: Lupus Education & Awareness
for Patients, Professionals and
Providers
Thometta Cozart, MS, MPH, CHES, MPH
Program Manager
Steven Owens, MD MPH
Director of Health Equity
Liz Traore, MPH
Epidemiologist/Evaluation Manager
DHPE Health Equity Program• Internship Program – Undergraduate and
graduate college students from Minority-Serving
Institutions are placed in 12-week internships
focused on preventing heart disease, increasing
physical activity and promoting proper nutrition
• LEAP: Lupus Education and Awareness
for Patients, Professionals & Providers
Program – National lupus health education program funded one-year by national OMH
2
National Health Education Program on Lupus
National Objectives
To reduce lupus related health disparities among
racial and ethnic minority populations
disproportionality affected by this disease by
conducting a national lupus education initiative
DHPE LEAP Goals
• Improve Healthy People 2020 outcomes in
and support for African American women
and their families by promoting lupus
awareness, education, diagnosis and
treatment among allied health
professionals, health professionals
students and public health professionals
DHPE LEAP Strategies
• Create and implement sustainable highly
effective partnerships
• Implement a local health department led
community level lupus awareness and education
program
• Award seven mini-grants to state OMH
• Develop culturally and linguistically appropriate
lupus training
DHPE LEAP Partners
• National Association of State Offices of
Minority Health (NASOMH)
• National Medical Association (NMA)
• Robeson County Health Department
• Lupus Foundation of America
• The Lupus Initiative – American College of
Rheumatology
• WebMD
Overview
• Lupus is a chronic disease that seems to be a mystery
• Lupus can take 4-6 years and 3 providers before
diagnosis*
• During that time, organ damage can develop leading to 5
times increased risk of death
• Patients go to primary care providers or emergency rooms
at onset of illness, so detection of lupus by these providers
and health educators is critical to early diagnosis
• Lupus impacts women of color two to three times more
than Caucasians.
* Survey data of health professionals
Abu-Shakra M, Urowitz MB, Gladman DD, Gough J. Mortality studies in systemic lupus erythematosus. Results from a single center.
II. Predictor variables for mortality. J Rheumatol. 1995;22(7):1265-1270.
What is lupus and its various types?
• An inflammatory, multisystem, autoimmune disease of unknown etiology with protean clinical and laboratory manifestations and a variable course and prognosis
• Lupus can be a mild disease, a severe and life-threatening illness, or anything in between
• 70% = Systemic lupus erythematosus
• 10% = Cutaneous lupus erythematosus (includes Discoid)
• 10% = Drug- induced lupus erythematosus
• 10% = Other overlap syndrome or mixed connective tissue disease (MCTD)
Common Signs and Symptoms
• Extreme fatigue (tiredness)
• Headaches
• Painful or swollen joints
• Fever
• Anemia (low numbers of red blood cells or hemoglobin, or low total blood volume)
• Swelling (edema) in feet, legs, hands, and/or around eyes
• Pain in chest on deep breathing (pleurisy)
• Butterfly-shaped rash across cheeks and nose
• Sun- or light-sensitivity (photosensitivity)
• Hair loss
• Abnormal blood clotting
• Fingers turning white and/or blue when cold (Raynaud’s phenomenon)
• Mouth or nose ulcers
Raynaud’s &
vasculitis
Eyes
Skin
Pleurisy
Kidney
disease
Central nervous
system
Oral & nasal ulcers
Pericarditis
Blood
disorders
Joints & arthritis
Muscle
Medical Illustration Copyright © 2012. Nucleus Medical Media. All rights reserved.
Examples of Organs Involved,Signs, and Symptoms
http://www.nucleusinc.com/
Why is SLE diagnosis so hard?
• The Great Masquerader: can mimic viral syndromes,
malignancies, allergic reactions, stress, etc.
• May be associated with depression and/ or fibromyalgia.
• Initial symptoms might be non-specific: fatigue, achiness,
stiffness, low grade fevers, swollen lymph nodes, rashes.
• Symptoms may develop slowly or suddenly.
• There is no gold standard diagnostic test for lupus
• Wide variety of symptoms and organ involvement may be
present.
Why is early referral important?
• Mortality is higher in lupus patients compared to the general
population
• 5-year survival rate in 1953 was 50%, increased to 90% with
better detection and treatment
• Currently 80 to 90% of lupus patients survive 10 years after
diagnosis, but that drops to 60% with advanced stages of organ
threatening disease
• Leading causes of mortality are preventable
• Appropriate therapeutic management, compliance with
treatment and improved treatment of long-term consequences
can prevent excess and premature deaths. This starts with
clinical suspicion of the diagnosis and early recognition.
American College of Rheumatology Ad Hoc Committee on Systemic Lupus Erythematosus. Guidelines for referral and management of
systemic lupus erythematosus in adults. Arth Rheum 1999;42:1785--96
Mortality
• Cardiovascular disease is the major cause of mortality in
patients with longstanding lupus
• Factors contributing to increased mortality*
- Active lupus & infection (early stages of disease)
- High disease severity at diagnosis
- Younger age at diagnosis
- Ethnicity: Black, Hispanic, Asian, and Native American populations
- Male gender
- Low socioeconomic status
- Poor patient adherence*
- Inadequate patient support system*
- Limited patient education*
*Indicates opportunity for improvement.
