Project Details
Description
I propose to enhance the level of knowledge about tuberculosis (TB)
beginning with medical students and housestaff and extending to community
physicians with no medical school or hospital affiliation. The education
efforts must extend to nurses and eventually to the general public in the
community. Our community includes Washington Heights, which is primarily
comprised of immigrants, both legal and illegal, from the Dominican
Republic, Mexico and other South American countries in which TB is
endemic, and Central Harlem, which is primarily African American. Poverty,
drug abuse and homelessness have contributed to the inherently high rate
of TB to create the highest case rates in the country and enormous
obstacles to effective treatment.
Over the past several decades, TB has been reduced to a negligible level
in the medical school curriculum. The curriculum at Columbia University
College of Physicians and Surgeons is currently being revised, and l
propose to institute specific TB instruction appropriate to each level of
medical school training. First year students will learn about the social
and psychological barriers to treatment through direct involvement with
one patient throughout the year; second year students will have additional
pharmacology, immunology and laboratory sessions to incorporate second
line TB drugs the interaction between HlV and TB, and culture and
sensitivity testing; third year students will participate in detailed case
conference discussions of one or two TB patients per medicine rotation;
and fourth year students may chose a month long elective in the Bureau of
TB clinic next door to the Presbyterian Hospital (PH).
Community physicians will participate in a preceptorship at PH with formal
didactic sessions and direct observation of patient care in the TB clinics
while those physicians working in community clinics will have on site
teaching in the form of monthly case conferences as well as regular
lectures. All community physicians will learn about the expanded role of
the Department of Health Bureau of TB in order to be directly integrated
into the TB control system. Nurses, the increasingly important front line
health care providers to TB patients, will receive formal instruction and
ongoing regular specific patient reviews in a didactic manner.
Finally, a pilot project will be established to provide general public
education in the community with the ultimate goal of soliciting outside
funding and support if successful.
Status | Finished |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 9/30/94 → 8/31/99 |
Funding
- National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Infectious Diseases
- Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine
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