1 / 16

Role of Health Centers

calix
Download Presentation

Role of Health Centers

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. The Integration of Health Centers into Community Emergency Preparedness Planning: An Assessment of LinkagesNicole V. Wineman MA, MPH, MBABarbara I. Braun PhD, Joseph Barbera MD, Stephen P. Schmaltz PhD, Jerod M. Loeb PhD Division of Research Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare OrganizationsFunding Source: AHRQ Partnerships for Quality Initiative (Cooperative Agreement Number 1-U18-HS13728-01)

  2. Role of Health Centers • 890 HRSA – Bureau of Primary Health Care (BPHC) supported health centers • Part of nation’s health care safety net • Provide care to 15 million people across 5000 sites • Have been involved in providing primary care services in many disasters

  3. Study Objectives • Conduct a national baseline assessment of health center integration into community planning • Test whether better linkages were associated with high perceived hazards, experience responding to an event, and health center characteristics

  4. Design and Implementation • Expert panel assisted in questionnaire development • Assessed linkages issues related to: Experience with prior emergencies/disasters Involvement in Community planning Role in community response Communication Surveillance, reporting and lab testing Training and exercises • Mailed questionnaire sent to population of BPHC supported health centers in February 2005

  5. Response • 307 (34%) health centers responded • Responders included: executives/administrators (54%) medical/clinical staff (15%) QI/compliance personnel (14%) • Responders vs Non-responders Responders: -Higher user volume than non-responders -More likely to be JCAHO Accredited (39%) than non-responders (28%) -No difference in number of sites

  6. Selected Findings Collaborative Planning • 54% of health centers are represented on the community planning group • 39% report that staff have seen the community emergency operations plan (EOP) • 27% completed a collaborative HVA with community responders • 24% participated in community-wide drills

  7. Selected Findings, continued Collaborative Response • 37% reported that the community used a formal IMS, but 55% did not know • About half reported that the community had established a role for their center in an emergency • Only 30% reported that their role is documented in the community plan

  8. Selected Findings, continued Experience in disaster response • 30% responded to an actual disaster or public health emergency, 11% to a potential/suspected event • Most common event responses: Provide medical care (48%) Evacuate / Close (40%) Reassign staff (27%) Provide education / information (21%) Serve as communication liaison (21%)

  9. Indicators of Strong Linkages Health center has completed a collaborative hazard and vulnerability analysis with community responders + Health center role is documented in the community emergency response plan + Health center has participated in community- wide drills. _______________________________________ = Strong linkages (summary indicator score)

  10. Multivariate Analysis: Significant associations between summary linkages indicator score and questionnaire items p value of < .05 was used for inclusion and retention in the model

  11. Significant associations between summary linkages indicator score and questionnaire items, continued p value of < .of was used for inclusion and retention in the model

  12. Health center characteristics not associated with higher linkages score • Heath center experience responding to an actual / potential disaster event • High perceived hazards or threats • Location within a MMRS region • High user volume • Large number of sites

  13. Limitations • Possible response bias • No data on urban/rural location • Health center perspective only • No verification

  14. Conclusions • Health centers are commonly on the community planning group, but the involvement may be superficial • Integration into substantive planning and response activities is limited • Health center and community characteristics were not associated with linkages – there is another driving force

  15. Implications • The importance of including health centers in planning and response is overlooked • Community planners should be encouraged to involve health centers • Collaborative planning can be effectively efficiently achieved through a health care coalition

  16. Contact Information Nicole Wineman, MA, MPH, MBA Associate Project Director Division of Research Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations Phone: 630-792-5948 E-mail: nwineman@jcaho.org

More Related