Community Photogs Eye Diabetes
by Paul Bass | October 27, 2008 9:23 AM | Permalink | Comments (3)
When Cynthia Alford pointed her camera at a shuttered roller-skating rink, she saw one ally of a “silent killer” that has stalked her for 30 years and endangers the kids from her church.
Alford is one of 11 members of New Haven’s black community who received digital cameras to document root causes of diabetes. They displayed their photos Friday in the City Hall atrium.
They took the 48 photos as part of an effort by Yale-Griffin Hospital Prevention Research Center and the Connecticut Health Foundation to tackle a deadly disease — Type 2 diabetes — that afflicts African-Americans almost twice as often as whites. The preventable disease is showing up in children.
Alford, who grew up in the Dixwell neighborhood and is 47, knows firsthand about diabetes: She has had it since she was 17. She has been on disability leave from her job at SNET for a host of health problems, including eight knee and hand surgeries.
In one photo on display, she captured a barrier to better health for obese shoppers on limited incomes: the higher cost of healthful food. The photo showed a 10-pound bag of “Great Value” sugar for sale for $4 and a much smaller package of Splenda for $8.
Participants in the project noted the lack of exercise options for adults and public spaces for kids to play in their community, another barrier to staying fit and healthy. (Another barrier: too few doctors.) Alford brought along her camera when she took kids from her church, St. Matthew’s Freewill Baptist, roller-skating at Wheel World in Wallingford.
Then she took a follow-up photo. “This is the closest place we could take them,” Alford lamented. “Now it’s closed down.”
Sharon Moore took this photo of the Stetson Library. The caption reads: “They were going to close this library. It’s the only place around here for kids to hang out after school. Kids are jumping out of their seats. They’ve been sitting all day in school. Need someplace safe to run around and play.”
Most of the photographers in the project have been training as “community health advisors” for the past four years in an effort to combat diabetes. (Read a full story about the project here.) The participants include Kouri Simmons, pictured in between Alford and Moore…
… Lillian Richardson, Alice Johnson, Christine Burruss …
… Naomi Kelly, Ruby Slade, Pastor Audrey Tinsley, and research assistant Maurice Williams.
Cardiologist Forrester “Woody” Lee, a Yale medical professor, said during a ceremony Friday accompanying the City Hall exhibit that he regularly sees patients from New Haven’s black community who wrestle with obesity, and thus hypertension and diabetes as well. “It’s not just about willpower,” Lee said. “They’re really victimized by the circumstances they live in… Healthy communities help healthy parents raise healthy children.”
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Posted by: Josiah Brown
| October 27, 2008 1:40 PM
A seminar on "Nutrition, Metabolism, and Diabetes" was offered in 2008 to public school teachers through the Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute. The seminar leader was Mark Saltzman, who chairs the Biomedical Engineering Department at Yale.
Among the teachers who participated as Fellows in the seminar were Sara Thomas of High School in the Community and Huwerl Thornton of Wexler-Grant. The curriculum units that they and others wrote are available here:
http://www.teachers.yale.edu/curriculum/index.php?url=http://www.yale.edu/ynhti/nationalcurriculum/units/2008/6/
An earlier seminar that Mark Saltzman led resulted in a volume of curriculum units including the following, on "The Challenge to Deliver Insulin," by Chris Willems of Wilbur Cross:
http://www.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/2006/5/06.05.09.x.html
Other recent seminars included one led by John Wargo, Professor of Environmental Risk Analysis and Policy, on "Urban Environmental Quality and Human Health," with specific curriculum units on topics such as asthma:
http://www.teachers.yale.edu/curriculum/index.php?url=http://www.yale.edu/ynhti/nationalcurriculum/units/2008/7/
These and numerous additional curricular resources that teachers have developed as Institute Fellows are available to educators, students, parents, and other members of the community.
Posted by: Sharon L. Bradford | October 28, 2008 7:02 PM
There was a New Haven Family Alliance, Inc. program called "We Walk in New Haven (WeWiN)." This program provided 13 free physical fitness activities to New Haven residents at a various community sites. The program ran from July 2003 through 2007. We saw changes in individuals' percentages of body fat and weight and referred individuals to their physicians' offices if their blood pressures or glucose were high. Unfortunately, there was not enough funding to sustain the program. Lastly, African American and other non-profit agencies that provide services in the urban community have such a difficult time securing funds to keep their doors open, as well as provide greatly needed programs to the populations they serve.
Posted by: Linda Boykin | October 28, 2008 10:27 PM
I am the wife of a diabete and have been with him for over 30 years. My husband now in on insulin he has one for night use and one for the day. being married to him makes the hold family eat the foods that will not make his sugar go up.
My grandson and I have gotten so use to eating that way that Mcdonald and buger king any out side eating is absolet.
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