Population Health Strategy Map

DRAFT – Work in progressp

After a summer of focus groups, we are thrilled to release an updated draft of our Community Action Strategies Map! Thank you to all who contributed feedback in one of our sessions. 

A reminded this document is very much in draft form. We intend for these maps to be a living document, that we regularly return to and update as needs and priorities change. Today, this map represents a snapshot of the most prominent themes we heard throughout the focus groups.

Our goal: Invest in upstream efforts to improve all aspects of health for the whole population.

The Population Health Community Action Team is tackling some of our regions biggest health concerns an looking for ways to prevent them upstream. Our targeted results include:

  • Control and prevent Diabetes
  • Prevent Adverse Childhood Experiences and mitigate the associated negative health outcomes. 
  • Reduce rates of unintended pregnancies 
  • Improve oral health
  • Prevent and control environmentally induced Asthma 
  • Prevent and Reduce Tobacco, eCig, and Marijuana usage 
  • Increase age appropriate immunization rates

Currently the group is in the process of prioritizing the metrics we would use to measure successful intervention in these areas. If you are interested in getting involved please email hadley@betterhealthtogether.org.  All are welcome!

 

Good news for School Nurse Day

Today is National School Nurses Day, which makes it the perfect day to share some good news from Newport. Thanks to funding from the Group Health Foundation, Newport School District has been awarded a grant to enact a School Population Health Program. This will allow for the School District and Newport Hospital Health Services (NHHS) to hire a new nurse, serving population health efforts on both campuses.

School nurses are a crucial community installment in health transformation; they help to reduce absenteeism due to illness, educate students early about their health, and address emergent health issues among the student population. This program aims to do exactly that, focusing on the following measures for children in rural Newport schools:

  1. Increase immunization compliance, and HPV education
  2. Reduce absenteeism due to asthma, diabetes, and other chronic health conditions
  3. Improve health education and health literacy

In addition, the nurse will work on the NHHS hospital campus in the Primary Care Clinic, serving as a population health nurse for adults, helping to forge stronger linkages between the school’s health program and the primary care services available throughout the hospital system. This connection will facilitate more timely education and interventions for students presenting with chronic conditions like diabetes and asthma. The new nurse will be hired this summer to start at the beginning of the 2016 school year.

This program will rely heavily on collaboration with the Pend Oreille Health Coalition, a grassroots community coalition to improve health outcomes in Pend Oreille County through a network of local partnerships. The Coalition will help Newport School District continue the program by solidifying sustainable funding past the grant period.

This is a great example of a community collaborating and crafting linkages to impact health. The benefits of these linkages, and the direct services the nurse will provide students and schools, are bound to ripple through Pend Oreille County. We are happy to celebrate National School Nurses day by spreading this good news! 

A Plan for a Healthier Washington

  • Build healthier communities and people through prevention and early attention to disease
  • Integrate care and social supports for individuals who have both physical and behavioral health needs
  • Reward quality heath care over quantity, with state government leading by example as Washington’s largest purchaser of health care