Public health workforce development is critical to promoting community health, but training resources are often expensive and distal to the work site.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Session Overview Office of Postsecondary Coordination and Alignment (OPCA): Mission and Goals Defining Dual Enrollment and Dual Credit Knowing the Key.
Advertisements

Orientation for New Site Visitors CIDA’s Mission, Value, and the Guiding Principles of Peer Review.
Quality Improvement/ Quality Assurance Amelia Broussard, PhD, RN, MPH Christopher Gibbs, JD, MPH.
Succeeding not seceding: The work of the Texas legislative workgroup on integrated healthcare Mary Lehman Held, L.C.S.W. Lynda E. Frost, J.D., Ph.D. Katherine.
LIFEPATH East Tennessee State University College of Public Health Tennessee.
Education Commission of the States Working Together to Address a Common Need: Partnerships for Teacher Quality Bruce Vandal Director, Postsecondary Education.
Purpose of Project  To assess the state of oral health within Douglas County  To develop a strategic plan, utilizing the data obtained from the assessment,
Healthy Start Interconception Care Learning Community (ICC LC) Using Quality Improvement for Better Preconception Care Preconception Care Summit June 14,
Susan Boyer VT Nurses in Partnership (c) 2009 VNIP, Inc All rights reserved. Contact:
SEM Planning Model.
Evidence Informed Practice Fellowships at a Complementary and Alternative Medicine Institution Brent Leininger DC, Linda Hanson DC, Corrie Vihstadt MOm,
A Healthy Place to Live, Learn, Work and Play:
Family Outreach and Response Program Strategic Plan September 26 th, 2012.
Parent Program Training We Can! Energize Our Families: Parent Program Parent Program Training We Can! ™ Energize Our Families: Parent Program U.S. DEPARTMENT.
 MCH Training Branch: Distance Learning Laura Kavanagh, MPP, Training Branch Chief CAPT Audrey M. Koertvelyessy, MSN, RN, FNP, Senior Public Health Analyst.
Building an Industry Based Approach to Workforce Change in Healthcare Presentation, October 16, 2013 Laura Chenven, Director, H-CAP.
Dual interviews: Moving Beyond Didactics to Train Primary Care Providers in the Biopsychosocial Model James Anderson, PhD Fellow in Primary Care Psychology.
BUILDING CAPACITY FOR UNIVERSAL PREVENTION THROUGH STATE-NONPROFIT-UNIVERSITY- SCHOOL SYSTEM PARTNERSHIPS Philip J. Leaf, Ph.D. Johns Hopkins University.
Wisconsin Health Care Workforce Challenges- Grow Wisconsin Initiative.
EVALUATION PURPOSE PROJECT DESCRIPTION IMPACT Critical Analysis in Nursing Case Management Critical Analysis in Nursing Case Management Karen Black, MSN,
General Introduction of Community Health Services in the Hongkou District Amy Jiang, MPA Shanghai, China.
“They thought I’d Never Work…” Jobsupport. Session Outline:- Jobsupport Overview Case Study – William.
Food Safety Professional Development for Early Childhood Educators Evaluation Plan.
Quentin R. Burdick Grant Interdisciplinary Learning in Rural Healthcare at East Tennessee State University East Tennessee State University.
Mark Miller, Director of Training Maryam Fatemi; Regional Administrator Tedji Dessalegn Regional Administrator A Los Angeles “Regional Update” Fairness.
Education, Training & Workforce Update FSP Training for Small Counties June 29, 2007 By Toni Tullys, MPA, Project Director, Regional Workforce Development,
SASIT Thomas E. Gluck, Acting Secretary of Education Amy Morton, Deputy Secretary, Office of Elementary and Secondary Education Ed Vollbrecht, Ph.D., Director,
Planning, Implementing, and Evaluating Your Health Promotion Programs A 6-Week Public Health Course.
Addressing Maternal Depression Healthy Start Interconception Care Learning Collaborative Kimberly Deavers, MPH U.S. Department of Health & Human Services.
Belinda Seto, Ph.D. Acting Deputy Director for Extramural Research National Institutes of Health Human Subjects Research Enhancements Awards Renaissance.
Creating Safe and Humane Settings for Children SUSAN P. LIMBER, PHD.
Nashville’s CPPW Corner Store Initiative: Methods and Measurement Celia Larson, PhD Director of Evaluation Alisa Haushalter, DNP, RN Project Director Bill.
Education Goal: To continue to develop our innovative, efficient, system-based curriculum with a focus on basic science and its correlation with clinical.
Strengthening Communities Awarded to support the development and implementation of collaborate and innovative community projects that address economic.
Credit Opportunity University of Wisconsin ˗ La Crosse Department of Health Education and Health Promotion Continuing Education and Extension 1 credit.
Metropolitan Council Environmental Services A Clean Water Agency Presented to the Environment Committee October 13, Workforce Plan Karen.
RE-AIM Framework. RE-AIM: A Framework for Health Promotion Planning, Implementation and Evaluation Are we reaching the intended audience? Is the program.
Evidence-Based Public Health in Action: Strategies from New York Moderator: Amy Ramsay Association of State and Territorial Health Officials Speakers from.
The Community Health Advancement Program (CHAP) Heather Ostmann, BA, MS3 Hana Smith, BS, MS2 Lili Peacock-Villada, BA, MS2 Suzanne Gillette, PhD, MPH,
BUS 226 ASSIST Peer Educator/ bus226assist.com FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT
A Longitudinal Curriculum in Motivational Interviewing WT-04 Clara Keegan, MD University of Vermont Medical Center.
