- Virginia Paine
Diabetes Program Manager - Maria Mathias
Diabetes Outreach, Living Well RI, Multicultural Diabetes Education Coordinator - Susan Cesare
TEAMWorks Coordinator - Deborah Newell
Certified Diabetes Outpatient Education Coordinator


The Diabetes Prevention and Control Program (DPCP) coordinates the Rhode Island Statewide Diabetes Health System (RI-SDHS), which is comprised of over 700 agencies and individuals. The goal of the DPCP is to prevent and control diabetes and diabetes-related complications. The DPCP adopts, implements, evaluates, and institutionalizes programs to improve the quality of diabetes clinical care. It expands the workforce available to address the burden of diabetes in RI by supporting multicultural diabetes self-management programs, education and pre-diabetes care. These programmatic elements work together synergistically and on multiple levels (i.e., individual, health system, environmental, community, state) to constitute a comprehensive systems approach to diabetes prevention and control.
The RI Diabetes Prevention & Control Program (RI-DPCP) was established in 1978 as one of the first federally funded diabetes programs in the United States. Since 1978, the Rhode Island Department of Health has received funding from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
We use state and national standards to certify a workforce of nurses, dietitians and pharmacists in diabetes education as well as practice sites. CDOE’s are healthcare professionals who focus on educating people with and at risk for diabetes and related conditions to achieve behavior change goals which, in turn, lead to better clinical outcomes and improved health status. Diabetes educators apply in-depth knowledge and skills to provide self-management education/self-management training to people with diabetes helping them to better manage their chronic disease. Visit the Rhode Island Certified Diabetes Outpatient Educators website for additional information and to find a CDOE.
We provide multilingual and multicultural basic diabetes education and support in communities with limited access to formal diabetes education programs.(more)
We provide physician practices with tools to improve screening and quality of care provided for patients at risk for diabetes and connect patients at risk for diabetes with community resources. (more)
We provide TEAMWorks, a 3-hour diabetes self-management program provided to adults in physician practices. This program is modeled after Kaiser Permanente's successful Diabetes Morning program. TEAMWorks is presented by a "team" of diabetes educators (nurse, dietitian, and pharmacist) and the practice physician. Participants review their own diabetes-related lab test results with their physician (HbA1C, lipid profiles, and tests for microalbuminuria) during the program. The nurse and dietitian provide skill-building sessions with patients who also receive one-on-one counseling on medications from the pharmacist. The physician reviews any medical issues with each participant. Referrals are made for dilated eye exams, dental care and diabetes out-patient education. TEAMWorks educational visits focus on managment of diabetes and cardiovascular disease. (factsheet)
We provide evidence-based chronic disease self-management education to people with diabetes statewide. The program’s chronic disease self-management workforce has been developed for both English and Spanish education. (more)
We work with physician practices to improve care tor patients with chronic conditions. (more)
The Diabetes Council provides leadership for diabetes-related activities in the state. (more)
These groups in the community help motivate adults with diabetes and their caregivers to better manage living with diabetes. (referrals)