1 / 16

Presentation at County Administrators Meeting

Presentation at County Administrators Meeting. IOM & SPF: What are they – and What implications do they have for us . Presented by Joël Phillips Community Prevention Institute January 26, 2006. NEW TERMS = NEW APPROACH. IOM - (Institute of Medicine) Continuum of Care

benjamin
Download Presentation

Presentation at County Administrators Meeting

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Presentation at County Administrators Meeting IOM & SPF: What are they – and What implications do they have for us. Presented by Joël Phillips Community Prevention Institute January 26, 2006

  2. NEW TERMS = NEW APPROACH IOM - (Institute of Medicine) Continuum of Care SPF - Strategic Prevention Framework IMPORTANCE Both concepts will dominate Prevention Planning/Policies Need to understand how they will impact field Know about availability of Resources to assist Counties.

  3. PREVENTION CONTINUUM – (U.S.I.)- A Brief History - 1957 Public Health Model – “Commission on Chronic Health Care” - Introduces Primary, Secondary, Tertiary Prevention (Disease/Health) 1983 1987 R. Gordon: Introduces U.S.I. concept to better distinguish between Populations in need of Primary Prevention (Disease/Health) 1994 Institute of Medicine – commissioned study examining Mental Disorders Use U.S.I. + Treatment + Aftercare (Continuum) (Mental Health) 2000 CSAP introduces term to substance abuse prevention (By 2002-03 directives went to States) (Substance Use – but not fully developed)

  4. The Continuum of Care Protractor Different levels of prevention are distinguished by the level of risk of disorder/distress in various populations groups targeted.

  5. Universal Prevention Measures: Address the entire population. Aim is prevent/delay use of AOTD. Deter onset by providing individuals with information/skills • Selective Prevention Measures: Targets subsets of the population considered at risk by virtue of their membership in a particular segment of the population. • Key Selective Prevention targets the entire subgroup regardless of the degree of risk of any individuals in the group. • Indicated Prevention Measures: Targets individuals who are exhibiting early signs or consequences of AOD use.

  6. IOM PreventionCircles within Circles Selected Subgroups Universal Populations Indicated Individuals

  7. Potential Selected Populations • Homeless • Young Offenders • Foster Youths • Drop-outs • Students with social/academic problems • Rave party-goers • Others

  8. High Indicated Moderate Selected Intensity of Intervention Universal Low Low Moderate High Degree of Risk

  9. Summary IOM approach requires: • Better understanding of our community – communities within communities. • Tired approach in thinking about prevention services. • U.S.I • Thoughtful application of prevention approaches to the three types of populations. But it gives us: • Better focus on AOD problems and individuals involved/impacted by AOD use. • Potentially better measurements of success.

  10. Strategic Prevention FrameworkSPF PURPOSE • Formalize a planning and implementation approach • Decrease substance use and abuse • Promote Mental Health • Prevent Mental Health disorders and reduce co-morbidity and relapse

  11. Strategic Prevention Framework Process STEP 1 – ASSESSMENT Profile population needs, resources, and readiness to address the problems and gaps in service delivery STEP 2 – CAPACITY BUILDING Mobilize and/or build capacity to address needs STEP 3 – PLANNING Develop a Comprehensive Strategic Plan STEP 4 – IMPLEMENTATION Implement evidence-based prevention programs and infrastructure development activities STEP 5 – EVALUATION Monitor process, evaluate effectiveness, sustain effective programs/activities, and improve or replace those that fail

  12. SPF Assumptions • Views health promotion across the spectrum of Prevention – Intervention – Treatment. • Requires Prevention and Treatment services (AOD/MH) to work together. • Focus on community based approaches • Planning for outcomes underlies the SPF approach. • Outcomes measures have been identified (NOMS) • 10 Domain Area impacting Mental Health, Prevention, Treatment.

  13. SPF IOMEXAMPLE Apply SPF Steps IOM Concepts 1. Assessment - Data Collection - Data Analysis What do we know about our populations - Who are most vulnerable - What are their characteristics - What risks / behaviors are present in their lives. (Measurement?)

  14. SPF IOMEXAMPLE Apply SPF Steps IOM Concepts 1. PLANNING - Resource Issue - Selecting policies, strategies, program services that FIT best with IOM population under consideration What do we develop prevention services for: - Which vulnerable population - What specific needs / issues are being addressed

  15. www.cars-rp.org PHONE 916-983-9506 FAX 916-983-5738 jphillips@cars-rp.org

  16. TA/TRAINING SERVICES (CPI) • Review of current practices (needs-based planning) • Assessments of community readiness to implement SPF • Strengths • Areas for Improvements • 3. Develop of SPF process specific to community needs • (sub-populations) • 4. Ongoing TA/Trainings specific to community needs

More Related