how to deal with latino data: a guide for montgomery county service providers a community based...

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How to Deal with Latino Data: A Guide for Montgomery County Service Providers A Community Based Strategy For Reducing Health Disparities Latino Health Initiative Montgomery County Department of Health and Human Services, Maryland Presented by: Graciela Jaschek, MPH; Eduardo Pezo, MPH, JD/MA Candidate (WCL)

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Page 1: How to Deal with Latino Data: A Guide for Montgomery County Service Providers A Community Based Strategy For Reducing Health Disparities Latino Health

How to Deal with Latino Data:A Guide for Montgomery County Service Providers

A Community Based StrategyFor Reducing Health Disparities

Latino Health InitiativeMontgomery County Department of Health and Human Services, Maryland

Presented by: Graciela Jaschek, MPH; Eduardo Pezo, MPH, JD/MA Candidate (WCL)

Page 2: How to Deal with Latino Data: A Guide for Montgomery County Service Providers A Community Based Strategy For Reducing Health Disparities Latino Health

Latino Health Initiative Background History

In July 2000, Latino community leaders formed the Latino Health Initiative (LHI) with support of the County Executive and County Council

In August 2000, the Latino Health Steering Committee (LHSC) was formed to advocate for Latino health

Page 3: How to Deal with Latino Data: A Guide for Montgomery County Service Providers A Community Based Strategy For Reducing Health Disparities Latino Health

Latino Health Steering Committee (LHSC)

The LHSC is composed of 16 volunteer professionals and community leaders that work at the national, state and local levels

LHSC members work as a team to provide expert guidance and technical assistance to the LHI and to advocate on behalf of Latino communities

Page 4: How to Deal with Latino Data: A Guide for Montgomery County Service Providers A Community Based Strategy For Reducing Health Disparities Latino Health

Latino Health Initiative Goals

Address health disparities by developing and implementing a plan of action

Engage in an ongoing community based participatory process to determine the major health priorities in the community that need to be addressed

Page 5: How to Deal with Latino Data: A Guide for Montgomery County Service Providers A Community Based Strategy For Reducing Health Disparities Latino Health

Results of a Community Based Participatory Process

In February 2002, the Blueprint for Latino Health 2002-2006 was released

The Blueprint is for policy and decision makers to develop responsive medical care and public health systems that address the basic needs of the community

An updated Blueprint for Latino Health will be released in February 2008

Page 6: How to Deal with Latino Data: A Guide for Montgomery County Service Providers A Community Based Strategy For Reducing Health Disparities Latino Health

Latino Data Workgroup

In 2002, the LDW was created to improve the collection, analysis, and reporting of health data for Latinos (Blueprint Priority Area A)

Composed of 9 volunteer professionals who work in Federal government, academia, and the private sector

Page 7: How to Deal with Latino Data: A Guide for Montgomery County Service Providers A Community Based Strategy For Reducing Health Disparities Latino Health

Latino Data Issues

Lack of data (ex: MD Vital Statistics) Under-representation of latinos (ex:

surveys done by phone, in English) Under-reporting of data (ex: combining sub-

populations, foreign-born/US-born) Lack of completeness Lack of accuracy

Page 8: How to Deal with Latino Data: A Guide for Montgomery County Service Providers A Community Based Strategy For Reducing Health Disparities Latino Health

How to Deal with Latino Data

In December 2006, the How to Deal with Latino Data Guide is released

Page 9: How to Deal with Latino Data: A Guide for Montgomery County Service Providers A Community Based Strategy For Reducing Health Disparities Latino Health

How to Deal with Latino Data: Purpose

The Guide is meant to be used by professionals

The Guide is meant to help entities improve data collection, analysis, and reporting efforts

Page 10: How to Deal with Latino Data: A Guide for Montgomery County Service Providers A Community Based Strategy For Reducing Health Disparities Latino Health

How to Deal with Latino Data: Demographics

Latinos in the United States:Largest and fastest growing minority In 2004, there were 41 million LatinosLatinos will grow from 14% to 24% of

the total population by 2050*64% Mexican, 15% Caribbean, 13%

Central and South America*** 2005 American Community Survey ** 2006 American Community Survey

Page 11: How to Deal with Latino Data: A Guide for Montgomery County Service Providers A Community Based Strategy For Reducing Health Disparities Latino Health

How to Deal with Latino Data: Demographics

Latinos in Montgomery County Fastest growing minority population* In 2005 Latinos were 14% of the total

county population* 67% Central and South America, 12%

Caribbean, 10% Mexico**

* 2005 American Community Survey Data ** 2006 American Community Survey

Page 12: How to Deal with Latino Data: A Guide for Montgomery County Service Providers A Community Based Strategy For Reducing Health Disparities Latino Health

How to Deal with Latino Data: Demographics ctd.

The MC Latino population is similar to other Latino populations in the U.S. The Latino population in MC is young (28.5) Latino households are large (3.83) Most Latino households are families (83%) Most Latinos speak a language other than

English at home (90%) Latinos face many economic challenges* 2005 American Community Survey

Page 13: How to Deal with Latino Data: A Guide for Montgomery County Service Providers A Community Based Strategy For Reducing Health Disparities Latino Health

How to Deal with Latino Data: Community Assets

Richness in diversityLatinos seek the American dream too

Many skilled professionals Strong social and community networks Untapped potential for community

leadership Well developed Spanish media

Page 14: How to Deal with Latino Data: A Guide for Montgomery County Service Providers A Community Based Strategy For Reducing Health Disparities Latino Health

How to Deal with Latino Data: Cultural Considerations

Cultural factors: Strong core values Strong family ties Importance of the personal rather than

the institutional Face to face communication preference Fatalistic attitude about disease

Page 15: How to Deal with Latino Data: A Guide for Montgomery County Service Providers A Community Based Strategy For Reducing Health Disparities Latino Health

How to Deal with Latino Data: Linguistic Considerations

Linguistic factors: Spanish is one language Not everyone who speaks Spanish can

be a translator or interpreter Translations (written text) Interpreters (oral communications)

Page 16: How to Deal with Latino Data: A Guide for Montgomery County Service Providers A Community Based Strategy For Reducing Health Disparities Latino Health

How to Deal with Latino Data: Collecting Data from Latinos

Go to the experts: Latinos themselves Trust from the community is key Research methods: there are several

options Considerations for survey design,

administration, and analysisTips for developing and administering forms

and surveysTips for analyzing and reporting collected data

Page 17: How to Deal with Latino Data: A Guide for Montgomery County Service Providers A Community Based Strategy For Reducing Health Disparities Latino Health

How to Deal with Latino Data: Take-Home Messages

Learn as much as possible about your local Latino community and their contributions

Take the risk to learn new information Train those collecting information about

Latino cultural and language nuances Do not rely on stereotypes Ensure data gathering is conducted with

methodological rigor, integrity, and patience

Page 18: How to Deal with Latino Data: A Guide for Montgomery County Service Providers A Community Based Strategy For Reducing Health Disparities Latino Health

Lessons Learned

The community knows the solutionCommunity generated information is

credibleData are vital to any communityCultural and linguistic issues need to

be considered for collection, analysis and dissemination of data

Page 19: How to Deal with Latino Data: A Guide for Montgomery County Service Providers A Community Based Strategy For Reducing Health Disparities Latino Health

Latino Health InitiativeContact Information

LHI Offices

240-777-3221

[email protected]

Website

www.lhiinfo.org