Focusing "upstream" to Address Maternal and Child Health Inequities: Two Local Health Departments in Washington State Make the Transition

被引:8
|
作者
Storey-Kuyl, Marni [1 ]
Bekemeier, Betty [2 ]
Conley, Elaine [3 ]
机构
[1] Washington Cty Hlth & Human Serv, Hillsboro, OR 97124 USA
[2] Univ Washington, Sch Nursing, Psychosocial & Community Hlth, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[3] Spokane Reg Hlth Dist, Spokane, WA USA
关键词
Public health MCH; Population-based; Health departments; Life course perspective;
D O I
10.1007/s10995-015-1756-4
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Two local health departments (LHDs) in Washington State, Spokane Regional Health District and Clark County Public Health, are transitioning their Maternal and Child Health (MCH) services from an individual-focused (mother-child dyads/family) home visiting model to a population-focused, place-based model. This paper describes the innovative process and strategies these LHDs used in applying existing MCH funding in new ways. The pilot communities selected in both jurisdictions for the initial transition were communities experiencing disproportionately high rates of maternal smoking, child abuse and neglect, births to single women, and low-income women on Medicaid. Available evidence suggested that the reach and effectiveness of existing, individual-level MCH approaches were not adequately improving these indicators in these communities. Using a population-based approach that addressed policy factors as well as social, organizational, and behavioral change; both counties developed neighborhood level initiatives directed at the root causes of health inequities. The approach included developing meaningful community partnerships, capacity building, and creation of a shared vision for community change. Both LHDs and their partners engaged county-wide groups in neighborhood selection, jointly established priority intervention areas, and actively engaged communities focused on reducing specific health inequities. With existing funding resources, the two county LHDs dramatically changed their practice to better address underlying conditions that threaten MCH. Early successes from these pilots have contributed to important local and state system-level changes in MCH programming as well as effective community-level efforts to reduce health inequities.
引用
收藏
页码:2329 / 2335
页数:7
相关论文
共 27 条
  • [11] Geographic Inequities in Coverage of Maternal and Child health Services in Haryana State of India
    Shankar Prinja
    Deepak Balasubramanian
    Atul Sharma
    Rakesh Gupta
    Saroj Kumar Rana
    Rajesh Kumar
    Maternal and Child Health Journal, 2019, 23 : 1025 - 1035
  • [12] Collaboration at the Federal, State, and Local Levels to Build Capacity in Maternal and Child Health: The Impact of the Maternal and Child Health Epidemiology Program
    Kroelinger, Charlan D.
    JOURNAL OF WOMENS HEALTH, 2012, 21 (05) : 471 - 475
  • [13] New Approaches for Moving Upstream: How State and Local Health Departments Can Transform Practice to Reduce Health Inequalities
    Freudenberg, Nicholas
    Franzosa, Emily
    Chisholm, Janice
    Libman, Kimberly
    HEALTH EDUCATION & BEHAVIOR, 2015, 42 : 46S - 56S
  • [14] Establishing maternal and child health data collection priorities for state and local oral health programs
    Kuthy, RA
    Siegal, MD
    Wulf, CA
    JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH DENTISTRY, 1997, 57 (04) : 197 - 205
  • [15] Child psychiatrists as leaders in public mental health systems: Two surveys of state mental health departments
    Soltys, SM
    Wowra, SA
    Hodo, GL
    PSYCHIATRIC SERVICES, 1999, 50 (12) : 1591 - 1595
  • [16] Application of Geographic Information Systems to Address Chronic Disease Priorities: Experiences in State and Local Health Departments
    Brissette, Ian
    Casper, Michele
    Huston, Sara L.
    Jordan, Melita
    Karns, Becky
    Kippes, Christopher
    Kramer, Michael R.
    Peacock, James M.
    Vaughan, Adam S.
    PREVENTING CHRONIC DISEASE, 2019, 16
  • [17] Working with State Health Departments on Emerging Issues in Maternal and Child Health: Immediate Postpartum Long-Acting Reversible Contraceptives
    Kroelinger, Charlan D.
    Waddell, Lisa F.
    Goodman, David A.
    Pliska, Ellen
    Rudolph, Claire
    Ahmed, Einas
    Addison, Donna
    JOURNAL OF WOMENS HEALTH, 2015, 24 (09) : 693 - 701
  • [18] Local Health Departments and Specific Maternal and Child Health Expenditures: Relationships Between Spending and Need (vol 18, pg 615, 2012)
    Morris, Michael E.
    JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH MANAGEMENT AND PRACTICE, 2013, 19 (05): : 491 - 491
  • [19] Relationships Among Providing Maternal, Child, and Adolescent Health Services; Implementing Various Financial Strategy Responses; and Performance of Local Health Departments
    Issel, L. Michele
    Olorunsaiye, Comfort
    Snebold, Laura
    Handler, Arden
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2015, 105 : S244 - S251
  • [20] Using a positive deviance framework to identify Local Health Departments in Communities with exceptional maternal and child health outcomes: a cross sectional study
    Klaiman, Tamar
    Pantazis, Athena
    Chainani, Anjali
    Bekemeier, Betty
    BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, 2016, 16