BUS 226 Entire Course For more course tutorials visit BUS 226 Week 1 DQ 1 Human Resource Transformations BUS 226 Week 1 DQ 2 Equal.
Advancing Public Health Kaye Bender, RN, PhD, FAAN, President and CEO Public Health Accreditation Board National Public Health Performance Standards Training.
MEHARRY-VANDERBILT COMMUNITY- ENGAGED RESEARCH CORE (CERC) COMMUNITY SCHOLARS AWARD INFORMATION MEETING.
International Faculty Development in FM through Videoconferencing 2009 AAFP Family Medicine Global Health Workshop – September 11, 2009 Jeffrey F. Markuns,
Nurse Education Practice Quality and Retention- Interprofessional Collaborative Practice: Behavioral Health Integration (NEPQR-IPCP:BHI) Program FY 2016.
Informational Webinar Troy Grant Assistant Executive Director for P-16 Initiatives Tennessee Higher Education Commission.
8 Nobermer, 2010 Sungsoo Chun, MPH, PhD, Easton Reid, PhD, Mi-Kyung Kim Korean Institute on Alcohol Problems School of Health and Welfare, Sahmyook University,
22 nd Annual Rural Health Policy Institute Deputy Administrator, HRSA Marcia K. Brand, PhD January 24, 2011.
Deep in the Heart of Texas Development of An Integrated Rural Training Track Tricia C. Elliott, MD, FAAFP, Steve Shelton, Ph.D., * Jorge Duchicela, M.D.,
Association President: Pat Keller, MSN, RN, NE-BC Association contact person/ Judi Hansen WNC representative: Pat Keller,
Management Academy for Public Health SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH ● ● KENAN-FLAGLER BUSINESS SCHOOL The Management Academy For Public Health: Developing Entrepreneurial.
Bridge to College Courses Funded by College Spark Washington Washington Bridge to College Project: Setting a Context for Principals Dr. Kathe Taylor Assistant.
Use of Quality Matters in the Faculty Mentor-Mentee Relationship
Tisha Johnson, MD, MPH, FACPM
Best Practices for Using Your Curriculum Management System
Cross-Institutional Collaboration for Sustainability
Prenatal group care within a small family medicine residency clinic
The Development of a Competency Map for Population Health Education
Kathleen Amos, MLIS & C. William Keck, MD, MPH
Nicole Deaner, MSW Colorado Clinical Guidelines Collaborative
A SOCIO-ECOLOGICAL MODEL APPROACH FOR STUDENT SUCCESS IN A GRADUATE NURSING PROGRAM Kimberly Hayman BSN, RN, PhD Candidate; Larronda Rainey MNSc, RN;
Connie Cowley, DNP, RN, CPHQ, NE-BC Catherine Alexander, DNP, RN
K–8 Session 1: Exploring the Critical Areas
Proposal Development Support & Planning
Webinar Presenters: Annie Rutter, MD Jim Ballard, EdD Emily Walters
Welcome to Your New Position As An Instructor
Minnesota Consortium for Practice Facilitation
Pati Kravetz Associate Director for Experiential Learning and Student Employment Main title: 40 pt. Arial Presenter Name: 16 pt. Arial Presenters Title:
Presentation transcript:

Public health workforce development is critical to promoting community health, but training resources are often expensive and distal to the work site. To address this, the master of public health programs at Meharry Medical College, Tennessee State University and Vanderbilt University Medical Center pooled their resources with the local health department to form the Nashville Public Health Learning Collaborative (NPHLC). gaged Research Core and has been used to strengthen protocol design, recruitment activities and materials, the consenting process, retention efforts, and implementation activities for research projects on the T1-T4 continuum. Leslie R. Boone, MPH, Institute for Medicine and Public Health, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN; Alisa R. Haushalter, DNP, RN, Director of Population Health, Kimberlee Wyche-Etheridge, MD, MPH, Director of Family, Youth and Infant Health, William S. Paul, MD, MPH, Director of Health, Metro Public Health Department, Nashville, TN; Yvonne Joosten, MPH, Institute for Medicine and Public Health, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN; Leah Alexander, PhD, Graduate Studies and Research, Meharry Medical College, Nashville, TN; William Cooper, MD, Preventive Medicine, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN; Mohamed Kanu, PhD, MPH, MA, Health Administration, Tennessee State University, Nashville, TN Background Key Components Evaluation Public Health Competency Matrix The key components of each didactic session include: a)Case study: each public health program took responsibility for developing a case study to illustrate the concepts outlined in the course objectives. The case study was presented by one of the public health instructors. b)Lead Presenter: described key concepts and outlined the framework of the discussion. c)Facilitator: introduced the course, described learning objectives, facilitated questions and discussion, wrapped up the training session. d)Coordinator: scheduled the team meetings and training sessions, tracked the evaluations, and monitored the success of the training sessions. e)Video production team: recorded and edited all training sessions, uploaded recordings to website for future use. Challenges Academic-Government Partnership: Building a Better Public Health Workforce through a Local Learning Collaborative NASHVILLE PUBLIC HEALTH LEARNING COLLABORATIVE Return on Investment Free meeting space Free video production No speaker fees No travel expenses for participants Videos available for later viewing Future Considerations Revise Course Content: building upon previous content and aligning with organizational needs Revise Course Structure: using a variety of teaching modalities and session structure Revise Marketing Strategy: improving recruitment and access from underrepresented programs/divisions Attendance was limited to those chosen by their supervisors Confined to employee work schedules Gatekeepers limited accessibility to marketing channels To view past trainings from the NPHLC, visit: Average number of attendees: 18 Average number of programs represented: 6 The matrix represents the competencies that were taught within each course.