[HealthLiteracy 2080] Re: WIC Mother's Health Literacy CampaignDavid Pole poledc at slu.eduFri Jun 13 10:17:00 EDT 2008
Matt and others There are two program books that were created by the Institute for Healthcare Advancement (IHA) which have been studied and shown to reduce ER visits and improve support from new mothers/parents. The program is designed for patients at lower literacy levels, included a book for the parent and there are training manuals on the use of the books also available. "What to do when you are having a baby" "What to do when your child gets sick" Additional information can be found on their website at http://www.iha4health.org/ The "Baby Basics" program and website also look great, Lisa thanks for sharing David Pole, MPH Deputy Director, Division of Community Health Promotion Deputy Director, AHEC Program Office Department of Community and Family Medicine Saint Louis University School of Medicine (P) 314-977-8484 (F) 314-977-5268 poledc at slu.edu SLU Community and Family Medicine ~ Innovations in Education, Research, and Primary Care _____ From: healthliteracy-bounces at nifl.gov [mailto:healthliteracy-bounces at nifl.gov] On Behalf Of Lisa Bernstein Sent: Thursday, June 12, 2008 1:05 PM To: The Health and Literacy Discussion List Subject: [HealthLiteracy 2075] Re: WIC Mother's Health Literacy Campaign Matt, Our Baby Basics Prenatal Health Literacy Program has a lower literacy pregnancy guide and complete prenatal health/health literacy curriculum that includes nutrition and breastfeeding information infused with health literacy skills. Our training and curriculum helps health educators understand how to use adult literacy teaching strategies when working with underserved expecting women either one-on-one or during group education. We help moms learn how to look up information in a book, make plans for nutrition and breastfeeding decisions, and write down questions for their provider. We are right now working on the Family's First Year Basics book and health literacy program that will include baby and family nutrition and a complete breastfeeding resource - as well as curriculum training etc. Take a look at our website www.whattoexpect.org <http://www.whattoexpect.org/> . Lisa Lisa Bernstein Executive Director The What To Expect Foundation 144 W. 80th Street New York, NY 10024 212-712-9764 www.whattoexpect.org Providing prenatal health and literacy support so that women in need know what to expect when expecting. n Thu, Jun 12, 2008 at 11:53 AM, Matt Gayer <mcggayer at sbcglobal.net> wrote: Colleagues - I am starting the planning phase of a health literacy campaign targeting WIC participants in our county. I was wandering if anyone else has done a similiar program, or if anyone else is interested in this. I would love to share our ideas with you and discuss your ideas as we try to develop an effective program. Thank you. Matt Matt Gayer Community Health Intern Jefferson County Health Department 1818 Lonedell Drive Arnold, Missouri, 63010 Work Phone 636-282-1010 Cell Phone 636-232-4703 ---------------------------------------------------- National Institute for Literacy Health and Literacy mailing list HealthLiteracy at nifl.gov To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/healthliteracy Email delivered to lisab at whattoexpect.org -- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.nifl.gov/pipermail/healthliteracy/attachments/20080613/034b1188/attachment.html
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