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Southwest Center for Public Health Preparedness

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Title: Southwest Center for Public Health Preparedness


1
Southwest Center for Public Health Preparedness
  • Review and Practice Evaluation

David L. Johnson, PhD, Director College of Public
Health, University of Oklahoma February 26, 2004
2
2004 Review and Practice Evaluation
  • Part A Introduction

3
Southwest Center for Public Health Preparedness
  • Mission
  • Provide education and training to help prepare
    the public health workforce and others for
    response to terrorism, emerging infectious
    diseases, and other public health disasters

http//www.swcphp.ouhsc.edu/
4
SWCPHP Specific Objectives
  • Accurately assess competencies in core public
    health skills and bioterrorism preparedness
  • Design, develop and deliver education and
    training to enhance agency preparedness to
    respond to bioterrorism events
  • Perform best practices evaluations related to
    emerging public health issues
  • Assist in sustaining and enhancing the public
    health workforce

5
Metrics for Success
  • Effectiveness
  • Efficiency
  • Productivity
  • Accountability

6
Effectiveness
  • Tailored to the audience
  • Relevance course content tailored to the
    specific audience through needs assessment
  • Credibility utilize local subject matter experts
    (SMEs) when possible and appropriate
  • Value relate the material to everyday practice
    needs and overall disaster preparedness as well
    as bioterrorism preparedness credential with
    continuing education credit (CME, etc.)
  • Competency-based training
  • Focus on both core public health competencies and
    bioterrorism preparedness competencies
  • Match the competencies to the functional role
  • Enhance and evaluate organizational as well as
    individual competencies

7
Efficiency
  • Avoid redundancy and waste
  • Close coordination with CDC Focus Area G and HRSA
    Hospital Bioterrorism Preparedness Program
    training efforts
  • Contract with SMEs to minimize overhead
  • Leverage resources
  • Partner whenever possible to expand audience
    access and leverage funding
  • Utilize Train-the-Trainer approach where
    appropriate

8
High Productivity
  • Broad variety of training modalities
  • Seminars, workshops, short courses, drills
    exercises, graduate courses degree programs
  • On-site in-person training
  • Synchronous distance education (graduate courses)
  • Streaming video
  • DVD / CD-ROM-based (in development)
  • Aggressive schedule of offerings (see pg. 28, 1
    qtr FY04 report)
  • Intensive and continuous course development
    effort
  • Wide variety of topics and audiences
  • Broad geographic coverage
  • Originally Oklahoma and New Mexico
  • North Texas (Tarrant County) via NACCHOs Project
    Public Health Ready
  • Colorado added in FY 2004 geographic expansion

9
Accountability
  • To trainees
  • Critiques obtained for every training course
  • Continuous quality improvement process
  • To our partners and client organizations
  • Advisory Board of practice partners and clients
  • Quarterly review and coordination meetings
  • To CDC ASPH
  • Monthly conference calls, quarterly reports,
    annual meetings
  • To Congress

10
2004 Review and Practice Evaluation
  • Part B Evaluation Criteria

11
2004 Review and Practice Evaluation
  • Part B-I
  • Leadership and Strategic Planning

12
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13
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14
Public Health Education and Training
Infrastructure BEFORE the SWCPHP
  • No formal individual needs assessment process
  • Few preparedness training opportunities
  • Infrequent drills and exercises
  • No Certificate program in core public health
  • Only discipline-specific MPH programs
    (biostatistics, epidemiology, health promotion,
    etc.)
  • No access to graduate public health education
    outside two major metropolitan areas
  • No distance education (DE)

15
Public Health Education and Training
Infrastructure AFTER the SWCPHP
  • Objective needs assessment
  • Broad spectrum of training opportunities
  • Drills and exercises keyed to the Response Plan
  • Aggressive and expanding Distance Education
    program
  • New graduate public health education curricula
    tailored to health agency personnel
  • New specialty MPH in Terrorism Preparedness

16
2004 Review and Practice Evaluation
  • Part B-II
  • Customer and Market Focus

17
Products and Clients
  • Products
  • Short courses, seminars, workshops, drills
    exercises
  • Graduate coursework leading to a Master of Public
    Health (MPH) degree in Preparedness and Terrorism
  • Clients
  • Public Health Leaders Managers, Professionals,
    and Support Staff (80)
  • First Responders, Educators, Media, First
    Receivers (ER, EMS, etc.), others (20)
  • Multiple Levels
  • Senior Leaders and Managers
  • Practice Professionals
  • Support Personnel

