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Healthy People 2020 Leading Health Indicators App
Challenge
Webinar Presentation
Friday, December 16 2:00 pm EST
On today’s call:
Adam Wong Program Analyst, ONC
Carter Blakey Acting Director, ODPHP
Linda Harris Health Communication/ eHealth Lead, ODPHP
JL Neptune Senior Vice President, Health 2.0
Agenda for Today’s Meeting
ONC and the Investing in Innovation (i2) Program
A discussion of the Healthy People 2020 Leading Health Indicators (LHIs)
An Introduction to the Healthy People 2020 Leading Health Indicators App Challenge
Q&A About the Challenge
ONC and i2
i2 Goals
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• Better Health, Better Care, Better Value through Quality Improvement – Further the mission of the Department of Health and Human Services – Highlight programs, activities, and issues of concern
• Spur Innovation and Highlight Excellence – Motivate, inspire, and lead
• Community building – Development of ecosystem
• Stimulate private sector investment
Healthy People 2020 Leading Health Indicators
YOU
INSERT SLIDES HERE
What Is Healthy People?
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• A national agenda that communicates a vision for improving health and achieving health equity
• Creates a comprehensive strategic framework uniting health promotion and disease prevention issues under a single umbrella
• A set of science-based, measurable objectives with targets to be achieved by the year 2020
• Requires tracking of data-driven outcomes
Evolution of Key Elements Healthy People
Target Year 1990 2000 2010 2020
Overarching Goals
• Decrease mortality: infants–adults
• Increase independence among older adults
• Increase span of healthy life
• Reduce health dispari<es
• Achieve access to preven<ve services for all
• Increase quality and years of healthy life
• Eliminate health dispari<es
• AAain high-‐quality, longer lives free of preventable disease
• Achieve health equity; eliminate dispari<es
• Create social and physical environments that promote good health
• Promote quality of life, healthy development, healthy behaviors across life stages
# Topic Areas 15 22 28 42
# Objec<ves/ Measures
226/NA 312/NA 467/1,000 ~600/1200
Leading Health Indicators N/A N/A 22* 26*
*selected from the full set of Healthy People objec<ves
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Leading Health Indicators (LHIs)
• What are the Leading Health Indicators (LHIs)? - Targeted set of Healthy People 2020 objectives with targets. - Communicate high-priority health issues - Motivate action
• Why LHIs? Provide national organizations, states, local communities, businesses, and others with a set of critical health issues that can have a major impact on improving the health of the overall population.
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LHI Topics • Access to Health Services • Clinical Preventive Services • Environmental Quality • Injury and Violence • Maternal, Infant, and Child
Health • Mental Health
• Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Obesity
• Oral Health • Reproductive and
Sexual Health • Social Determinants • Substance Abuse • Tobacco
LHI Tab
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LHI Monthly Bulletin and Webinar • In January ODPHP will launch a monthly series called, “Who’s Leading
the Leading Health Indicators?”
• Series will include a monthly webinar
• For more information about the LHIs visit www.healthypeople.gov
Sign up for bulletins
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Connect with Healthy People
• Follow Healthy People on Twitter @gohealthypeople.
• Connect with Healthy People on LinkedIn.
• Join the Healthy People Consortium.
• Join the Healthy People listserv.
• Visit www.healthypeople.gov for up-to-date information and announcements.
• E-mail: [email protected].
The Challenge:
“For developers and public health experts to co-design an application that makes the Leading Health Indicators (LHIs)
customizable and easy to use ”
The Challenge:
These apps should include tools that help users integrate:
• LHI topic areas, measures and evidence-‐based resources
• Community, county and state health status comparisons
• Data from EHRs to assist with case management
• Real-‐<me communica<on tools to stay in touch with peers
• Web or mobile curricula to teach health promo<on and disease preven<on
• Related news, analyses and blogs from outside sources
• Related community level data, combining the LHI data in innova<ve ways
• Access to social media outlets and online networking communi<es
Co-Design
There are a number of way to co-design and build an app.
The first is to select a ‘persona’ or a specific user who might find your application useful and to design with that
person’s needs in mind.
The second - the co-design step – is for developers to team-up with a field expert who will help strategize the
application’s design and subsequent realization.
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LHI Topics • Access to Health Services • Clinical Preventive Services • Environmental Quality • Injury and Violence • Maternal, Infant, and Child
Health • Mental Health
• Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Obesity
• Oral Health • Reproductive and
Sexual Health • Social Determinants • Substance Abuse • Tobacco
Co-Design: ���Selecting a Persona
How can your app make a difference?
The matrix provided on the Healthy People Challenge site offers numerous scenarios to help get you get
started.
To implement your initiative, you must select determinants for each of the following:
a person, place and a Leading Health Indicator.
Co-Design (continued): ���Finding an Expert in the Field
How can you get your app to make a difference? …the possibilities are endless.
Now that you know the type of app you want to build, decide what your app will do.
Pair up with an expert and co-design the app to solve a problem or revolutionize the way that work is
done.
Evaluation Criteria
1. Easy Access
2. Platform Neutrality
3. User Appeal
4. Innovative Design
5. Broad Applicability
6. Integration of Health Data
7. Evidence of Co-Design and Collaboration
8. Bonus Points for Compliance with Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, use of plain language and use of health literacy principles
Timeline
Submission Period Ends 03-09-12
Winner Announced 04-10-12
at the National Health Promotion Summit in Washington, DC
Prizes
First Place: $10k
Second Place: $3k
Third Place: $2k