Topic:Assessing the Next Best Step
Using the Riverbend City: Strategic Planning for Community Needs media piece you completed in this unit’s study, focus on the public health issues and challenges each character described. The community is clearly at a critical inflection point where strategic approaches should be enacted to address the communitys pressing public health challenges. But where and how should the director of the local public health department begin?
Drawing from key learnings in your readings, identify and describe three of the six approaches to planning you feel the director of the local public health department should consider. Specifically reference the community members’ concerns in your response. For each approach, provide a definition, the condition(s) for which it is best applied, and why you selected the approach.
· Include THREE academic references above 2017
· NO CONSIDERATION FOR PLAGIARISM
· APA FORMAT AND INDEX CITATION
· PLEASE WRITE FROM PUBLIC HEALTH PERSPECTIVE
· Due 7/20/22 at 10am
Instruction
As the Director of the Riverbend City Health Department you have convened the Community Action Board (comprised of several concerned citizens) to discuss the results of the Riverbend Community Health Needs Assessment. It will be your responsibility to determine next steps (in the Strategic Planning process) that will be informed by these results.
The Community Action Board meets to talk about the implementation plan. see each group below to see what they discuss. Review the Riverbend City Community Health Needs Assessment here
Riverbend City
Group1
Martin Lewis, Parent: You know what bugs me? The panhandlers in Ruby Lake are getting so much worse. It was always kind of a problem, but now when I wait for a bus I actually feel kind of unsafe. Some of those people are aggressive and seem kind of unhinged.
Ed Kowalski, Riverbend City Police Department: Its tough. I can tell you that, on the force, we know its a problem. Homelessness all over Riverbend City has gotten a lot worse in the past five years, especially in Ruby Lake.
Nicole Fernandez, Health Care Representative: Well, if we want to talk about public health needs, there you go. Spiking homelessness represents a collision of a bunch of public health issues a lot of the time. The correlation between homelessness and mental health problems is very large, and we know for a fact that access to mental health care is a glaring problem in the city. Across all populations, by the way, not just among the homeless. Same thing for substance abuse- it can be a gateway to homelessness or an endemic condition within it, and either way, we again have real problems.
Group-2
Victor Maldonado, Community Activist: If we look at the Community Health Needs Assessment, the top needs all seem to pop up here. Mental health- top concern, check. Substance abuse, check. Health care access, big check.
Father Junot Rivera, Faith-Based Representative: Certainly thats a problem among the homeless, but I think we can agree that its a problem throughout the neighborhood and the city. In my parish, there are very few people who feel like they have easy access to healthcare, especially preventative healthcare. And this is both among people who work and people who dont.
Victor Maldonado, Community Activist: And the other two in the top five concerns are in the same neighborhood, thematically: programs and resources for obesity prevention, and for chronic disease. Add this up, and our citizens overwhelmingly have problems getting health care in a systematic and preventative way.
Martin Lewis, Parent: : And thats why we need to work out how the city and county can help connect people with these services.
Recent Comments