SAVI Online Magazine | Page 8

PUTTING THE “COMMUNITY” IN COMMUNITY HEALTH Using tools like SAVI to analyze community data improves local health assessment quality, leading to better-targeted improvement plans that address the most pressing issues. Indiana hospitals have many opportunities to increase the value and improve the quality of their community health assessment reporting, according to an examination by the Indiana Partnership for Healthy Communities, a collaboration of the Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health, The Polis Center, and the Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute. The Partnership recently completed its review of 2012-2013 community health assessment reports required by the federal government. Among its findings, the Partnership uncovered the crucial role that data systems, like SAVI and its analytics tools, can play as hub of local information that can help to create higher value community health assessments. “Hospitals can use data to directly inform the community conversations they hold to identify health priorities,” says Karen Comer, Director of Health Geoinformatics at The Polis Center. For example, health indicator data can be used to verify a perceived community health disparity, such as a higher 8 incidence of lung cancer. In turn, hospitals can use data-informed discussions with community stakeholders to increase their awareness of and engagement with existing resources, such as smoking cessation programs. “Data also helps better target the use of financial and human resources for community health improvement efforts by using more geographically specific indicators, such as neighborhood-level versus county-level data on prenatal smoking rates,” Comer says. For example, a proposed educational campaign can be targeted to those neighborhoods where a higher percent of mothers report smoking during pregnancy. The review also indicated that hospitals have the opportunity to more actively engage local health departments throughout the assessment process. “The knowledge of the local health department is invaluable for community health needs assessments,” says Dr. Cynthia Stone of the Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health.