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TOURO’S MALHOTRA-GUPTA WINS AWARD TEACHING HOMELESS RESIDENTS HEALTHY HABITS

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Touro College of Osteopathic Medicine Harlem (TouroCOM) has an office on 125th Street and a fourth-year medical student Gayatri Malhotra-Gupta  at Touro College of Osteopathic Medicine (TouroCOM) who has just won first place in a poster competition.

Gayatri won based on her research on the effects of teaching about healthy diet and nutrition at a Queens homeless shelter. The award was presented at the recent 61st Midwinter Conference of the Texas Osteopathic Medical Association in Dallas.

Malhotra-Gupta said her research grew out of her community service work and interest in studying the need for nutrition education programs in homeless shelters and whether they would have an impact long-term.

“I wanted to see whether it would make a difference,” said Malhotra-Gupta. “A lot of the participants were never screened for diabetes though they were overweight and had risk factors. We educated them and showed them how to build a healthy food plate.”

Working with a nonprofit organization that provides free healthcare education programs to underserved communities, Global Physicians Network Foundation, Malhotra-Gupta joined GPNF’s first endeavor to promote health education in a shelter.
Fifty women and children living at the shelter in Astoria, Queens, participated. Volunteers gave the residents a presentation on healthy eating and the different food groups. Adults were screened for prediabetes, taught how to calculate their body mass index (BMI), and counseled on how to make healthy meals and monitoring weight. Children were given worksheets on healthy food choices that they filled out in small groups, and were shown ti chi exercises and taught the importance of daily exercise.

“We know we had a positive impact on their knowledge from the surveys we got back,” said Malhotra-Gupta, who explained that after the program, a majority of responders said they had a better understanding of the topic and were better able to identify foods from the food groups and use them to make a healthy plate than they were before the program. Specifically they learned to “eat more fruits and veggies” and to exercise, she said.

However, there were challenges. Only 20 percent of the participants responded to the surveys. And as far as gauging any long-term impact, that seemed unlikely, she said. When the organization returned to the shelter to do a program on hygiene, half of the residents had moved on.

“It’s hard to see how they will use their knowledge in practice because they still don’t have access to stoves and it’s hard to monitor how they will use this knowledge in the future. Every time we go into a shelter fifty percent of the residents are new. It’s a very transient population,” she said.
Malhotra-Gupta’s research mentor at TouroCOM was Dr. Kurt Degenhardt, associate professor in the Department of Biomedical Sciences.

For further information on Touro College, please go to www.touro.edu

NYSOMS TOWN HALL, JANUARY 25, 2017

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From right to left:   Natasha Wu, SOMA President, and MSII Touro COM Middletown NY; David Broder, President of NYCOMEC and Vice Speaker of the AOA House of Delegates; Pat Hunt President of NYSOMS; Steve Sherman, Immediate Past President, NYSOMS; Tom Gallo, Partner Kern Augustine and NYSOMS legal advisor, and Justine Misholy, MSII Touro COM Middletown NY.