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Health Needs Assessment Workshop

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Title: Health Needs Assessment Workshop


1
Health Needs Assessment Workshop
  • Sue Cavanagh
  • Keith Chadwick

2
Workshop aims
 
  • To demonstrate the contribution that Health Needs
    Assessment can make to meeting national
    inequality targets, to addressing local
    priorities and to professional development
  • 2. To provide participants with a clear
    understanding of the health needs assessment
    process
  • 3. To provide the opportunity to consider the
    practical application of HNA for different types
    of populations

3
Workshop structure
  • Part 1 Introduction
  • Part 2 The HNA 5 step process
  • Discussion
  • Part 3 Case study presentation
  • Part 4 Group activity

4
Introduction
  • Health Needs Assessment is a systematic review of
    the health issues facing a population, leading to
    agreed priorities and resource allocation that
    will improve health and reduce inequalities.

5
Why is the HDA involved
  • The HDA considers that the systematic process
    used by HNA provides ideal opportunities to
    reduce inequalities by gathering evidence from
    and about specific populations and for utilising
    an evidence based approach to affect service
    changes and improvements.
  • The HDA supports HNA by
  • Providing written guidance
  • Providing a web site www.healthaction.nhs.uk
  • Supporting regional HNA workshops, learning sets
    and networks

6
How does HNA support National Targets
  • The Governments aim is to reduce health
    inequalities strategy by tackling the wider
    determinants of health, such as poverty, poor
    educational outcomes, worklessness, poor housing
    and the problems of disadvantaged neighbourhoods.
    This approach is supported by a national public
    service agreement (PSA)
  • by 2010 to reduce inequalities in health outcomes
    by 10 as measured by infant mortality and life
    expectancy at birth.
  • Tackling Health Inequalities A Programme for
    Action DH p7.
  • HNA provides a vital tool by being able to target
    populations
  • in most need of improved
  • support and services.

7
HNA is compulsory
  • HNA has been linked to health commissioning since
    1989, and in 2001Shifting the Balance gave
    specific responsibility for conducting HNAs to
    Primary Care Trusts.
  • HNAs are recommended in various policy documents
    to inform
  • Local Delivery Plans
  • Community Strategies
  • Specialised services commissioning
  • Health and social care joint commissioning
  • General Practice Strategic Development Plans

8
Benefits
  •      strengthened community involvement in
    decision-
  • making
  •       improved team and partnership working
  •        development of professional skills and
    experience.
  •        improved communication with other
    agencies and
  • the public
  •        better targeted services and use of
    resources

9
Links to other assessment tools
  • Health Impact Assessment (HIA)
  • Integrated Impact Assessment (IIA)
  • Health Equity Audit (HEqA)
  • Population
    Policy/ Project/ Programme
  • HNA
    HIA
  • HEqA
    IIA


10
The Five Steps of Health Needs Assessment
  • Aim
  • A systematic process focussed on a target
    population that
  • sets priorities for improving health and tackling
    local health
  • inequalities then plans effective change
  • Result
  • clear priorities for action
  • implementation of effective local action plans

11
Target population
  •  
  • The four main population types
  • 1.     Geographic at different levels eg
    regional/PCT/neighbourhood wide
  • 2.     Settings for example schools, workplaces,
    prisons, hospitals.
  • 3.     Shared social experience homelessness,
    refugee, ethnicity, culture,
  • age, sexuality.
  • 4.     Specific health experience diseases,
    mental health, disabilities. 
  • Example older people living in a deprived
    neighbourhood
  • Ensure you have
  •         Clearly defined the population.
  •         Clarity around sub groups
  • Checked they match with National/local priorities
    on reducing health inequalities?

12
Setting Priorities
  • Criteria For Setting Priorities
  • Impact
  • Which conditions / factors have the most
    significant impact on local health?
  •   Severity
  • Size
  • Changeability
  • What can effectively be done about the
    significant diseases / factors by those
    involved?

13
Setting Priorities
  • Acceptability
  • What are the most acceptable changes required
    for the maximum positive impact?
  • Resource feasibility
  • Are the resource implications of the proposed
    actions feasible?

14
Setting Priorities Sources of needs information
  • data about population characteristics and the
    severity and size of the health issues i.e. who,
    when,where and what
  • perceptions of the profiled population
  • perceptions of people providing the services
  • perceptions of managers of commissioning /
    provider organisations
  • relevant national, local or regional priorities

15
  • The 5 steps
  • Step 1 Getting started
  • who are the population to be assessed?
  • why are we doing this assessment?
  • who should be involved, when and how?
  • what skills are required?
  • Step 2 Identifying health priorities of the
    population
  • what diseases or factors have a significant
    impact?
  • which of these are changeable?
  • who are most at risk from these?

16
  • The 5 steps
  • Step 3 Choosing priorities for change
  • what significant diseases, conditions or
    factors affect this priority?
  • what can be done to improve this priority?
  • what are the acceptable, feasible changes?
  • what resources are required?
  • who will gain from these changes?
  • Step 4 Action planning
  • what are we aiming to do?
  • who is going to do it?
  • when is it going to be done?
  • how are we going to monitor and evaluate the
    programme?
  • what is our implementation and dissemination
    plan?
  • what is our risk assessment strategy?

17
The 5 steps
  • Step 5 Moving on
  • what learning has emerged from the project?
  • what needs to be done now/next?
  • Selection of next population/priority revisit
    step 1

18
Health triangle
  • Health Functioning

Health Functioning
  • Levels of prevention
  • occurring
  • recurring
  • consequences

Diseases / Conditions
  • Factors
  • biological
  • personal behaviours
  • social community networks
  • living working conditions
  • socio-economic, cultural and environmental
    conditions

19
Group Activity Step 1 Getting started
  • Select a population
  • How does this population relate to
    national,regional and local priorities?
  • 3. What would you hope the HNA to achieve (aims
    and objectives)
  • 4. Who would you want to be involved in the
    project (team, stakeholders, senior /policy
    mangers, skills)
  • 5. What resources would you require?
  • 6. What data might be available about this
    population and from where?
  • 7. What challenges/ difficulties might you
    encounter setting up this project?
  • 8. How would you overcome these
  • problems?
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