
|
NEWS SERVICES |
T 919-962-2091 F 919-962-2279 www.unc.edu/news/ news@unc.edu |
News Release
| For immediate use |
July 28, 2006 -- No. 352 |
Local angles: Greenville, Raleigh
Note: For a visual coverage opportunity
Saturday (July 29) see end of story.
New course to teach beginning Spanish
to U.S. health-care professionals
CHAPEL HILL - Help is on the way for health-care workers who don't know one
word of Spanish but increasingly find themselves treating Latino patients.
In North Carolina, a team of representatives from state government health agencies
and higher education has started work on a language course designed especially
for them: "!A su salud! (meaning 'To your health!') Introductory Spanish
for Health Professionals."
Health-care workers will be able to take the course in traditional classrooms
or on their own via distance learning. It will focus on Spanish specific to
the work of nurses, doctors, pharmacists, dentists, social workers and allied
and public health professionals.
"The Latino population is growing rapidly, and health-care providers are
crying out for ways to effectively serve them," said project co-director
Claire Lorch, a clinical instructor in the School of Public Health at the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. "'!A su salud!' creatively speaks to
the needs of both patients and providers."
UNC's Office of Distance Education and E-Learning Policy is leading the project,
with team members from East Carolina University in Greenville, Wake Technical
Community College in Raleigh, the N.C. Office of Minority Health and Health
Disparities and the N.C. Public Health Directors Association.
Filming began last week for the centerpiece of the course, a video designed
to teach both language and Latino culture. The multimedia course will combine
the video with interactive exercises, available on a DVD or online, and written
text.
"Included in the multimedia materials will be a telenovela - an engaging
story to motivate the adult learner," Lorch said. Other parts of the video
will present interviews with health-care professionals. The video will be mostly
in Spanish, with English and Spanish subtitles available. Learners will get
to know the Montoyas, an immigrant family, as they adapt to life in the United
States."
Demographic statistics demonstrate the need for the course:
"The need is astounding," said Dr. Maria Clay, project co-director at ECU, the fiscal agent for the project. "We believe health-care providers around the state and the country will embrace this program with open arms, and that will be a major step toward relieving a situation that is fast becoming a crisis."
The course will be modeled after an intermediate "!A su salud!" produced
at UNC - also directed by Lorch - and published last year by Yale University
Press. To date, 33 colleges and universities nationwide have adopted the course.
(http://salud.unc.edu).
The intermediate course was created first because of the urgent need for fluent
Spanish speakers in health care settings, Lorch said: "Students with a
background in Spanish become fluent more quickly than those with no knowledge
of the language."
The North Carolina GlaxoSmithKline Foundation contributed $720,000 for the course
to ECU. Two additional grants came to UNC, from Blue Cross and Blue Shield of
North Carolina ($25,000) and The Aetna Foundation ($30,000), the charitable
arm of the Connecticut-based health care insurance company.
The gifts to UNC count toward the $2 billion goal of Carolina First, a comprehensive,
multi-year, private fund-raising campaign to support Carolina's vision of becoming
the nation's leading public university.
Last year, the team filmed a pilot project for the new course, funded by the
Office of the President of the 16-campus University of North Carolina. The team
tested the pilot with a group of working professionals and students from health-care
fields.
"We wanted to see whether the teaching approach would be effective, especially
at a distance," Lorch said. Now, the team is incorporating the group's
advice into development of the course.
The team plans to offer the introductory course at UNC, ECU and partner institutions
by spring 2008 and then make it available for national distribution.
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Coverage note: Media representatives are invited to photograph and cover filming for the !A su salud! video from approximately 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday (July 29) at UNC Health Care's Ambulatory Care Center on Mason Farm Road, near South Columbia Street. Actors will portray health-care professionals and Latino patients in clinical settings, with visuals of medical equipment. Project co-director Claire Lorch will be available for interviews. For directions and timing updates, contact Lorch on site via producer David Anderson, cell phone (803) 920-4675, or Blackberry Anderson@constantnow.com.
UNC School of Public Health contacts: Claire Lorch, (919) 360-5369,
clorch@email.unc.edu; Ramona DuBose,
(919) 966-7467, ramona_dubose@unc.edu
ECU contacts: Dr. Maria Clay, (252) 744-1290, clayma@ecu.edu
(Clay will not be available until Monday, July 31); Jeannine Hutson, Office
of News & Information, (252) 744-2911, hutsonj@ecu.edu