Measuring Multi-Sector Contributions to Public Health Services and their Impact on Population Health

Date
Presentation Slides

screen_shot_2016-08-18_at_10.36.19_am Overview

The delivery and financing systems for medical care, public health, and social and community services are powerful determinants of health and wellbeing for families and communities across the U.S.  Unfortunately, these systems interact in complex and often poorly understood ways through fragmented funding streams, organizational relationships, information flows, and governance and decision-making structures. This session will feature new studies underway through the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s Systems for Action (S4A) Research Program to test multi-sector strategies for integrating delivery and financing systems to improve population health.

Featured speakers from the S4A Collaborating Research Centers:

David Meltzer, MD, PhD, University of Chicago Urban Labs. Expanding a Comprehensive Care Program to Address Social and Cultural Needs of Urban Seniors at High Risk of Hospital Admission.

William Riley, Arizona State University Modeling System Fragmentation and Alignment Opportunities Across Medical, Behavioral, and Criminal Justice Systems for Persons with Mental Illness

Nir Minachemi, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis Improving Population and Clinical Health with Integrated Services and Advanced Analytics

Glen Mays, University of Kentucky. Measuring Multi-Sector Contributions to Public Health Services and their Impact on Population Health


Details

Project: Multi-Sector Population Health Activities Reduce Income-related Disparities in Life ExpectancyNALSYS Resources and Results
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