Local Public Health and Primary Care Collaboration: A Practice-Based Approach

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Bridging Health and Health Care Local Public Health and Primary Care Collaboration: A Practice-Based Approach Research In Progress Webinar Wednesday, July 13, 2016 12:00-1:00pm ET/ 9:00-10:00am PT 1

Title Agenda Title Welcome: Anna G. Hoover, PhD, Co-Director, RWJF Systems for Action National Coordinating Center, Assistant Professor, U. Kentucky Local Public Health and Primary Care Collaboration: A Practice-Based Approach Presenters: Elizabeth Gyllstrom, PhD, MPH, Senior Research Scientist, Minnesota Department of Health beth.gyllstrom@state.mn.us Rebekah Pratt, PhD, Assistant Professor, Department of Family Medicine & Community Health, U. Minnesota rjpratt@umn.edu Commentary: Michael A. Stoto, PhD, Professor, Health Systems Administration & Population Health, Georgetown University stotom@georgetown.edu and Alexander Brzezny, MD, MPH, FAAFP, Health Officer, Grant County Health District, Washington brzeznya@columbiabasinhospital.org Questions and Discussion 2

Presenters Elizabeth Gyllstrom, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Public Health Practice Section, Health Partnerships Division Minnesota Department of Health beth.gyllstrom@state.mn.us Rebekah Pratt, PhD Assistant Professor Department of Family Medicine and Community Health University of Minnesota rjpratt@umn.edu 3

Local Public Health and Primary Care Collaboration: A Practice-Based Approach Beth Gyllstrom, PhD, MPH and Rebekah Pratt, PhD PHSSR Webinar in Progress July 13, 2016 HEALTH PARTNERSHIPS DIVISION

Acknowledgements The Minnesota Department of Health is a grantee of Public Health Services and Systems Research (PHSSR), a national program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. This research would not be possible without the local PH directors and local clinic medical directors & staff who participated in the interviews & surveys, as well as all who participate on their practice-based research networks and have provided guidance on the implementation of this study. HEALTH PARTNERSHIPS DIVISION 5

Background Little knowledge of the degree to which public health and primary care work together at the local level. Pressure on public health and primary care organizations to collaborate is growing Expectations for increased efficiency and effectiveness of services and population health improvement Barriers to system integration Collaboration is challenging 6

Washington Betty Bekemeier, PhD, MPH, MSN, RN University of WA Minnesota Beth Gyllstrom, PhD, MPH, Principal Investigator, Minnesota Department of Health Rebekah Pratt, PhD, Co-Principal Investigator, University of Minnesota Kim Gearin, PhD, MS, Co-Investigator, MDH Carol Lange, MPH, Co-Investigator, UMN Kevin Peterson, MD, Co-Investigator, UMN Colorado Lisa Van Raemdonck, MPH CO Association of Local Public Health Officials Wisconsin Susan Zahner, DrPH, RN Tracy Mrochek, MPH University of WI-Madison Laura-Mae Baldwin, MD, MPH University of WA Don Nease, MD University of CO-Denver David Hahn, MD, MS University of WI-Madison

Conducted 40 interviews with local public health and primary care Key findings Surveyed public health and primary care leaders in all local jurisdictions Dialogue Action 8

Research Questions How does the degree of integration between PC and PH vary across local jurisdictions? Which barriers to PH-PC integration are most problematic? Does this differ based on PH vs. PC perspective? How might local PH and PC entities take action to promote their level of integration and overcome such barriers, while grounded in a practice-based perspective? 9

Survey Implementation -Sample drawn from: 241 LHD jurisdictions in 4 states (CO, MN, WA, WI) LHD directors and PC leaders -Respondents 193 PH (80%) 128 PC (31% overall, 50% geographic-specific) -Questions 38 online items Collaboration factors from each perspective *Primary care survey oversampled jurisdictions to increase overall jurisdictionspecific response rates 10

Methods Frequency distributions of response options for PH & PC separately Created PC/PH dyads in jurisdictions with at least 1 respondent in each 71 dyads across the 4 states Examined % agreement & correlation of responses between PC & PH within dyads Used PH, PC, & PC/PH dyad sets to examine distribution of jurisdictions within the multi-dimensional model of integration 11

Assigning Jurisdictions to Multi- Dimensional Model Questions assigned to Foundational or Energizing Characteristics. Responses to those questions were assigned values used to calculate scores Score distributions were assigned cut-points for jurisdictions placement in 1 of 4 quadrants 12

