This article describes the process, approaches, and selected outcomes of a rural care management outreach intervention for older African Americans in South Carolina. The model is a community-academic partnership between a federally qualified community health center, a rural health clinic, and the Medical University of South Carolina. Its aim is to improve access to and utilization of health care and social services to enhance the quality of life of older African Americans. This is being accomplished by using paid, trained outreach workers (called geriatric coordinators), who function as advocates in linking clients to needed health and social services through activities such as arranging transportation to health care, rescheduling missed medical appointments, providing health promotion, and making referrals to public benefits and indigent drug programs. Outcomes demonstrated that the use of geriatric coordinators as care managers is a feasible way of increasing quality of life for older African Americans. The most notable outcome showed that 54% of clients who were eligible but not receiving benefits prior to this intervention were signed on for programs such as Supplemental Security Income, Specified Low-Income Medicare Beneficiary (SLMB), Qualified Medicare Beneficiary (QMB), disability, railroad pensions, and Veterans Administration benefits. Health centers realized an increase in reimbursable services and new clients. Increased capacity for older adult services is being accomplished through geriatric-coordinator-directed collaborations with social service agencies and participation in community events and committees.
The purpose of this study was to investigate the individual and social determinants of rural nurses' willingness to care for people with AIDS (PWAs). Willingness to care was viewed as a function of nurses' personal attitudes about AIDS care and PWAs; the influence of normative (significant others), comparative (the nursing profession), and generalized (the rural community) reference group norms on these attitudes; and how much importance respondents placed on membership in these reference groups. Responses to a mailed questionnaire from 615 rural nurses were analyzed. Individual determinants were nurses' feelings of preparedness and favorable attitudes about their personal safety when administering care. Social determinants were the degree of upset of respondents' significant others about their caring for AIDS patients and favorable attitudes of the respondents about professional and social concerns related to AIDS.
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