18
SWCPHP Core Partners
  • College of Public Health
  • New curricula tailored to public health agency
    personnel
  • Course scheduling to accommodate working students
  • Active involvement of the Dean, Chairs, and
    senior faculty
  • Distance Education infrastructure investment
  • Oklahoma State Department of Health
  • Tuition support
  • Employees allowed time off to attend classes
  • Advancement incentives tied to advanced education
  • Active involvement of the Commissioner and senior
    leaders
  • Distance Education infrastructure investment

19
SWCPHP Core Partners (cont.)
  • Tulsa City-County and Oklahoma City-County Health
    Departments
  • Objective needs assessment methods development
  • Training methods development
  • Quantitative evaluation methods development

20
Additional Partners
  • New Mexico Department of Health
  • Oklahoma Department of Mental Health and
    Substance Abuse Services
  • Oklahoma City Area Indian Health Service
  • Oklahoma City Area Inter-Tribal Health Board
  • Indian Health Resource Center of Tulsa
  • Albuquerque Area Indian Health Board
  • Oklahoma Department of Environmental Quality
  • Oklahoma Department of Emergency Management
  • Oklahoma State Medical Association
  • Oklahoma Hospital Association
  • University of Oklahoma at Tulsa
  • University of North Texas
  • Los Alamos National Laboratory
  • Tulsa AHEC
  • University of New Mexico
  • Central Colorado Area Health Education Centers
    (AHECs)

21
Partnerships Resulting from SWCPHP Efforts
  • NACCHO - Public Health Ready Project
  • Working closely with Tulsa City-County Health
    Department and Tarrant County (Texas) Health
    Department, as well as the Cherokee Nation to
    assess preparedness for bioterrorism and
    emergency response
  • Memorial Institute for the Prevention of
    Terrorism (MIPT)
  • University of Texas School of Public Health,
    Academic Center for Public Health Preparedness

22
New Partnerships (cont.)
  • HRSA - Bioterrorism Hospital Preparedness Program
  • Best practices evaluation and technical
    assistance related to expedient engineering
    techniques for patient isolation in bioterrorism
    and epidemic disease response
  • Working with the MIPT and UTSPH to develop
    integrated first responder / public health
    preparedness training

23
Graduate Public Health Education Maintaining the
Public Health Workforce
  • Active collaboration between the University of
    Oklahoma College of Public Health, Oklahoma State
    Department of Health, and the Southwest Center
    for Public Health Preparedness
  • Tailor public health curricula to health agency
    needs
  • Improve access to graduate public health
    education
  • Stimulate current health department employees to
    pursue formal public health education
  • Promote interest among non-employee students to
    seek public health agency careers

24
A Collaborative Effort
  • College of Public Health
  • New curricula tailored to public health agency
    personnel
  • Course scheduling to accommodate working students
  • Active involvement of the Dean, Chairs, and
    senior faculty
  • Distance Education infrastructure investment
  • Oklahoma State Department of Health
  • Tuition support
  • Employees allowed time off to attend classes
  • Advancement incentives tied to advanced education
  • Active involvement of the Commissioner and senior
    leaders
  • Distance Education infrastructure investment
  • Southwest Center for Public Health Preparedness
  • Develop curricula and courses in Preparedness
    topics
  • Provide technical support to preparedness
    instructors

25
New Product Graduate Certificate in Public Health
  • Specifically tailored to public health agency
    personnel
  • 18 semester hours
  • Core didactic public health education in
    biostatistics, epidemiology, health promotion,
    health administration policy, and environmental
    health
  • Integrated public health practice course via case
    studies and problem based learning involving
    bioterrorism scenario

26
New Product MPH in Public Health Practice
  • 44 semester hours, of which 18 are from the
    Certificate program
  • Broad-based preparation in all core areas
  • 9 hours of electives to allow additional focus
  • Particularly suited to public health agency
    leaders and managers

27
New Product MPH in Preparedness and Terrorism
  • Specifically designed for public health
    preparedness and response planners
  • 44 semester hours,
  • Broad-based preparation in all core areas
  • Focus on preparedness for bioterrorism, emerging
    infectious diseases, and other public health
    disasters

