National Academies Press: OpenBook

2016 Year in Review: Roundtable on Population Health Improvement (2017)

Chapter: 2016 Year in Review: Roundtable on Population Health Improvement

Suggested Citation:"2016 Year in Review: Roundtable on Population Health Improvement." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2017. 2016 Year in Review: Roundtable on Population Health Improvement. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/27078.
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Suggested Citation:"2016 Year in Review: Roundtable on Population Health Improvement." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2017. 2016 Year in Review: Roundtable on Population Health Improvement. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/27078.
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2016 YEAR IN REVIEW ROUNDTABLE ON POPULATION HEALTH IMPROVEMENT VISION & MISSION The Roundtable’s vision is of a strong, healthful, and productive society that cultivates human capital and equal opportunity. This vision rests on the recognition that outcomes such as improved life expectancy, quality of life, and health for all are shaped by interdependent social, economic, environmental, genetic, behavioral, and health care factors. Altering these factors will require robust national and community-based actions and dependable resources to achieve them. The Roundtable intends to catalyze urgently needed action toward a stronger, more healthful, and more productive society. The Roundtable will therefore facilitate sustainable collaborative action by a community of science-informed leaders in public health, health care, business, education, and early childhood development, housing, agriculture, transportation, economic development, and non-profit and faith-based organizations. MEMBERS The Roundtable comprises 34 members from academia (with expertise including social sciences and economics), business, foundations, all levels of government, health care, and non-profit organizations. COMMUNICATION STRATEGY & APPROACH A 3-minute video orients audiences to the meaning of To achieve the vision of a strong, healthful, and productive population health in the words of some of our members. society, the Roundtable’s workshops and other activities are intended to catalyze the following conditions for influence: Resources Relationships Communication Policy Measures Research The Roundtable’s work frames issues, raises awareness, generates urgency, poses questions, reveals opportunities, elevates exemplars, informs the identification of priorities, and explores norms/standards. All workshops are webcast and archived on the RELATIONSHIPS roundtable webpage (click on Multimedia). Follow the conversation Relationships—across sectors and systems and within communities—are key to any effort to improving population health. Roundtable members participate in several national @NASEM_Health conversations that help to disseminate the Roundtable’s #pophealthrt work. Roundtable workshops also serve to build relationships that advance the conversation and inform new efforts in the field.

2016 BY THE NUMBERS 4 WORKSHOPS 4 WORKSHOP PRODUCTS  Community Violence as a Population Health Issue:  Framing the Dialogue on Race and Ethnicity to Advance Proceedings of a Workshop—in Brief Health Equity (February) in Washington, DC  Advancing the Science to Improve Population Health:  Community Violence as a Population Health Issue (June) Proceedings of a Workshop in Brooklyn, NYC  Framing the Dialogue on Race and Ethnicity to Advance  Building Sustainable Financing Structures for Population Health Equity: Proceedings of a Workshop Health (October) in Washington, DC  Metrics that Matter for Population Health Action:  Exploring the Infrastructure of Multisector Community Workshop Summary Health Partnerships (December) in Oakland, CA All publications available for free download at www.nap.edu. 17 PERSPECTIVES Perspectives are individually authored expert commentaries and discussion papers by leading voices in health and health care and are posted by the National Academy of Medicine (NAM). Ideas emerged from the Roundtable’s workshops or are related to the conditions for influence described above, but these views have not been subject to the National Academies review process and are not necessarily endorsed by the NAM or the National Academies. CDC’s 6|18 Initiative: Accelerating Evidence into Action by James Hester, The Communities That Care Coalition Model for Improving Community John Auerbach, Laura Seeff, Jocelyn Wheaton, Kristin Brusuelas, and Health through Clinical–Community Partnerships: A Population Christa Singleton Health Case Report by Jeanette Voas, Katherine Allen, and Ruth A Population Health Strategy for Diabetes: New Partners, New Potee Opportunities by Rachel Bright and Brian Sakurada Public Health–Health Care Collaboration to Improve Smoking Cessation Building a Culture of Health Equity at the Federal Level by David Rates Among Low Socioeconomic Status Patients in Denver: A Zuckerman, Violeta Duncan, and Katie Parker Population Health Case Report by Tracey A. Richers Maruyama, The Olmsted County (MN) Collaborative School-Located Influenza Theresa Mickiewicz, Ava Cannon, Teddy Montoya, Santos Diaz, Erica Immunization Program: A Population Health Case Report by Jennifer Berg, Daniel Kortsch, Ali Zirakzadeh, and Judith C. Shlay L. Brickley, Tammy L., Schmit, Lila J. Finney Rutten, Jennifer L. St. Referral System Collaboration Between Public Health and Medical Sauver, Karen L. Ytterberg, and Robert M. Jacobson Systems: A Population Health Case Report by Eric W. Fleegler, Integrating Health Care and Supported Housing to Improve the Health and Clement J. Bottino, Aaron Pikcilingis, Beth Baker, Emmett Kistler, and Well-Being of the Homeless: A Population Health Case Report by Areej Hassan John Lovelace An Environmental Scan of Recent Initiatives Incorporating Social Technology-Enabled Transitions of Care in a Collaborative Effort between Determinants in Public Health by Denise Koo, Patrick W. O’Carroll, Clinical Medicine and Public Health: A Population Health Case Report Andrea Harris, and Karen B. DeSalvo by Laura Ahmed, Daniel Jensen, Lisa Klotzbach, Geoffrey Huntley, Daring to Change for Better Health, Partnerships, and Business by Murray Alex Alexander, Veronique Roger, Lila Finney Rutten Stewart Integrating Clinical Care with Community Health through New Hampshire’s New Summary Measures of Population Health and Well-being for Million Hearts Learning Collaborative: A Population Health Case Implementation by Health Plans and Accountable Care Organizations Report by Kimberly Persson by Thomas E. Kottke, Jason M. Gallagher, Sachin Rauri, Juliana O. Preparing Health Care and Public Health Professionals for Team Tillema, Nicolaas P. Pronk and Susan M. Knudson Performance: The Community as Classroom by Corinne Graffunder Optimizing Health Outcomes for Children with Asthma in Delaware: A and Brian Sakurada Population Health Case Report by Daniella Gratale and Alisa “Well-Being in All Policies”: Promoting Cross-Sectoral Collaboration to Haushalter Improve People’s Lives by Thomas E. Kottke, Matt Stiefel, and Democratizing Health: The Power of Community by George Flores Nicolaas Pronk All perspectives are available for download at www.nam.edu/perspectives. 2 COLLABORATIVES 1 CASE CHALLENGE  Action Collaborative on Business Engagement in Building  The Roundtable co-sponsors the Annual DC Regional Healthy Communities Public Health Case Challenge along with the National  Action Collaborative on Bridging Public Health, Health Academy of Medicine. The 4th annual case challenge Care, and Community event took place October 16, 2016, and focused on The Changing American City and Implications for Health and Wellbeing of Vulnerable Populations.

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