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Title: Promoting the Cardiovascular Health of People with Disabilities: Research, Programs, and Progress


1
Promoting the Cardiovascular Health of
People with DisabilitiesResearch, Programs, and
Progress
  • Dot Nary, MA
  • University of Kansas
  • Cardiovascular Health Summit
  • Missoula, MT
  • 4/3/09

2
Disability Definition
  • An impairment that substantially limits
    performance in a major life area
  • Functional abilities seeing, hearing, speaking,
    lifting/carrying, walking
  • Activities of Daily Living (ADLs) bathing,
    dressing, grooming, toileting, getting in/out of
    bed
  • Instrumental Activities of Daily Living
  • ( ADLs) shopping, cooking, cleaning, paying
    bills

3
Disability Definition
  • Ways to acquire disability
  • Birth congenital issue (Spina Bifida, MR, CP)
  • Traumatic injury (SCI, TBI, stroke, amputation)
  • Inherited disease (MS, MD, ALS)
  • Onset of other disease or illness (arthritis,
    cancer, lupus, fibromyalgia, diabetes)
  • Aging

4
Demographics
  • 54.4 million Americans live with a disability
    (19)
  • gt half (58) are between 18 and 65 years old
  • 46 are employed vs 83 of the general population
    (aged 18-64)
  • 27 with severe disability live in poverty, vs
    12 with non-severe disability and 9 with no
    disability
  • Brault, 2008

5
Definition of Health
  • Health is the actualization of inherent and
    acquired human potential through goal-directed
    behavior, competent self-care, and satisfying
    relationships with others while adjustments are
    made as needed to maintain structural integrity
    and harmony with the environment
    (Pender,
    1987)

6
Health Continuum
  • Travis Ryan, 1988

7
Health of People with Disabilities
  • Risk for many health problems
  • secondary conditions
  • chronic conditions
  • more days of pain, depression, anxiety, and
    sleeplessness
  • national data reveals
  • higher obesity rates
  • lower physical activity rates
  • higher health care expenditures

8
Secondary Conditions
  • Definition Conditions to which a person with a
    disabling condition is more susceptible due to
    presence of a primary disability
  • Examples burns, contractures, pressure ulcers,
    obesity, deconditioning, urinary tract infections
  • May be as or more disabling than the primary
    disability
  • High prevalence found in many CDC-funded studies

9
Health Disparities
  • Rimmer, J. (2009). Dont die of a broken heart
    this Valentines Day. Retrieved 3/5/09 from
    www.ncpad.org/director/fact_sheet

10
Obesity rates and disability 1998-1999 BRFSS
data from 8 states DC
Credit K. Grobe, Project Workout on Wheels
11
Prevalence of Health Risk Behaviors and
Conditions Related to Heart Disease by
Disability Group ()
Source NCPAD presenting data from Havercamp et
al (2004) except for aBauman WA (2008), Spinal
Cord, 46, 466-76 on Adults with SCI bZigman WB
(2007), Neuroscience Letters, 416, 279-84 on
Adults with Down Syndrome and cFord ES (2003),
Circulation, 107, 2185-9.
12
Direct weight measures of people with disabilities
  • 1 published study of 306 Chicago residents with
    various disabilities (Rimmer Wang, 2005)
  • Predominantly female (65) and Black (56), with
    some Whites (32) and Hispanics (11)
  • Mean age 50 years
  • 62 were obese 22 were extremely obese,
    compared to obesity rates of 27 in the national
    samples

13
Disability and Health A Paradigm Shift
  • Increased life expectancy
  • Concern about high use of health care services
  • Recognized risk for preventable, secondary health
    problems
  • Increased opportunities for community-based
    activities
  • Higher expectations for quality of life

14
Barriers to Health Promotion
  • In additional to barriers experienced by
    nondisabled people, those with disabilities
    experience other barriers
  • EnvironmentalLack of
  • Facilities that meet accessibility guidelines
  • Affordable transportation
  • Knowledgeable professionals
  • Financial resources
  • Programmatic
  • Attitudinal

15
Health Initiatives for People with Disabilities
16
Healthy People 2010
  • Health goals for the nation
  • Increase the quality and years of healthy life
    for all Americans
  • Eliminate health disparities
  • http//www.healthypeople.gov/

17
Healthy People 2010
  • Chapter 6 contains 13 health objectives for
    people with disabilities
  • Example 6/10. Increase the proportion of health
    and wellness and treatment programs and
    facilities that provide full access for people
    with disabilities
  • Other chapters include objectives related to
    disability
  • HP 2020 in planning stage

18
International Classification of Functioning,
Disability and Health (ICF)
  • World Health Organization's framework for
    measuring health and disability at both the
    individual and population levels.
  • Acknowledges that every human being can
    experience a decrement in health and thereby
    experience some degree of disability
  • Mainstreams the experience of disability and
    recognizes it as a universal human experience
  • Emphasizes functioning and how the environment
    can support it

19
Surgeon Generals Call to Action to Improve the
Health and Wellness of Persons with Disabilities,
2005
  • Persons with disabilities must have accessible,
    available, and appropriate health care and
    wellness promotion services. They need to know
    how toand be able toprotect, preserve, and
    improve their health in the same ways as everyone
    else.

