Three Rivers Community College: In the News | Mobile health screening program aims to reach people where they live

Three Rivers Community College: In the News | Mobile health screening program aims to reach people where they live
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Three Rivers Community College issued the following announcement on March 19.

Separate from COVID-19 testing and vaccination clinics held  throughout the coronavirus pandemic, Hartford Healthcare has launched a  mobile health program that aims to bring basic health screenings to  residents in the neighborhoods where they live.

A-OK with HHC was created last fall based on results of a recent  community health assessment that showed access to basic care is a major  obstacle for at-risk populations. The program halted in January during  the surge of the omicron variant of the virus but is resuming this  month.

The program provides monthly mobile health screening sessions at soup  kitchens, homeless shelters and public housing locations in the region  for blood pressure and blood sugar, overall health assessments and  connections to primary care facilities to anyone without regular health  care providers.

The next session will be held from 9 a.m. to noon Wednesday at St.  Vincent de Paul Place soup kitchen, 120 Cliff St., Norwich. It is open  to the public on a walk-in basis. All services are free.

A screening session for residents of Stonington Arms in Pawcatuck  will be held March 31. The program will move to the Covenant soup  kitchen in Willimantic in early April and will return to St. Vincent in  Norwich in mid-April. Dates and times for the April sessions are not yet  set.

Michele Brezniak, community health nurse for Hartford Healthcare’s  east region, heads up the program at the various locations, with help  from nursing students at Three Rivers Community College if COVID-19  restrictions are eased to allow students to participate in outside  programs. A community health worker at St. Vincent will assist with the  Norwich screenings.

Brezniak said participants will have their blood pressure checked,  and a finger prick hemoglobin A1c test will give a three-month average  measure of the possibility of diabetes. Everyone will be given a  questionnaire to provide a list of their current diagnoses, medications,  recent hospital emergency room visits and other health updates.

All information is anonymous, with no personal identifying information requested, Brezniak said.

For those who do not have regular primary care doctors, “We give  recommendations on what to do and help connect them with resources,”  Brezniak said.

She said the program tries to reach traditionally underserved  residents, including low-income residents, homeless people, undocumented  residents and senior citizens, in their own neighborhoods. It is  “expanding slowly,” she said to include screenings at some United Way  mobile food pantry sites in the region.

“We’re looking to close the loop and meet our underserved populations  where they are,” Brezniak said. “Our goal is to provide testing that  can help inform recipients of their current health status and resources  to connect them to health services.”

By Claire Bessette, Day Staff Writer

The original article can be found here: “Mobile health screening program aims to reach people where they live”

Original source can be found here.



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