Verner and YWCA two out of only six programs recognized from across the U.S.
Verner Center for Early Learning’s Rainbow in My Tummy®
program and the YWCA of Asheville’s DiabetesWellness
& Prevention program have both been honored by Premier, Inc.
as finalists for the 23rd annual Monroe E. Trout Premier Cares
Award. Rainbow In My Tummy was recognized for increasing nutritional
literacy of children, families and early childhood caregivers. Diabetes
Wellness & Prevention was recognized for addressing health disparities
among low-income patients who either have diabetes or are at high risk for
developing the condition.
A panel of national healthcare leaders
selects the Premier Cares Award winner and five finalists, all of which receive
cash awards for use in further improving their programs. The Cares Award
program spotlights these community-based healthcare initiatives and helps other
organizations learn to replicate the unique programs by featuring information
about them on the Cares Award website. Sponsored by Premier and its member
hospitals, the Cares Award recognizes exemplary efforts by
not-for-profit community organizations to improve the health of populations in
need. Representatives of Verner and the YWCA were honored during Premier’s
annual Governance Education Conference, February 23-25.
“Every year our Cares Award program honors six outstanding
organizations that are helping to care for a medically underserved population
in their community,” said Susan DeVore,
Premier’s president and CEO. “Rainbow in My
Tummy is improving the health of communities by
providing nutritious food and education to children, child care centers and
families. Diabetes Wellness and Prevention is
making a true impact by helping to reduce the incidence of diabetes in at-risk
patients through weight loss and exercise.”
Verner Center for Early Learning’s
Rainbow in My Tummy program received
$24,000 as a finalist. Created in 2008 by Verner Center for Early Learning,
program staff members work with early care and education care centers to
provide training, coaching and resources needed to change the food culture
surrounding children ages birth to kindergarten. Goals of the program include
significantly increasing the quality of food served to young children and
shifting preferences away from processed foods.
From 2012 to 2014, several Head Start
centers in the Asheville, North Carolina, area reported a significant drop in
obesity rates among children as a result of the program’s work to help child care centers eliminate harmful ingredients from
their menus.
“Rainbow In My Tummy exists because we
love children and believe that ALL children deserve access to a wide variety of
fresh, healthy, naturally colorful foods that taste good and are cooked from
scratch. Being recognized by Premier enables us to further expand our services
and replicate our program in other child care centers in WNC and across the
nation.” Bronwen McCormick, Rainbow In My Tummy® Director
Watch the Rainbow in My Tummy video here.
The YWCA of Asheville’s Diabetes
Wellness and Prevention program
also received $24,000 as a finalist. The program was started by the YWCA of Asheville
in 2004 to align fitness offerings with their mission of addressing health
disparities among low-income and at-risk people. Based on a community health
needs assessment, organizers learned that more than 11 percent of area
residents had been diagnosed with diabetes and an additional 6 percent had been
diagnosed with pre-diabetes. The program helps patients understand the disease
process, promotes regular exercise and healthy eating, teaches participants to
use their medications correctly and helps patients manage their disease with
appropriate and consistent lifestyle changes.
Services are offered by Diabetes
Wellness and Prevention to many patients at sliding scale cost– including
access to fitness facilities and personal training sessions. The program has
helped significantly reduce blood sugar/A1c levels among those participating in
the program.
In a film about the program shown at the
awards ceremony, Susan Edwards, a Diabetes Wellness & Prevention program
participant, shared that in the ten months she had participated in the program
she had lost 30 pounds and several inches. Ms. Edwards says: “It's been
incredible to know that we're all here working towards a goal of getting
healthy, and [we] have the encouragement and the education to make it happen.” Since
the film was produced Ms. Edwards has lost an additional 10 pounds, and says
that not only her health but the health of her whole family has really
improved.
Watch the Diabetes Wellness &
Prevention video here.
This year’s Cares
Award recipient is Telepsychiatry
Improves Outcomes in Frontier Communities of Orofino, Idaho. The
program provides adult and pediatric psychiatry specialty services using
teleconferencing to help care for a remote population of at-risk patients.
About the Premier Cares Award
Premier has presented the Cares Award annually since 1991, when it was created by Dr. Monroe E. Trout, former CEO of American Healthcare Systems, one of Premier’s heritage organizations. The program has provided more than $3 million to more than 100 organizations nationwide. The Cares Award winner receives a cash prize of $100,000, while five runners-up receive $24,000 each. The competition is open to not-for-profit organizations that have been in existence for more than two years, are providing creative solutions to health status improvement, can provide documentation of outcomes and impact on a specific population, and have programs that can be replicated in other communities.
Premier has presented the Cares Award annually since 1991, when it was created by Dr. Monroe E. Trout, former CEO of American Healthcare Systems, one of Premier’s heritage organizations. The program has provided more than $3 million to more than 100 organizations nationwide. The Cares Award winner receives a cash prize of $100,000, while five runners-up receive $24,000 each. The competition is open to not-for-profit organizations that have been in existence for more than two years, are providing creative solutions to health status improvement, can provide documentation of outcomes and impact on a specific population, and have programs that can be replicated in other communities.
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