28
New Graduate Courses Developed for the MPH in
Preparedness and Terrorism
CPH 7113 Current Topics in Preparedness CPH 7223
Policy and Legal Aspects of Terrorism CPH
7433 Mental Health and Psychological Aspects
of Terrorism CPH 7533 Emergency Risk
Communications CPH 7940 Field Practice in Public
Health Preparedness
29
2004 Review and Practice Evaluation
  • Part B-III
  • Information and Analysis

30
Productivity Statistics for 5 Quarters (Oct
2002-Dec 2003)
  • Continuing Education
  • 3,300 persons trained (700/qtr average)
  • 57 training events (10/qtr average)
  • 21,200 person-hours of training (4000/qtr
    average)

Average cost 37/hour or 296/day
31
SWCPHP Y1 Q1 Training
32
SWCPHP Y1 Q2 Training
33
SWCPHP Y1 Q3 Training
34
SWCPHP Y1 Q4 Training
35
SWCPHP Y2 Q1 Training
36
Productivity Statistics for 5 Quarters (Oct
2002-Dec 2003) (cont.)
  • Graduate Education
  • 43 health department professionals trained
  • 596 semester hours of coursework
  • 8,940 classroom hours

37
Public Health Employee Education Gains Achieved
to Date
  • 43 OSDH students currently enrolled
  • 25 expected to complete the Certificate by Dec
    2004
  • Broad and balanced representation
  • Oklahoma City OSDH employees (22 students)
  • HIV/STD Service Injury Prevention
  • Immunization Special Services
  • Financial Management Child Abuse Prevention
  • Emergency Medical Service Nursing Service
  • Maternal and Child Health Laboratory Service
  • Family Health Administration Internal Audit Unit
  • Community Health Administration Tobacco Use
    Prevention
  • Acute Disease Epidemiology
  • County health department employees (17 students
    representing 12 departments)
  • Other (4 students formerly with OSDH)

38
Areas of Special Expertise
  • Objective scenario-based evaluation
  • Disaster mental health aspects of public health
    preparedness
  • Policy and legal aspects of terrorism
    preparedness
  • Water supply security
  • Technical assistance in expedient engineering
    methods for hospital and health department
    isolation surge capacity
  • Cultural issues in working with Native American
    and Hispanic populations

39
Objective Evaluation
  • SWCPHP staff have been active in developing and
    validating objective techniques for preparedness
    evaluation
  • Current projects
  • NACCHO Project Public Health Ready assessment,
    training, and evaluation support to the Tarrant
    County, TX Public Health Department and Tulsa
    City-County Health Department
  • Several publications submitted or in preparation,
    participation in panel discussions at national
    ASPH/CDC and NACCHO meetings

40
Disaster Mental Health
  • SWCPHP staff are nationally active in disaster
    mental health preparedness efforts, particularly
    regarding the protection of children
  • Current activities
  • P-FLASH and K-FLASH mental health practitioner
    training (direct and as Train-the-Trainer)
    courses on-going
  • Disaster mental health planning for school
    administrators, counselors, and nurses in
    development
  • Best practices survey of state mental health
    disaster plans in progress
  • Developing graduate course in disaster mental
    health

41
Policy and Legal Assets
  • SWCPHP staff and practice partners with combined
    public health and law backgrounds
  • Peter Budetti, MD,JD Betty Pfefferbaum, MD, JD
  • Madeline Robertson, MD,JD Les Beitsch, MD JD
  • Ken Levit, JD Gary Cox, JD
  • David L. Boren, JD President, University of
    Oklahoma and former Chair, United States Senate
    Intelligence Committee

42
Current Public Health Law and Policy Related
Activities
  • Developing model public health policy and
    preparedness workshop format and curriculum
  • Pilot workshop scheduled for April 2004 in
    partnership with the Oklahoma Public Health
    Association

43
Water Supply Security
  • SWCPHP staff and partners are providing both
    preparedness planning and hands-on emergency
    response training in drinking water supply
    security
  • Active partnership with Los Alamos National
    Laboratory trainers
  • Current projects
  • Water treatment plant operator preparedness
  • Chlorine release emergency response
  • Chapter on water security for new bioterrorism
    text in final draft by SWCPHP personnel