Jurisdiction Descriptions Jurisdiction Characteristics Full Set (n=241) PH Only (n=193) PC Only (n=128) PC-PH Dyad (n=71) Population Size Less than 50,000 50,000-100,000 Greater than 100,000 64.2% 16.5% 19.3% 64.8% 16.1% 19.1% 44.0% 12.8% 43.2% 47.9% 14.1% 38.0% % Poverty Less than 10.9% 11-14.9% 15% or higher 35.4% 38.3% 26.3% 33.2% 38.3% 28.5% 28.9% 39.1% 32.0% 36.6% 28.2% 35.2% % Non-White Less than 5% 5.1-8.9% 9.0% or higher 39.9% 31.3% 28.8% 39.9% 31.1% 29.0% 35.2% 24.2% 40.6% 28.2% 40.9% 31.9%

What did we learn? Some aspects of partnership build and maintain foundations Some activities raise energy and action. Satisfaction is not the same as action. Agreement that collaboration is important. There is a need for a more dynamic model to describe partnerships. Integration is likely not linear. 14

Weaker Energizing Characteristics Stronger Collaboration Framework Come together for specific clients or projects, or to address a crisis Have MOUs, contracts, and other formal structures Leadership directs work Lack shared vision, mutual trust, respect, and value Work together is ongoing Shared vision, mutual trust, respect, and value Formal structures in place Shared data and information Adequate staffing or financial commitment Rarely come together around projects or clients Inadequate staffing or financial commitment Few formal structures support working together Lack shared vision, mutual trust, respect, and value Shared vision, mutual trust, respect, and value Supportive leadership Few formal structures in place Inadequate staffing or financial commitment Weaker Foundational Characteristics Stronger 15

Weaker Energizing Characteristics Stronger Collaboration Framework 10% Public Health Only 37% Public Health Only 12% Primary Care Only 18% Primary Care Only 16% Paired Dyads 18% Paired Dyads 42% Public Health Only 11% Public Health Only 62% Primary Care Only 8% Primary Care Only 65% Paired Dyads 1% Paired Dyads Weaker Foundational Characteristics Stronger 16

Variation in Jurisdiction Assignment PH only has closest relationship to self-rated degree of working relationship for both PH & PC respondents separately LHD directors may be better positioned to reflect on working relationship given their broad community role More variation in roles represented in PC PH jurisdiction profile most similar to entirety of potential jurisdictions across the 4 states Distribution likely falls somewhere in between PC & PH only distributions Both perspectives important & valuable 17

Quadrant Characteristics (PH Data) Low Foundation/ Low Energy High Foundation/ Low Energy Low Foundation/ High Energy High Foundation/ High Energy LHD Structure Stand-Alone Within Agency 61% 39% 82% 18% 45% 55% 68% 32% Jurisdiction Type Single County Multi-County City/County City 60% 26% 3% 10% 82% 18% 0% 0% 55% 40% 5% 0% 73% 21% 1% 4% Population Size <50,000 50,000-100,000 >100,000 62% 25% 13% 73% 4% 23% 65% 15% 20% 65% 10% 25% 18

Quadrant Characteristics (PH Data) Low Foundation/ Low Energy High Foundation/ Low Energy Low Foundation/ High Energy High Foundation/ High Energy Number of Practices in Jurisdiction 1-4 5-19 20+ 46% 38% 16% 55% 23% 22% 35% 45% 20% 46% 39% 14% PH Approach Consistent across Clinics Generally same Varies widely 23% 48% 29% 41% 32% 27% 20% 40% 40% 40% 44% 16% 19

Key Barriers: Partnership-Related Communication Data sharing Lack of capacity Lack of prior partnership Lack of shared priorities Not understanding each other There are some other places, where I think we could just provide better communication with them if we had a way to electronically share information. I think it would enhance our being a part of their team, where they could rely on us for more easy communication. (CO Public Health) 20

Key Barriers: System-Related Constant change Funding environment Geographic Primary care context Resources Need for systems change It sure would be nice if the health department had access to all our data, you know, from our health records to run studies to learn more about the health of populations. In our community has I think there are 3 different EHRs in our community. So it s not a simple system thing. If there s somebody in the health department that was, became highly trained in our EHR they could you know help themselves to data and help us too. (WA Primary Care) 21

Taking Action: Foundational Capacity Connect on key programs with existing resources to build relationships & understanding Support PH as neutral convener, regional focus Support mission & priorities of PC Develop IT & communication capacity Leader commitment 22

Taking Action: Energizing Capacity Aligned goals and activities (strategic planning/community assessment) Engage in joint program/project opportunities to build relationship & understanding Frequent [bilateral] communication Share resources/staffing Innovation/EBP projects 23

Taking Action: Stakeholder Perspectives Need consistency with people/partners Align health goals with partners Joint grant proposals Joint work on CHA/CHIP Regional approaches Dedicated funding/incentives/cost sharing models Tool Kit of ideas 24