Bernatsky S, Boivin JF, Joseph L, et al. Arthritis Rheum. 2006;54:2550-2557.
How can you address lupus disparities?
• Problem: Education about lupus is important for all health professionals, but there is a lack of knowledge by primary care
and public health professionals
• Solution: Expand lupus education and awareness among health professionals, including family physicians and nurses,
public health advocates, as well as health educators
• What you can do: Learn signs and symptoms of lupus and make appropriate referrals
• Our goal: To expand quality education on lupus to improve detection, increase appropriate referral, and decrease
diagnosis time
DHPE LEAP ActivitiesCreate and
implement
sustainable highly
effective
partnerships
-Faith Tabernacle Christian Center of St. Pauls
-First Baptist of Fairmont
-Judah International Ministries of Maxton
-Sandy Grove Baptist Lumberton
-Shiloh Baptist of Rowland
-St Joseph MRC- Solid Rock Ministries of Red
Springs
Faith-based Activities (NC)
LAP: Lupus Awareness
Program Taskforce
DHPE LEAP Activities
Implement a
local health
department led
community
level lupus
awareness
and education
program
DHPE LEAP ActivitiesAwarded nine mini-grants through state OMHs
• Big Bend Area Health Education Center, Tallahassee, FL
• Cultivating Healthier Options In Communities Everywhere
(C.H.O.I.C.E. Int’l Inc.), McDonough, GA
• Fayette Community Service Organization, Jefferson
County, MS
• Louisiana Bureau of Minority Health Access and
Promotions, Baton Rouge, LA
– Crescent City WIC in Gretna, LA
– Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church in Baton Rouge, LA
DHPE LEAP Activities
Awarded nine mini-grants through state OMHs
• Mount Olive Community Development, Clearwater, FL
• Office Management and Technology, Inc. (OMT, Inc.),
Baltimore, MD
• Pediatric Rheumatology Center at Rutgers Medical
School, New Brunswick, NJ
• Urban Minority Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Outreach
Programs (UMADAOP), Dayton, OH
Fayette Community Service Organization (FCSO)
Learn About Lupus (LAL) Campaign
FCSO's LAL LEAP Report: Fayette, MS
• # of people reached through outreach - 702
• # of people reached through media – 12,413
• May 12th – 9:00 am - Jefferson County Hospital Health
Fair
OMT, Inc. – Baltimore, MD
• Optimal Support Group Meetings to 100
African-American, Hispanic/Latina and Asian American Women
• Advertising on Radio Station and Asian American Newspaperto increase Lupus Awareness Messages to 120,000
• “Grassroots” outreach efforts to reach ethnic/minority communities and increase awareness about LUPUS - 300
• OMT, Inc. will host a “Champions of LUPUS Purple Luncheon” May 21, 2016 at St. Stephens AME Church – Baltimore, MD. Honoring thirty (30) Women who fight this mysterious disease.
• Theme: “I have LUPUS, but LUPUS does not have me”
Living Beyond Lupus ProgramMount Olive Community Development
Corporation - Clearwater, Florida
Over 120 people reached through direct outreach and educational activities
1,653 reached through media channels
May activities: Praying in Purple Lupus Awareness Prayer Breakfast and Walk to End Lupus
Spreading Awareness for
“Loop us and Love us”
Project in
Madison, Florida• Views: 1,513
• Shares: 173
• Madison County Carrier: 3,500
• Madison Enterprise-Recorder: 3,500
Lupus Advisory
Committee
Madison, FL
• 96.1 Jamz—50,000
• Blazin’ 102.3—
58,900
• Reached in-person: 703
CRESCENT CITY WIC SERVICES:N.EW O.RLEANS L.UPUS A.WARENESS PROJECT2nd Annual Bayou Women’s Health Festival CAN Meeting/Lupus Training
May 5, 2016 April 22, 2016
Outreached: 73 individuals Outreached: 27 individuals
Total Outreach: ~ 900 individuals
DHPE LEAP ActivitiesDevelop
culturally
and
linguistically
appropriate
lupus
training
DHPE LEAP ActivitiesDevelop
culturally and
linguistically
appropriate
lupus training
Media Outreach and
Dissemination
Media Outreach and
Dissemination
"As Asian American women celebrate the year of the Red Monkey for
Chinese New Year, remember February is also American Heart Month.
Since Asian American women are twice as likely to have lupus as Whites
and 1 in 3 lupus patients have heart disease, OMT, Inc. urges you to learn
the signs and symptoms of Lupus and Heart Disease during this New Year
at Lupus.org and Heart.org!"
Media
Outreach and
Dissemination
DHPE Lupus Program Support Team, Contact:
Steve Owens, MD, MPH
Director of Health Equity
Thometta Cozart, MS, MPH, CHES, CPH
Program Manager
Liz Traore, MPH
Epidemiologist and Evaluation Manager