An alternative to taking pills

Dr-Fain-Granthon-WEB

After his cholesterol measured high, Felix Granthon didn’t ask his doctor for the simplest solution.

“I knew I could take medication — but I don’t like medication,” Granthon, 72, said. “I wanted to know what else I could do besides take pills.”

So Granthon and his wife, Carla, and their family physician, Harold Fain, MD, Assistant Professor of Community Medicine, created a healthier lifestyle plan that included nutritious foods and regular physical activity. Six months later, Granthon’s cholesterol level had dropped by 35 percent, and Carla’s had fallen 28 percent to normal levels.

Learn more:

UNTHSC
Graduate Certificate
in Lifestyle Health

This holistic style of patient-centered care is the focus of a new Graduate Certificate in Lifestyle Health offered by UNT Health Science Center. The online program, designed by a multidisciplinary team, provides health care practitioners and UNTHSC students the tools needed to incorporate evidence-based lifestyle interventions into their practices for management and prevention of chronic illnesses, said Dr. Claire Peel, Vice Provost and Dean of the School of Health Professions.

“Up to 80 percent of chronic diseases can be prevented by what you eat, how much you weigh, how much you exercise and if you don’t smoke,” said Dr. Fain, who practices at a JPS Health Network clinic and serves as a program instructor. “But the truth is that in school, providers spend little time, if any, learning how to help a patient make these critical lifestyle changes.”

Health care providers often lack time for discussions of lifestyle health with patients, Peel said. The application-based program helps providers quickly assess whether a patient is ready to make a lifestyle change and offers a structured, efficient way to empower patients to make healthy adjustments in their diet, physical activity, stress management, smoking and sleep habits.

“This goes far beyond ‘eat more vegetables’ and instead offers evidence- based strategies that really make a difference in someone’s quality of life,” said Debbie Gillespie, a Registered Dietitian and the program’s director.

The benefits of changing one’s lifestyle far outweigh the effort required, the Granthons said.

“We feel great,” Carla Granthon said. “All we needed was someone to help us.”

Recent News

Hill Signing 6627
  • Education
|Sep 6, 2024

HSC and Hill College partner to expand educational opportunities

The University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth and Hill College on Thursday announced a new partnership aimed at creating pathways to success for students in the region. Hill College is a comprehensive community college with campuses in Hillsboro, Cleburne and Burleson, with a str...
Amany Hassan
  • Research
|Sep 4, 2024

TCOM faculty and staff receive AACOM grant to study innovative AI curriculum integration

The emergence of artificial intelligence is undeniable and the Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine at The University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth is receiving a grant from the American Association of Colleges of Osteopathic Medicine to study an innovative way of merging AI in...
Img 6647
  • Patient Care
|Sep 3, 2024

Individualization is key: Collaborative care makes all the difference for older adults

Nina Cox was never a cook – her husband did most of the cooking in their household. That was until she was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes and tasked with lowering her A1C to be cleared for knee surgery. With a clear goal in mind, Cox got serious about her health and found support with The Universi...
HSC Sign
  • Education
|Aug 29, 2024

HSC elevates focus with new college names, addition of Graduate School

The University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth today announced it would launch a new Graduate School to enhance graduate education and rename three of its schools to better clarify their focuses. Effective Sept. 1, HSC will establish a new Graduate School under the leaders...