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April 17,2025

T1D Exchange (T1DX) Health Equity Advancement Lab (HEAL) Meeting:

April 17, 2025, 1-2 pm ET, Zoom

Participants:

Shideh Majidi, Jenise Wong, Jody Grundman, Carla Demeterco, Jen Raymond, Anyanate Gwendolyne Jack, Selorm Dei- Tutu, Kajal Gandhi, Ashley Butler, Nicole Rioles, Trevon Wright

Agenda:

Time Item Facilitator
1:00-1:05 pm

05’

Welcome

  • Welcome
 

Dr. Dei-Tutu

 

Dr. Butler

1:05-1:25 pm

20’

Manuscript Outline Overview 

  • Preferred Equity Language Use
Dr. Dei-Tutu

Dr. Butler; All

1:25-1:35 pm

10’

Finalize 2025 Annual Survey Questions Dr. Dei-Tutu

Dr. Butler; All

1:35:-1:55 pm

20’

Current Equity Initiatives within the T1DX-QI Collaborative Dr. Dei-Tutu

Dr. Butler; All

1:55-2:00 pm

5’

Updates and Close-Out

  • Summary of next steps
  • Next meeting: Thursday July 17, 1-2pm EST
T1DX-QI staff

Manuscript Opportunity

  • The group is considering writing a manuscript based on the HEAL survey questions about the workforce.
  • The manuscript could focus on workforce considerations to improve health for people with type 1 diabetes, grounded in the Exchange’s Quality Improvement Equity Framework.
  • The manuscript could center on step two of the framework: building an equitable project team to address disparities.
  • The group wants to review literature on programs/quality improvement projects addressing disparities, focusing on team members’ skills/roles in addressing disparities.
  • Another suggestion was to discuss the role of institutional and structural support in achieving health equity, as institutional support can influence the success of diabetes/endocrine clinics in this area.
  • The focus should remain on providing the same services and resources, even if the wording needs to be adjusted.

2024 Survey Data

  • The goal is to describe the racial/ethnic makeup and job titles of staff in responding clinics.
  • The speaker wants to compare the literature’s recommendations for job titles/expertise needed to address disparities with the actual workforce composition from the survey.
  • The Exchange provided data by adult and pediatric centers, including data on patients with Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes.
  • Data includes the percentage of diabetes center staff and patients from minoritized racial/ethnic groups, as well as staff FTE (full-time equivalency).
  • FTE data is analyzed as the ratio of providers to patients, categorized by physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, social workers, and registered nurses.

Preferred Language and Health Equity

  • The T1D exchange is working on preferred language, and the group is asked to discuss language around health equity.
  • There are different types of terms to consider, such as using first-person language when talking about people with diabetes.
  • One example of preferred language is using “minoritized groups” instead of “minority.”
  • Consider including a footnote describing the term chosen for the manuscript and recognizing other ways to describe the group.
  • Navigating Current Climate and Research Funding
  • Consider how to make research applicable and avoid having it rejected due to specific words.
  • There’s a sense that NIH is discouraging the use of DEI (diversity, equity, and inclusion) terms, though not officially.
  • Frame the work around “health for all” and the steps needed to achieve positive health outcomes for everyone.
  • Equity in language should be included in discussions about specificity in terminology. Terms like “high risk” can be ambiguous and negative, leading to labeling.

2025 Survey Questions

  • The group will email out the 2025 survey questions due to time constraints.
  • Questions will cover topics discussed in the last meeting, such as:
    • Where else to lean into if federal funding streams are uncertain.
    • What other partnerships to lean into.
    • Compensation methods.
  • Questions about partnerships:
    • Who partners with community organizations in the exchange/collaboration?
    • Which community organizations are involved (open to all, local, hyper-local)?
    • How powerhouses like Breakthrough T1D step into the gaps.

Multidisciplinary Partnerships & Public Health

  • Clarification needed for the term “multidisciplinary partnerships” in the survey.
  • It refers to different job titles within a group (e.g., dietitians, physicians, behavioral health).
  • Communication and work with public health is important.
  • Public health divisions reach out to insurance companies for resources.
  • Questions should address communication with public health and efforts to find resources for publicly insured people with diabetes.

PowerPoint Slides: HEAL April 2025 Meeting

Meeting Recording: https://us02web.zoom.us/rec/share/DtSIQnA_DUrf_MR1Ns7mvwnm7039Sdjl4XrSCUvjUrFjCVu72B3Iyt3KOtB3Ggok.larienZDGHAkOUjw

Passcode: Qqb@!3r&

 

 

 

 

T1DX-QI

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