44
Isolation Surge Capacity
  • SWCPHP staff are leading a national effort to
    evaluate expedient engineering methods for
    isolating potentially infectious patients in
    hospitals and health department during natural or
    bioterrorism-related outbreaks
  • Current projects
  • Preliminary evaluation of free-standing HEPA
    filtration units and HEPA-filtered
    exhaust-ventilated patient enclosures (completed)
  • Detailed case study evaluation of real-world
    applications of various system designs, and
    development of a guidelines document in
    partnership with the HRSA Hospital Bioterrorism
    Preparedness effort

45
Cultural Issues
  • SWCPHP staff are working with Oklahoma tribes,
    New Mexico tribes and pueblos, and regional
    Latino populations
  • Current projects
  • Disaster crisis communications development under
    the CDC Pre-Event Message Development project
  • NACCHO Project Public Health Ready Cherokee
    Nation
  • Indian Health Service Incident Command System
    training (approximately 50 of all IHS hospitals,
    health centers, and field clinics fall within the
    SWCPHP support area)

46
2004 Review and Practice Evaluation
  • Part B-IV
  • Systems Development

47
Education and Training Delivery Methodologies
  • Traditional in-class delivery
  • Synchronous video teleconferencing
  • Asynchronous streaming
  • Digital capture for Internet streaming or CD-ROM
    distribution
  • Hard-copy materials

48
Large Geographic Support Region
  • SWCPHP supports three states
  • 300,000 square miles
  • 10,000,000 population
  • 9,200-member public health workforce (excluding
    Indian Health Service and Tribes)
  • Geography is a driver for innovation and an
    enhanced distance education infrastructure
  • Collaboration between OSDH and SWCPHP has made
    possible significant expansion in DE capabilities

49
Distance Education Initiative
  • State-of-the-art synchronous video teleconference
    delivery statewide, with interstate compatibility
  • Evening and weekend course scheduling, video
    capture, and on-line streaming to accommodate
    working students
  • DE infrastructure funding provided by OSDH and
    COPH
  • 220,844 OSDH
  • 175,000 COPH

50
Oklahoma State Department of HealthH.323
Videoconference Sites
OSDH H.323 Videoconference Sites
OCCHD
OSDH
51
College and university H.323 hub sites in Oklahoma
52
2004 Review and Practice Evaluation
  • Part B-V
  • Business Focus

53
The Bottom Line Public Health Preparedness has
been significantly enhanced during the Centers
first year
  • Opportunities for Best Practices advances in
    demonstrating public health preparedness
  • Objective rather than subjective assessment and
    evaluation
  • Organizational as well as individual preparedness
    evaluation, on the NACCO model
  • Training and evaluation keyed to the
    organizations Emergency Response Plan
  • Integrated scenario-based evaluation/training/re-e
    valuation

54
Funding Leveraged in Support of SWCPHP Goals
  • COPH, OSDH distance education initiative
  • Synchronous DE infrastructure
  • Asynchronous (Internet web site)
  • CD-ROM based materials
  • OSDH tuition assistance
  • MIPT integrated first responder / public health
    training
  • In cooperation with UTHSC A-CPHP
  • CDC Pre-Event Message Development

55
Involvement of Partners in Planning,
Implementation, or Communication
  • Advisory Board
  • Curriculum Development Committee
  • Assessment and evaluation methods development
  • Lecturers in Grand Rounds, short courses, and
    graduate courses
  • COPH Liaison Office at OSDH

56
Human Resources Management
  • Mix of on-staff, contractor, and partner subject
    matter experts, with a total of 4 administrative
    staff for CO, NM, OK
  • In-state facilitation by our contractual partners
    in New Mexico and Colorado
  • Utilize LOCAL subject matter experts whenever
    possible
  • University contractor facilitates CME
    credentialing

57
Types of Competency-Based Training and Education
  • Grand Rounds
  • Seminars
  • Workshops
  • Short courses
  • Tabletop exercises
  • Problem-based learning and case studies
  • Hands-on field exercises
  • Conferences
  • Graduate public health coursework

58
2004 Review and Practice Evaluation
  • Part C
  • Summary

59
Summary
  • Working closely with our partners
  • Highly productive and cost-effective
  • Leveraging funds via partnerships
  • Sustaining and enhancing the workforce by
    enhancing access to formal public health
    education
  • Developing special expertise in a number of
    nationally relevant areas

60
Southwest Center for Public Health Preparedness
  • Discussion
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