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Briefing Slides. Version Date: December 19, 2013. Con t ents. NHSPI™ Overview and Background The 2013 NH SPI™ What the 2013 Results Tell Us Using the NHSPI™ Results Future Direction and Next Steps. What is the National Health Security Preparedness Index™ (NHSPI™)?.
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Briefing Slides Version Date: December 19, 2013
Contents • NHSPI™ Overview and Background • The 2013 NHSPI™ • What the 2013 Results Tell Us • Using the NHSPI™ Results • Future Direction and Next Steps
What is the National Health Security Preparedness Index™ (NHSPI™)? A first of its kind tool to annually measure and advance our preparedness Examines health security preparedness of the nation by collectively looking at states Initial focus on public health, health care, and more
Why an Index? • Evaluates levels of complex things - economy (e.g., Consumer Price Index), health (e.g., Well-Being Index), etc. • Provides more meaningful information groupings than sum of individual parts or measures
Why is the Index Important? • Before NHSPI™, many different benchmarks measured numerous aspects of preparedness • No composite picture on topic existed • Complexity of preparedness has made understanding and assessing it confusing to most audiences Assesses how well we are prepared for emergencies Provides the most comprehensive set of measures to date Guides improvement efforts Includes many elements and sectors
The NHSPI™ Team Steering Committee Chair: Dr. John Lumpkin (Robert Wood Johnson Foundation)Leading NHSPI™ development and implementation The Project Management Office (ASTHO, CDC) manages NHSPI™ development and implementation More than 25 organizations actively involved in developing the NHSPI™ Governance Workgroup Chair: Dr. Tom Inglesby (U. of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Center for Health Security) Leading transition of NHSPI™ ownership Subject Matter Workgroups • Model Design Workgroup • Chair: Dr. Jonathan Links (Johns Hopkins Medicine) • Selecting NHSPI™ measures • Developing Index Structure • Validating and further developing Index • Stakeholder Communications Workgroup • Chair: Dr. Catherine Slemp (W. Va. Bureau for Public Health (ret.)) • Sharing information with and gathering feedback from stakeholders • Continuing to engage stakeholders
The NHSPI™ Development Process Practice Experts + Academic Experts + Policy Experts Populated Index Structure with existing, applicable measures Searched hundreds of data sources for potential measures Developed Index Structure Stakeholder Review and Engagement State preparedness directors & colleagues NHSPITMworkgroup members Representatives from 48 national associations Commitment to thoroughness, transparency, and stakeholder engagement.
Methodology • NHSPI™ • 1. Select measures • Research and identify • Examine against quality criteria • 3. Stakeholder input • 2. Develop structure • Group related measures into sub-domains • Group related sub-domains into domains
Contents • NHSPI™ Overview and Background • The 2013 NHSPI™ • What the 2013 Results Tell Us • Using the NHSPI™ Results • Future Direction and Next Steps
2013 NHSPI™ Structure The 2013 IndexGroups related measures (128 total) into 14 sub-domains and related sub-domains into 5 domains
Contents • NHSPI™ Overview and Background • The 2013 NHSPI™ • What the 2013 Results Tell Us • Using the NHSPI™ Results • Future Direction and Next Steps
2013 NHSPI™ National Results Strengths Three areas (i.e., domains) of health security preparedness strength: Result: 9.0 Result: 7.8 Result: 7.3 10 5 0 10 5 0 10 5 0 HealthSurveillance • Incident &InformationManagement CountermeasureManagement
2013 NHSPI™ National Results Strengths Core areas (i.e., sub-domains) bolstering these strengths are: Result: 9.3 Result: 8.7 Result: 8.0 Result: 7.7 Result: 7.6 Result: 7.5 10 5 0 10 5 0 10 5 0 10 5 0 10 5 0 10 5 0 Health SecuritySurveillance & Epidemiologic Investigation Laboratory Testing Incident Management &Multi-AgencyCoordination EmergencyPublicInformation &Warning Medical MaterielManagement,Distribution, &Dispensing CountermeasureUtilization &Effectiveness
2013 NHSPI™ National Results Areas in Greater Need of Development Two key areas (i.e., domains) in greater need of development: Result: 6.1 Result: 5.8 10 5 0 10 5 0 CommunityPlanning &Engagement SurgeManagement
2013 NHSPI™ National Results Areas in Greater Need of Development The areas (i.e., sub-domains) needing the most work are: Result: 5.9 Result: 5.9 10 5 0 10 5 0 10 5 0 10 5 0 Result: 4.9 Result: 3.7 Cross-Sector/CommunityCollaboration Management ofVolunteersDuringEmergencies Acute & PrimaryCare Mental &BehavioralHealth Care
Contents • NHSPI™ Overview and Background • The 2013 NHSPI™ • What the 2013 Results Tell Us • Using the NHSPI™ Results • Future Direction and Next Steps
Who Can Use the NHSPI™? • The Index is intended to be used to: • Support quality improvement, • Inform resource and policy decisions, • Enhance collaboration and strengthen shared responsibility, and • Advance the science of measuring preparedness.
Contents • NHSPI™ Overview and Background • The 2013 NHSPI™ • What the 2013 Results Tell Us • Using the NHSPI™ Results • Future Direction and Next Steps
The Future of the NHSPI™ – Annual Release The NHSPI™ will continue to evolve with expanded input from stakeholders, experience from use, and changing demands of health security preparedness. • Incorporate additional sectors: • Environmental and Occupational Health, Congregate Care, Chronic and Long Term Care, etc. Future releases may: Explore additional data sources Add tools to support Index use Consider weighting of components
Future Direction – Areas Under Construction 2014 NHSPITM (v.2.0)1 Additional Domain8 Additional Sub-domains2 Overarching Areas165 + Total Indicators 2013 NHSPITM (v.1.0)5 Domains - 14 Sub-domains128 Active Indicators
Built by the Community, for the Community Stakeholders will continue to shape the Index!Receive updates and share ideas at www.nhspi.org.
For More Information Website www.nhspi.org General Inquiriesnhspi-info@astho.org Media Inquiries Scott Briscoe ASTHO Senior Director, Communications and Marketing sbriscoe@astho.org 571-527-3173
Top 10 Myths about the NHSPI™ • 1. A simple roll-up of PHEP and HPP performance measures X • 2. Measures the 62 awardee jurisdictions from PHEP cooperative agreement X 3. Intended for federal funding decisions X • 4. Going to be a “Super TAR Score” X • 5. One more thing for state Preparedness Directors to collect data / report on X
Top 10 Myths about the NHSPI™ • 6. State public health departments are accountable / responsible for state’s score X • 7. Created in a vacuum X • 8. Will replace grant-based performance measures X • 9. “One-and-done”; does not need future revision X • 10. Used to rank states (and / or Preparedness Directors) X
The NHSPI™ Informs Policy Decisions Researchers and Academics Policymakers • Practitioners Communicators
The NHSPI™ Supports Quality Improvement and Shared Responsibility Researchers and Academics Policymakers • Practitioners Communicators
The NHSPI™ Calls for Research to Advance Preparedness and Measurement Researchers and Academics Policymakers • Practitioners Communicators
The NHSPI™ Expands Understanding of Health Security Preparedness Researchers and Academics Policymakers • Practitioners Communicators
[Insert state]2013 NHSPI™ Key Messages • [Insert • Overall results and highlights. What the NHSPI™ results suggest about a state • Strengths. What was found and why these areas are strengths • Potential areas for greater development. What was found and what these results mean • Using the data. Ways the state anticipates using the results and their importance to preparedness efforts]
NHSPI™ Resources Tools available to guide and support Index discussions: