170 likes | 350 Views
The Emergence of District Public Health in Maine. Mark Griswold, M.Sc Maine CDC Office of Local Public Health.
E N D
The Emergence of District Public Health in Maine Mark Griswold, M.Sc Maine CDC Office of Local Public Health
Taking the long journey to make Maine the healthiest state requires an organized public health infrastructure that is strategic and reliable across Maine. A well developed and organized infrastructure is intimately related to our ability to achieve our goal of ensuring that all Mainers have access to affordable, quality care that will help individuals maximize their personal health status and productivity. --2007 Maine State Health Plan
Co-Conveners • Healthy Maine Partnerships • Prevention activities: • tobacco • physical activity and nutrition • chronic disease screening & self-management • substance abuse prevention • coordinated school health • Essential Public Health Services, including work with DCCs • Primary provider of public health services at the local level • Community health assessment: Mobilizing for Action through Planning and Partnerships: Achieving Healthier Communities (MAPP) • Funded through Fund for Healthy Maine, with other diverse funding sources
Co-Conveners, continued • Maine CDC Office of Local Public Health • Purpose: coordinate & strengthen local public health infrastructure • Projects for year 1: • Convene district public health units of Maine CDC field staff • Provide local health officer training and support • Co-convene DCCs • Assist with public health-related assessments • Link with county and state emergency management • Has both central office and field staff • District Public Health Liaisons (3 of 8 districts) • Funded through reallocation of central office positions throughout Maine CDC
Lower Population density Median income Adult H.S. graduates Higher Families living in poverty Kids on free or reduced school lunch Single-parent households with kids Acute MI hospitalizations ED visits for asthma Reported rapes Reported domestic assaults Public Health Challenges for the Central District
The Funding Picture: How Maine Ranks • 60% of Maine CDC budget is federal • Rank about ½ among 50 states for per capita federal PH funding • 48th for per capita state funds for public health • Bottom line: we must be effective, efficient, coordinated
Public Health Workgroup 2005-2007 • Led by Governor’s Office of Health Policy and Finance • 40 Members, broad representation and input • Charged by 2 legislative resolves: • Make recommendations about core public health work for Healthy Maine Partnerships (CCHCs) • Make recommendations about district-level public health infrastructure • Maintained focus on the 10 Essential Public Health Services • Now called the Statewide Coordinating Council
Recommended by PHWG: • 8 DHHS Districts • Strengthened Local Health Officer system • Core public health functions carried out by Healthy Maine Partnerships • 8 District Coordinating Councils (DCCs) • District Public Health Units • MCDC Office of Local Public Health
Maine’s local public health infrastructure, a simplified view Statewide Coordinating Council Maine CDC/DHHS Office of Local Public Health District Liaison and Public Health Unit District Coordinating Council Local Health Officers District health partner District health partner District health partner District health partner
Maine Public Health Infrastructure Governor’s Office of Health Policy and Finance Statewide Coordinating Council State Public Health Agency 2 City Health Departments 4 Tribal Health Systems 8 DHHS Districts 28 Healthy Maine Partnerships 492 Municipal Local Health Officers 500 Maine CDC contracts for local public health services (~50 per district)
More About DCCs • Integral part of Maine’s local PH structure • Established by SCC & Maine DHHS/CDC with input from District stakeholders • Functions: • District-wide representative body for PH-related planning & coordination • Deliver, through its members, specific, district-level PH services • Mobilize partnerships to combine efforts and resources within the district for more effective and efficient delivery of the EPHS • Advise about allocation of certain district-level PH funds
Leadership: • Operating principles, transparent decision-making • Small volunteer Steering Committee • Linkage with the Maine CDC/DHHS Local Public Health Liaison • Assure appropriate membership • Potential activities for Year 1: • Establish process for planning and decision-making • Assess access to PH services • Health disparities: population-based and geographic • Begin development of a district public health improvement plan • DCC Vision: • A healthy population served by comprehensive, well-coordinated public health services
Desired DCC competencies: • District-wide convening, fostering collaboration, mobilizing across communities, organizations, and sectors • Leveraging local assets and securing external resources • Interpretation and use of health assessment data • District-level and issue-specific planning • Evaluation design, analysis, use of evaluation findings • Working with fiscal agents capable of accepting and administering funds on behalf of the district
Value of DCC • Broad-based, inclusive • Address regional PH issues more effectively and efficiently • Identify resources and gaps at the district level • Convene non-traditional PH partners • Strong influence on local and state policy • Help allocate money • Create collaborations to attract funding • Address health disparities and • reach underserved populations and geographic areas
Central DCC Timeline, A work in progress December ‘07 PHWG report to the Maine Legislature June ’08 Convene DCC (describe process, orient members) Vision: A healthy population served by comprehensive, well-coordinated public health services Create District PH Improvement Plan Address health disparities Fall ’08 DCC Meeting: Determine leadership Advise about Allocation of some District PH funds April – May ‘08 Co-conveners Plan meeting July-August ’08 Continue planning Process: membership, group process, assessments, etc. Conduct Assessment (PH needs, existing services, gaps)