Transcript Slide 1

Lead States in Public Health
Quality Improvement:
New Hampshire
Lea R. Ayers LaFave, PhD, RN
Community Health Institute/JSI
Bow, New Hampshire
August 2008
Participants in Attendance
Joan Ascheim, MSN
Bureau Chief
NH Division of Public Health Services
Bureau of Policy and Performance Management
Concord, NH
Amy Cullum, MPH, MA
Community Health Institute/JSI
Bow, NH
Lindsey Vacek, MPH
Mascoma Valley Health Initiative
Canaan, NH
Preparing for Accreditation
Regionalization and building the public
health infrastructure
Overall Goal: A performance-based public health delivery
system, which provides all 10 essential public health
services throughout New Hampshire
Repeat National Public Health
Performance Standards State Level
Assessment
Existing
NH Public Health Infrastructure
234 cities and towns
Health Officer required by statute
5 communities with public health departments
No county health departments
Strong community-level informal public-private
partnerships
State level:
DHHS (lead agency),
Department of Environmental Services
Department of Education
Department of Safety
Our Vision
The evolution of a 2-tiered public health
system based on standards for agency
infrastructure and performance
Capacity, expertise, leadership to assure a
fundamental public health presence
Performs some level of each essential service
Collaborates with
– regional partners
– State DPHS
Will require statutory changes.
Regionalization Process
April 2008 consolidated 19 All Health
Hazards Regions to 15 Public Health
Network (PHN) regions
3 assessments:
– Financial
– Capacity - modified NACCHO Assessment Tool
– Governance
Next Steps
PHNs in selected regions develop detailed plan to
implement proposed new model [June 2008-June
2009]
Modified NACCHO SelfAssessment Tool [DRAFT]
Quality Improvement Learning
Collaboratives (QuILTs)
QuILTS
2 cohorts, 3 each, 15 months
Interest areas
Capacity:
Culturally appropriate care, health improvement planning,
competent workforce
Health Status:
Chronic disease, tobacco-related disease, alcohol-related
disease and injury
Linkage– health status to capacity indicators
Aligned with state health priorities and strategic plan
Kickoff
Kickoff Event
September 26th, 2008
Keynote Speaker
Bonnie Zell, MD. MS
Senior Advisor for Partnership Development
Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion,
Office of the Director, CDC
IHI George W. Merck Fellow, 2006-2007
Work Session
Sharing of work to date
Content Expert Speakers
Tracking Tool Training
Most interesting…
Including other groups in our QI initiative
DHHS Public Health Improvement Team (PHIT)
Links with other work
PHIT Tracking Tool
To simplify process of tracking improvement initiatives
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Create performance measures
Record data
Create performance reports
Download data into MS Excel format
Partnering with University of New Hampshire through the CDC
Assessment Initiative
Develop web-based performance measure module in HealthWRQS
application
PHIT Tracking Tool
Most exciting…
Work with Quality Improvement Learning
Collaboratives
Ayers, LR, Beyea, SC, Godfrey, MM, Harper, DC, Nelson, EC, and
Batalden, PB (2005). Quality Improvement Learning Collaboratives.
Quality Management in Health Care, 14(4), 234-247.
Developing relationships with international QI
experts at The Dartmouth Institute for Health
Policy and Clinical Practice
www.dartmouth.edu/~cecs/
Hopes and Long Term Goals…
Demonstrate the value of public health
through evidence
Build capacity
Create a culture of QI simultaneously
through regionalization
Resulting in….
…an accreditable public health system built from the
ground up…