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Building State and Local Partnerships to Promote Preconception Health: The Florida Experience. Carol Brady, Executive Director, Northeast Florida Healthy Start Coalition, Inc. EveryWoman SE Webinar November 4, 2010. Background & Overview. MCH in Florida: Key Stakeholders - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Building State and Local Partnerships to Promote Preconception Health: The Florida Experience Carol Brady, Executive Director, Northeast Florida Healthy Start Coalition, Inc.
EveryWoman SE Webinar November 4, 2010
Background & Overview
• MCH in Florida: Key Stakeholders
• State & Local Collaborations in preconception health (PCH)– Perinatal Periods of Risk (PPOR) Practice Collaborative– Preconception Care (PCC) Community Initiatives (Title
V)– VitaGrant Initiative– Black Infant Health Practice Initiative– Interconception Care (ICC) Pilots (MOD)
• Lessons Learned
MCH in Florida
• State Healthy Start legislation– Created and funded 30 community-based
non-profits focused on reducing infant mortality, promoting healthy child development
• State agency leadership– Title V willing to “think outside box”
• Strong March of Dimes– History of collaboration (state DOH, local
MCH agencies)– Visionary
MCH in Florida
• Stakeholders: offer different strengths, resources, organizational structures, capacity
• Allowed Florida to create, take advantage of opportunities in PCC
• Highlight five examples of state-local partnerships
PPOR Practice Collaborative
• Recognition of need to move before and beyond pregnancy (2002)
• Opportunity to “build a case” using Perinatal Periods of Risk (PPOR)
• Proposal submitted to MOD to replicate national practice collaborative (CityMatCH) with coalitions and local health departments in seven largest counties
PPOR Practice Collaborative
• Teams met quarterly to analyze data, translate data into practice
• DOH provided TA, along with other experts
• Resulted in expansion of HS services to include interconception education and support, in addition to “traditional” case services during pregnancy
• Link between PCC and disparities
• Incorporated into state plan (Title V)
PCC Community Initiatives
• $3 million in “extra” Title V funding authorized in 2006
• DOH allocated funding to Healthy Start Coalitions (HSC) to develop and implement new CDC recommendations on PCC
• Focus: community outreach & education, provider education & direct services
• Streamlined RFP & funding process
PCC Community Initiatives
• Community OutreachMovie theatre ads: raising awareness
among young womenFaith-based partnershipsCollaborations (STEPS, Federal
Qualified Health Centers (FQHC), Closing the Gap Grants, Zero Exposure, WIC)
PCC Community Initiatives
• Provider EducationConferences, workshops, train-the-
trainerWeb sitesInfo sheets, brochures
PCC Community Initiatives
• Direct ServicesDental care to address periodontal
infections: women identified in primary care, family planning clinics
Weight management, nutrition counseling to address obesity
Training, screening, education in private MD offices
2006 – 2008 VitaGrant Initiative
• MOD funded and partnered with the Department of Health – Provided and distributed educational
materials and multivitamins with folic acid to women of childbearing age statewide
– Paid for staff outposted in state DOH– Knowledge increased from 3 – 92%;
multivitamin consumption increased from 6 percent to 88%
Black Infant Health Practice Initiative
• Advocacy efforts (disparities) resulted in $1 million appropriation for BIHPI (Federal HS)
• Implemented through DOH in eight counties with largest disparities in birth outcomes (urban, rural) in 2008-09
• Teams included state, federal HS, DOH and community representatives
• Strategies: PPOR, FIMR and community engagement
Black Infant Health Practice Initiative
• Results underscored importance of preconception health on disparities
• Aligned efforts in communities with state & federal Healthy Start initiatives
• Strengthened advocacy around preconception health
• Increased community awareness, engagement around issue
ICC Pilots
• MOD initiated “focused” funding in 2009
• Three community-based pilot projects currently funded to develop ICC model for mothers who have had a baby hospitalized in NICU
• Multi-site evaluation
• Potential for sustainability through HS
Lessons Learned
• State, local partnerships are more powerful than “top down” or “bottom up” alone.
• Alliances between public, private and voluntary sectors provide the flexibility required for innovation.
• Collaborative state, local initiatives can stretch limited resources.
• Different perspectives – one goal
Resources
• EveryWoman Florida
http://everywomanfl.com
• Preconception Health Indicator Report
http://everywomanfl.com/Pages/Healthcare_Providers/Preconception_Health_Indicator_Report.aspx
• HS Standards & Guidelines – Chapter 21 ICC Education & Counseling
http://www.doh.state.fl.us/family/mch/hs/hstraining/hstraining.html