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2019 YEAR IN REVIEW ROUNDTABLE ON POPULATION HEALTH IMPROVEMENT VISION & MISSION The Roundtableâs vision is of a strong, healthy, 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. To attain this vision, the Roundtable intends to facilitate sustainable collaborative action by a community of science- informed leaders in public health, health care, business, education, early childhood development, housing, agriculture, transportation, economic development, and non-profit and faith-based organizations. MEMBERS The Roundtable brings together approximately 30 members from academia, philanthropy, health care, governmentâincluding public healthâand non-profit organizations. More information about members, including those w ho represent sponsoring organizations, is available on the roundtable w eb page. STRATEGY & APPROACH MAKING A DIFFERENCE The Roundtableâs w ork frames issues, raises awareness, Inspire new ideas and shape the field poses questions, reveals opportunities, elevates examples, ⢠A listserv of over 3,000 receives regular updates about the informs priorities, and explores norms. Roundtableâs w orkshops and publications. ⢠All w orkshops are streamed live and high-quality video is The Roundtableâs w orkshops archived on the Roundtable w eb page. and other activities are Influence policies and programs designed to inform and catalyze action in the field around the Members, participants in Roundtable activities, and readers of metrics and research, w orkshop publications have reported that information showcased resources and policy, and the at roundtable w orkshops has influenced their work, from grant- relationships and making, to research and teaching, to planning. communication for equitable Foster relationships and collaboration health and w ell-being. The Roundtableâs w ork has spurred interaction and collaboration, and informed curricula and programming. Members have partnered on joint projects, w orkshop attendees have networked and built connections, and participants in action collaborative efforts have gathered for dialogue and shared learnings. Follow the conversation on Tw itter: @NASEM_Health (Health and Medicine Division of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine) #pophealthrt
WORKSHOPS WORKSHOP PRODUCTS ⢠Dialogue About the Workforce for Population Health ⢠Dialogue about the Workforce for Population Health Improvement (Washington, DC) Improvement: Proceedings of a Workshop ⢠Models for Population Health Improvement by Health Care ⢠School Success: An Opportunity for Population Health: Systems and Partners: Tensions and Promise on the Path Proceedings of a Workshop Upstream (Washington, DC) ⢠FaithâHealth Collaboration to Improve Community and ⢠A Population Health Perspective on Middle School Success: Population Health: Proceedings of a Workshop Activities, Programs, and Policies (Oakland, CA) ⢠School Success: An Opportunity for Population Health: ⢠Implications of the California Wildfires for Health, Proceedings of a Workshopâin Brief Communities, and Preparedness (Davis, CA) ⢠Implications of the California Wildfires for Health, Conducted in collaboration with the Forum on Medical and Public Communities, and Preparedness: Proceedings of a Health Preparedness for Disasters and Emergencies; the Workshop Roundtable on the Promotion of Health Equity; and the Roundtable on Environmental Health Services, Research, and Medicine Nearly 6,000 readers downloaded our 2019 publications, and thousands more who downloaded older publications at www.nap.edu. *Perspectives, published by the National Academy of Medicine (NAM), are individually authored by Roundtable and PERSPECTIVES* Forum members and outside experts in health and health care. The views expressed in these papers are those of the author(s) and not necessarily of the author(s)â organizations, the National Academy of Medicine (NAM), or the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (the National Academies). Perspectives are intended to help inform and stimulate discussion. They are not reports of the NAM or the National Academies. ⢠Jonas WB and M Jonas. 2019. Faith-Health Collaboration to Improve Community and Population Health. Commentary. Washington, DC: National Academy of Medicine. ⢠Johnson, R. 2019. Poor Education Predicts Poor Health - A OTHER WORK Challenge Unmet by American Medicine. Commentary. Washington, DC: National Academy of Medicine Baciu A, LA Pray, and KR Stratton. ⢠Perspectives are available for dow nload at 2019. Transportation and Health in a www.nam.edu/perspectives. Changing Climate. TR (Transportation Research) New s 324:24-27 -- _______________________________________________ Highlights from the 2017 w orkshop 2019 views of all perspectives associated with the Roundtable Protecting the Health and Well-Being Total: 42,140 of Communities in a Changing Climate Pageviews of perspectives published in 2019: 2,357. COLLABORATIVES** CASE CHALLENGE Action Collaborative on Business Engagement in Building The Roundtable co-hosts the Annual DC Regional Public Health Healthy Communities Case Challenge along w ith the National Academy of Medicine. ⢠Held series of 5 w ebinars. This problem-based learning opportunity engages multi- ⢠Co-hosted the event âEngaging Businesses in Creating disciplinary teams of students in developing solutions that use Health and Economic Prosperity for Vibrant Communities.â the socioecologic model of health as a starting point. Video and resources Action Collaborative on Bridging Public Health, Health The 7th annual case challenge event took place October 18, Care, and Community 2019, and w as titled 2019 Case: Reducing Health Disparities in ⢠Held series of 4 w ebinars. Maternal Mortality by Addressing Unmet Health-Related Social Action Collaborative on Health Care Expenditures Needs. The team from University of Maryland, Baltimore, w on ⢠Organized to explore the implementation of recommendation the grand prize The teams from George Mason, How ard, and 1 in the 2012 IOM report For the Publicâs Health: Investing in George Washington University, respectively, won three topical a Healthier Future. prizes. The judges for the 2019 competition included experts from the March of Dimes, the DC Maternal Mortality Review **Each action collaborative is an ad hoc activity under the auspices of the Committee, Moms Rising, the Association of American Medical Roundtable. The products of the action collaborative do not necessarily Colleges, and the Council on Social Work Education. represent the v iews of any one organization, the Roundtable, or the National Academies and have not been subjected to the review procedures of, nor are they a report or product of, the National Academies .