Conclusions Both sectors value working together, but unclear regarding next steps towards building relationships Paradigm conflict PH more likely to report a stronger working relationship Neither group reports high levels of working together Both report being satisfied PH more traditionally grounded in community outreach & coalition- building, PC may see value in the partnership as they continue to identify shared priorities 25

Limitations Difficulty in engaging primary care respondents from a wider breadth of local health jurisdictions Interviews focused on local jurisdictions where investigators knew at least some collaboration existed; may have missed additional issues that would have been raised in jurisdictions with little or no collaborative work Interview times were limited; may have missed important modifiable barriers 26

Implications for Policy & Practice Evidence-building for overcoming barriers (foundational and energizing) Evidence-building about the return on investment of greater integration and more collaboration Policy, incentives (funding) supporting more collaboration & integrating activities Attending to primary care and public health contexts and limitations Continued development of information technologies and information sharing Leader development for collaboration 27

Next Steps Study complete in fall 2016 Continued focus on translation and dissemination activities Considering future research questions that could go beyond PC-PH sectors to engage other community partners Role of our developing Tool Kit and other existing tools that could be used to build PC-PH relationships, as well as with other sectors 28

For More Information Beth Gyllstrom, beth.gyllstrom@state.mn.us Rebekah Pratt, rjpratt@umn.edu Kim Gearin, kim.gearin@state.mn.us Minnesota Research to Action Network: www.health.state.mn.us/ran Research Findings: Search for: Measuring Variation in the Integration of Primary Care and Public Health: A Multi-State PBRN Study of Local Integration and Health Outcomes 29

Project Updates go to: http://www.publichealthsystems.org/projects/measuring-variationintegration-primary-care-and-public-health-multi-state-pbrn-study-local 30

Commentary Michael A. Stoto, PhD Professor, Health Systems Administration and Population Health Georgetown University stotom@georgetown.edu Citation: Kania J, Kramer M (2011). Collective Impact. Stanford Social Innovation Review, 9(1): 36-41. Alexander Brzezny, MD, MPH, FAAFP Health Officer, Grant County Health District, Washington brzeznya@columbiabasinhospital.org Questions and Discussion Resource: Canadian Public Health & Primary Care Collaboration Toolkit http://www.toolkit2collaborate.ca 31

Webinar Archives & Upcoming Events go to: http://www.publichealthsystems.org/phssrresearch-progress-webinars Upcoming Webinar 32

Thank you for participating in today s webinar! For more information about the webinars, contact: Ann Kelly, Project Manager Ann.Kelly@uky.edu 111 Washington Avenue #201, Lexington, KY 40536 859.218.2317 www.systemsforaction.org 33

Speaker Bios Elizabeth Gyllstrom, PhD, MPH, is a Senior Research Scientist in the Public Health Practice section, Health Partnerships Division, Minnesota Department of Health (MDH). Trained as an epidemiologist, she has extensive experience working with state and local public health data. Previously, Dr. Gyllstrom worked in the MDH Center for Health Statistics, with a focus on maternal and child health research. She has been the Principal Investigator (PI) or co-pi of several public health services and systems research studies and staffs the Minnesota public health practice-based research network (PBRN). Rebekah Pratt, PhD, is a faculty member in the Department of Family Medicine and Community Health at the University of Minnesota. Dr. Pratt is a community psychologist and works in the area of public health approaches to mental health. She has extensive experience in conducting qualitative and mixed methods work in health services research. Her work explores making important linkages between qualitative and quantitative data sets, which offers an important contribution to work that considers both the process change, the impact of interventions, and the interactions between both process and outcome orientated data. She is an expert and trainer in NVivo 10, software to facilitate qualitative data analysis, and has additional expertise in the areas of health disparities, multi-morbidity and complexity. Michael A. Stoto, PhD, a Professor of Health Systems Administration and Population Health at Georgetown University, is a statistician and health services researcher. He also holds faculty appointments in the Department of Family Medicine, where he is the Associate Director of the Population Health Scholars Program, and the Georgetown University Law Center. Dr. Stoto is an expert on public health systems research (PHSR), applying and developing rigorous mixed-methods approaches to studying and evaluating federal, state, and local public health systems. His recent PHSR work has focused on public health emergency preparedness, regionalization in public health, the evaluation of biosurveillance methods, and the development of methods for assessing emergency preparedness capabilities based on exercises and actual events. Dr. Stoto s work in population health and public health assessment includes developing methods for evaluating community health assessments and performance measures to help hospitals, and state and local health departments in the Washington DC metropolitan area develop community health needs assessments. Alexander Brzezny, MD, MPH, FAAFP, has served as the Health Officer for the Grant County Health District, Washington since 2001 and is a family medicine physician in Ephrata, Washington. His experience includes that of European healthcare and public health systems and other international experiences, including a visiting study at the University of Iceland and University of Minas Gerais, Brazil. 34