- Home
- About DHA
- Projects
- Healthy Living
- Careers
- Audio Books
- Press Room
- Blogs
Southern Remedy: Mississippi’s Big Problem focuses on the state’s obesity epidemic and attempts to change Mississippi’s poor bill of health. Southern Remedy sets out to modify the way Mississippians take care of themselves, using real-life stories and methods that anyone can use to lose weight. Dr. Rick DeShazo and his team traveled across the state [...]
MSDH and its partners are offering free training in BodyWorks — a new program designed to help parents and caregivers of children ages 9 to 13 to improve family eating and activity habits. Using the BodyWorks Toolkit, this program focuses on parents as role models and provides them the hands-on tools to make small, specific [...]
The 9th Annual Hope Conference is designed to meet the educational and informational needs of the public and cancer patients, survivors, family members and caregivers. The day will feature presentations by cancer specialists, medical experts, allied health professionals and cancer survivors. Saturday, March 5, 2011 9:00 AM—1:00 PM First Baptist Church of Jackson Christian Life [...]
Posted By: John P. Howe, III, M.D. on January 24, 2011 Labels: United States It is appropriate that it was Health Awareness Day in Mississippi, as the HOPE team began our visits to several of the health programs administered by the Delta Health Alliance (DHA.) Our day started out at the DHA eICU Center at [...]
Right now, one in ten U.S. adults has diabetes. If trends keep heading the way CDC expects, that figure will be one in three adults by 2050.
Health IT will be extremely beneficial for modernizing health care communications between doctors, nurses, and patients, and will disproportionately benefit patients with diabetes.
Diabetics see primary care physicians for overall management of the disease. They see ophthalmologists for necessary eye exams and podiatrists for necessary foot exams – both to avoid costly and invasive complications that can arise without careful management of the disease. Patients with diabetes also frequent pharmacies, see other specialists, and occasionally end up in the hospital