Improving Health in the Community: A Role for Performance Monitoring

Front Cover

How do communities protect and improve the health of their populations? Health care is part of the answer but so are environmental protections, social and educational services, adequate nutrition, and a host of other activities.

With concern over funding constraints, making sure such activities are efficient and effective is becoming a high priority.

Improving Health in the Community explains how population-based performance monitoring programs can help communities point their efforts in the right direction.

Within a broad definition of community health, the committee addresses factors surrounding the implementation of performance monitoring and explores the "why" and "how to" of establishing mechanisms to monitor the performance of those who can influence community health. The book offers a policy framework, applies a multidimensional model of the determinants of health, and provides sets of prototype performance indicators for specific health issues.

Improving Health in the Community presents an attainable vision of a process that can achieve community-wide health benefits.

 

Contents

Executive Summary
1
1 Introduction
23
2 Understanding Health and Its Determinants
40
3 Managing a Shared Responsibility for the Health of a Community
59
4 A Community Health Improvement Process
77
5 Measurement Tools for a Community Health Improvement Process
126
6 Conclusions and Recommendations
166
A Prototype Performance Indicator Sets
183
Health Care Resource Allocation
262
Infant Health
276
Tobacco and Health
300
VaccinePreventable Diseases
324
Violence
345
B Methodological Issues in Developing Community Health Profiles and Performance Indicator Sets
360
Exploring the Issues
374
Conceptual Framework and Community Experience
416

Breast and Cervical Cancers
189
Depression
205
Elder Health
229
Environmental and Occupational Lead Poisoning
242
E Committee Biographies
452
Acronyms
460
Index
463
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