20
Call to Action Goal 1
  • People nationwide understand that persons with
    disabilities can lead long, healthy, productive
    lives

21
Call to Action Goal 2
  • Health care providers have the knowledge and
    tools to screen, diagnose, and treat the whole
    person with a disability with dignity

22
Call to Action Goal 3
  • Persons with disabilities can promote their own
    good health by developing and maintaining healthy
    lifestyles

23
Call to Action Goal 4
  • Accessible health care and support services
    promote independence for persons with disabilities

24
Examples of Health Promotion Programs
25
Living Well with a Disability
  • Health promotion intervention program targeting
    people with all types of disabilities
  • Based on three social cognitive models of health
  • Sense of coherence
  • Attribution style
  • Hope
  • Written at an eighth-grade level
  • Developed with people with disabilities using
    Participatory Action Research

26
Living Well with a Disability
  • Curriculum delivered to groups
  • Designed for delivery through ILCs
  • 10 chapters
  • Goal Setting
  • Problem Solving
  • Attribution Training
  • Depression
  • Communication
  • Information Seeking
  • Nutrition
  • Physical Activity
  • Advocacy
  • Maintenance

27
Living Well with a Disability
  • Tested across many states and populations
  • Outcomes reported include
  • Less limitation from secondary conditions
  • Fewer unhealthy days
  • Less health care utilization
  • Currently being tested at an assisted living
    center, with a youth/student population, and in
    an online version

28
Project WOW (Workout on Wheels)NIH grant
R01-HD48628 1/06 -12/10
  • Project WOW aims to increase physical activity in
    wheelchair users by helping participants begin
    and maintain over 12 months a regular program of
    aerobic exercise and strength training.

29
Project WOW Methods
  • Randomized, stratified controlled trial
  • Randomized into 2 groups
  • Control group (minimal contact)
  • Experimental group (intensive support)
  • Exercise Approaches
  • Exercise at home or in the community
  • Encouraged to incrementally increase weekly PA
    over 6 months
  • Tailor program to individual needs interests

30
Project WOW Outcomes
  • Primary
  • Physical Activity
  • Self report
  • exercise logs
  • Objective
  • ActiGraph
  • Secondary
  • Physiological
  • Aerobic Capacity
  • Strength
  • Exercise-Related
  • Self-Efficacy
  • Barriers
  • Disability-Related
  • Function
  • Participation
  • Fatigue
  • Health Problems

31
Resources
32
The University of Montana Rural
InstituteCenter for Excellence in Disability
Education, Research, and Service
  • Part of the national network of programs funded
    by the Federal Administration on Developmental
    Disabilities (ADD) committed to increasing and
    supporting the independence, productivity, and
    inclusion of persons with disabilities into the
    community. We provide interdisciplinary
    demonstration, information dissemination,
    leverage of funds, research, service and
    technical assistance and training.
  • http//ruralinstitute.umt.edu/

33
National Center on Physical Activity and
Disability
  • The mission NCPAD is to promote substantial
    health benefits that can be gained from
    participating in regular physical activity
  • This site provides information and resources that
    can enable people with disabilities to become as
    physically active as they choose to be
  • www.ncpad.org

34
Frank Porter Graham Center,University of North
Carolina
  • Useful guides to barrier removal for people with
    disabilities in health care settings, and in
    fitness facilities
  • http//www.fpg.unc.edu/products/productcatalog.cfm

35
National Rehabilitation Hospital
36
Spina Bifida Association of America
37
  • The challengeis to continue the revolution so
    that it truly meets the needs of those at the
    bottom of the disability ladder, not just the
    talented 10.
  • Litvak Martin, 2000

38
References
  • Brault, M. (2008). Americans with Disabilities
    2005. Current Population Reports, P70-117.
    Washington, DC U.S. Department of Commerce,
    Economics and Statistics Administration, U.S.
    Census Bureau.
  • Kailes, J.I. (2006). Making preventive health
    care work for you-A resource guide for people
    with physical disabilities. Pomona, CA Western
    University of Health Science, The Center for
    Disability Issues and the Health Professions.
  • Pender, N. (1987). Health Promotion Nursing
    Practice (2nd ed.). Norwalk, CT Appleton
    Lange.
  • Ravesloot, C., Seekins, T., Cahill, T.,
    Lindgren, S., Nary, D.E., White, G. (2007).
    Health promotion for people with disabilities
    Development and evaluation of the Living Well
    with a Disability program. Health Education
    Research, 22, 522-531.

39
References (cont.)
  • Ravesloot, C., Seekins, T., White, G. (2005).
    Living Well with a Disability health promotion
    intervention Improved health status for
    consumers and lower costs for health care
    policymakers. Rehabilitation Psychology, 50,
    239-245. Rimmer, J. (2009). Dont die of a
    broken heart this Valentines Day. Retrieved
    3/5/09 from www.ncpad.org/director/fact_sheet
  • Spina Bifida Association of America. (2005).
    Health guide for adults living with spina bifida.
    Washington, DC Author.
  • Travis, J.W., and Ryan, R.S. (1988). Wellness
    Workbook. Berkeley, CA. Ten-Speed Press. 

40
References (cont.)
  • U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
    (2005). Surgeon Generals Call to Action to
    Improve the Health and Wellness of Persons with
    Disabilities. U.S. Department of Health and Human
    Services, Office of the Surgeon General.
  • World Health Organization. International
    Classification of Disability, Functioning and
    Health (ICF). Retrieved 5/15/09 from
    http//www.who.int/classifications/icf/en/
  • US. Department of Health and Human Services.
    Healthy People 2010. Retrieved 3/15/09 from
  • http//www.healthypeople.gov/default.htm
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