1 the healthy weight learning collaborative: using quality improvement to prevent and treat obesity...
TRANSCRIPT
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The Healthy Weight Learning Collaborative:Using Quality Improvement to
Prevent and Treat Obesity in Communities
CAPT Sarah Linde-Feucht, MDChief Public Health Officer
Health Resources and Services AdministrationU.S. Department of Health and Human Services
USPHS Scientific and Training SymposiumCollege Park, MD
June 20, 2012
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Objectives
1. Describe the impact of overweight and obesity on community health
2. Demonstrate the use of Quality Improvement to prevent and treat obesity communities
3. Identify sustainable ways to achieve healthy weight in communities
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HRSA Mission
To improve health and achieve health equity through access to quality services, a skilled health workforce and innovative programs.
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Access and Workforce
• Nearly 19 million patients are served through more than 8000 HRSA-funded health centers, including 1 in 3 people with incomes below the poverty level.
• Over 500,000 people living with HIV/AIDS receive services through more than 900 HRSA-funded Ryan White Clinics. Two-thirds are members of minority groups.
• 34 million women, infants, children, and adolescents benefit from HRSA’s maternal and child health programs.
• Currently more than 10,000 National Health Service Corps clinicians are working in underserved areas in exchange for loan repayment or scholarships.
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Access and Workforce
• Workforce training programs• Rural health care• Federal organ procurement system• Poison Control Centers• 340B low-cost drug program
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Impact• One in three children born in 2000 will develop diabetes in his or
her life, and among African-American and Latino children, that number is one-in-two.
• The annual medical costs of an obese person are $1,400 more than someone who’s not obese.
• Obesity costs $147 billion per year in medical costs and obesity in the workforce costs more than $73 billion each year in lost productivity.
• As a public policy problem, an overweight employee may face higher health insurance premiums, and the taxpayer may face higher Medicare and Medicaid costs.
• Our nation’s safety and security is threatened as fewer individuals meet standards to serve as firefighters, police, and in the military.
• Weight discrimination has increased by 66% over the past decade. Unlike Gender, ethnicity, religion, age, and disability, there are no legal protections against discrimination based on weight.
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Collaborate for Healthy Weight
Congress authorizes the Affordable Care Act
NICHQ launches Collaborate for Healthy Weight
October 2010-March 2013
July 2010
March 2010
HRSA designs vision of Prevention Center for Healthy Weight
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• National quality improvement initiative
• Breakthrough Series Approach • Multi-sector teams• Evidence-based interventions• Specifically related to prevention
and treatment of obesity in children and families
The Healthy Weight Collaborative
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What are we trying to accomplish?
How will we know that a change is an improvement?
What change can we make that will result in improvement?
Aims
Measures
Changes
Act Plan
Study Do
The Model for Improvement
Testing Cycle
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Healthy Weight Collaborative Project Aims• Establish sustainable community-based partnerships
consisting of primary care, public health and community sector participants
• Implement and test selected evidence-based and promising interventions to achieve healthy weight and health equity
Phased Approach• Phase One:
Ten teams, June 2011 - July 2012• Phase Two:
40+ teams, Dec 2011 - January 2013
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Selected Focus Areas
• Tribal Communities• Faith-Based Communities• Women’s Health• Intergenerational Health• Community Health Workers• Federally Qualified Health Centers• Medically Underserved Areas• Rural • mHealth
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Objectives, Strategies, and ActivitiesOBJECTIVE 1: The HWC Team will establish or strengthen multi-sector community-based partnerships so that the Team is both effective and sustainable
STRATEGY 1: Commit to the Healthy Weight Collaborative Aim through the development of a community action plan to improve healthy weight of the target population, and establish the necessary infrastructure to effectively implement the plan
ACTIVITY A: Create an action plan to improve healthy weight of the target population
ACTIVITY B: Develop and strengthen the Team's capacity to effectively implement the plan
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OBJECTIVE 2: Teams will provide appropriate, planned and coordinated services tailored to the individual and family across lifespan for the target population
STRATEGY 2: Develop a consistent message to promote healthy weight in the target population and disseminate the message where the target population lives, learns, works and plays ACTIVITY A: Adopt a message that reflects the priorities of the community around healthy weight promotion
ACTIVITY B: Develop and implement a communication plan to reach the target population
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OBJECTIVE 2: Teams will provide appropriate, planned and coordinated services tailored to the individual and family across lifespan for the target population
STRATEGY 3: Assess current weight status throughout the target population using standardized, evidence-based health assessment protocols
ACTIVITY A: Adopt a healthy weight assessment template; adapt it to incorporate community priorities and messaging
ACTIVITY B: Develop and implement a plan to complete healthy weight assessments in the target population
ACTIVITY C: Redesign clinical care delivery to reliably assess patients for weight status including health behaviors
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OBJECTIVE 2: …coordinated services to individual and family across lifespan…
STRATEGY 4: Use a standardized template for a healthy weight plan that can be personalized to address the needs of individuals within the target population ACTIVITY A: Adopt a healthy weight plan that incorporates the cultural, linguistic and literacy needs of the target population and allows for pertinent individualized goals
ACTIVITY B: Create and implement a dissemination plan
ACTIVITY C: Redesign clinical care delivery to reliably offer plans that support healthy weight, regardless of current weight status
ACTIVITY D: Provide education and activities to support individuals and families to follow their healthy weight plans
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OBJECTIVE 2: …coordinated services to individual and family across lifespan…
STRATEGY 5: Build capacity to meet the needs of the target population utilizing an integrated approach that provides ongoing assessment, prevention activities, treatment and appropriate follow-up of healthy weight ACTIVITY A: Assess gaps in capacity to promote healthy weight assessment, healthy weight plans and prevention activities for the target population
ACTIVITY B: Integrate efforts across sectors to meet the demand
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OBJECTIVE 3: Teams will create community environments that enable healthy eating and active living in the target population
STRATEGY 6: Implement strategies for improving the environment to support promotion of healthy weight in the target population
ACTIVITY A: Develop and implement one organizational policy to improve physical activity
ACTIVITY B: Develop and implement one organizational policy to increase healthy eating
ACTIVITY C: Develop an action plan for one public health policy that would improve physical activity or healthy eating
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Collaborative Support Model
• Healthy Weight Interventions• Implementation
Guide• Change Package
• Collaborative Support Model• Tools/ Methods• Measurement
Strategy• Healthy Weight
Resources
• ILab• www.CollaborateforHeal
thyWeight.org • Technology Platform• On Demand Learning
Library
• Improvement Advisors (IAs)• Expert Faculty• HRSA Regional Offices/
Staff• Partners• NICHQ staff enabled by
technology
SupportLearning EnvironmentContent
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Collective Impact and Sustainable Change
Stanford Social Innovation Review, Winter 2011
1.Common Agenda
2.Shared Measurement Systems
3. Mutually Reinforcing Activities
4.Continuous Communication 5.Backbone Support Organizations
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Objectives
1. Describe the impact of overweight and obesity on community health
2. Demonstrate the use of Quality Improvement to prevent and treat obesity communities
3. Identify sustainable ways to achieve healthy weight in communities
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CAPT Sarah Linde-Feucht, MDChief Public Health Officer
[email protected]://www.hrsa.gov
Thank you!www.CollaborateForHealthyWeight.org