TEAM UP TAKE ACTION CONFERENCE
In partnership with Dartmouth Health, Vermont PHA, and Maine PHA
DECEMBER 9, 2022 I Virtual Meeting
SCHEDULE & SPEAKERS |
8:30 - 9:00 AM
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Welcome Remarks
Sally Kraft, MD, MPH Vice President, Population Health, Dartmouth Health Hanan Bedri, MS, MA Executive Director New Hampshire Public Health Association |
9:00 - 10:00 AM
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Opening Keynote Address: Taking up the Equity Lessons of Covid: Let's Imagine a New Public Health World Together
This talk will review some of the key equity lessons of Covid-19, share how the New England federal family is working to address them, and suggest creative ways to catalyze partnerships across New England to imagine a more equitable future together in public health and beyond. We must fully utilize this moment to Team Up to Take Action! Speakers Betsy Rosenfeld, JD, Regional Health Administrator - Region 1, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health (OASH), US Department of Health and Human Service Gary J. Kleinman Regional Administrator, Region 1 (New England) Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response (ASPR) US Department of Health and Human Services |
10:00 - 11:00 AM
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Morning Breakout Sessions
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Breakout Room 1: Telling the Stories that Heal: COVID, Storytelling and the Public's Health
This session illustrates a collaborative COVID-focused storytelling project called Our Story NH between public health, healthcare, media, and higher education funded through the NH Charitable Foundation that collects first-person COVID stories across NH, maps those stories, and hosts community-based and virtual storytelling workshops. The Our Story NH project collects diverse voices across NH in written, audio and digital media formats. These stories are mapped (assuming consent) and shared to help bridge understanding gaps amplified by the COVID pandemic. The project utilizes a robust equity-centered ethical framework that focuses on the health and well-being of the storyteller. Learning Objectives Upon completion, session attendees will:
Moderator
Speakers
Breakout Room 2: Intersections Between State and Local Public Health: COVID-19 and the Local Health Officer Local municipalities and public health officers played a significant role in the State of New Hampshire's response to COVID-19. These local officials, who have statutory authority to perform sanitary inspections and respond to environmental health-related concerns, were tasked with ensuring compliance with emergency orders issued during the pandemic. During this session, we will review the relationship between NH DHHS and local public health officials to control the spread of COVID-19, as well as discuss the legislative response to the expanded authority of the local health officer. We will highlight important legislative changes and future threats to local public health powers. Learning Objectives Upon completion, session attendees will:
Moderator
Speaker
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11:00 - 11:15 AM
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Break
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11:15 AM - 12:15 PM
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Breakout Room 3: Keep Us Thriving: Five Principles for Advancing Health Equity
Recognizing that community conditions and social needs significantly influence health outcomes is not new. The pandemic has underscored this point and highlighted the known health disparities and structural inequities that exist between communities. Effectively addressing social determinants of health (SDoH) will require dynamic data sets that provide insight into local community needs and opportunities. Join us as we explore opportunities to ensure communities and individuals most impacted have the power to make decisions; leverage the power of referral data to improve access to social care; measure and evaluate data; remove barriers to data sharing; and Use data to drive action. Learning Objectives Upon completion, session attendees will:
Moderator
Speakers
Breakout Room 4: Building Alliances within Communities for Health Equity: A Vermont System of Local Collaboratives to Strengthen Community Health Infrastructures The Vermont Public Health Institute (VTPHI,) as an organizational component of the Vermont Public Health Association (VtPHA,) received a $4.1 million CDC grant to build community public health infrastructure by addressing issues based on health inequities as made evident by the COVID 19 pandemic. The Vermont Community Health Equity Partnership (VTCHEP) supports the creation of health equity capacity building in VDH Districts by creating local collaborative learning coalitions. The presentation will address how we built VTCHEP, a small non-profit organization “from scratch” within a few months, recruited and hired staff, and created community learning collaboratives using the Collective Impact Model. We advise the local Learning Collaboratives on the many aspects of community health systems work, such as community needs assessments, application of quantitative and qualitative data, selecting a “backbone organization” and “Integrator “staff, and developing a process for distributing their funds allotted from our total grant amount. We also subcontracted with key consulting firms for organizational and group communications and assistance in incorporating health equity as the guiding driver of programming. At the time of the TUTA conference, the local Learning Collaboratives will have implemented “Round 1” of the granting process. We will assess and apply lessons learned for the second round of community grants. Evaluation is being conducted using the Result Based Accountability (RBA) model. Learning Objectives Upon completion, session attendees will:
Moderator
Speakers
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12:15 PM
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Lunch Break
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1:15 PM
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Afternoon Keynote Address: Driving Dirt Road Equity: Reimagining Rural Health
In the early months of the pandemic, rural communities have outpaced urban areas in COVID-19 deaths and sustained significant impacts on health, healthcare systems, and economic well-being. At the same time, the pandemic has illuminated strengths that can be leveraged to address longstanding rural health challenges. This talk will explore how lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic can help us to reimagine rural health equity. Speaker Anne N. Sosin, MPH, Policy Fellow, The Nelson A. Rockefeller Center, Dartmouth College |
2:15 - 3:15 PM
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Afternoon Breakout Sessions
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Breakout Session 1: Medical Legal Partnership (MLP): The Integration of Legal Services in Healthcare Settings to Address and Support Social Determinants of Health
This session outlines the value of legal assistance through developing a Medical-Legal partnership in two diverse settings to improve individuals' care and health. The unique settings that will be described include a recovery center and family resource center, which address health and social determinants of health across their vulnerable populations. Creating cross-system partnerships provides an opportunity to bolster the capacity of the healthcare workforce. Learning Objectives Upon completion, session attendees will:
Moderator
Speaker
Breakout Session 2: Health Equity Roundtable Health Equity Q&A Session In this interactive recap session, conference attendees, will network with Penrose Jackson, Laural Ruggles, Nadine Lamontagne, and Anne N. Sosin. This is an opportunity to ask questions, share your experiences, and discuss health equity challenges and opportunities. The session will be facilitated by Sally Kerschner, RN, MSN, of the Vermont Public Health Assn and also a TUTA planning committee member. Learning Objectives Upon completion, session attendees will:
Moderator
Panelists
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3:15 - 3:30 PM
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Break
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3:30 - 4:30 PM
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Breakout Session 3: The Promise and Power of Community Health Workers:
Paving a path to health equity in Vermont, Texas and New Hampshire Serving the healthcare needs of complex, vulnerable patients has moved the traditional healthcare system to collaborate more closely with those outside of it—including social service, public health agencies, and community-based organizations. Increasingly, primary care practices are designing and implementing health equity interventions to address the root causes of negative social determinants of health to support systematically excluded communities to achieve and maintain health. Community health workers have emerged as heroes during the COVID-19 pandemic and gaining broader recognition for their unique and invaluable work. This session will focus on community health workers' practices as a critical and public health workforce in reducing health inequities for diverse and underserved populations, with evidence of impact from Vermont, New Hampshire, and Texas. We will demonstrate how health literacy promotion by Texas CHWs is being used to advance health equity in 22 historically redlined zip codes in San Antonio. Recent findings on patient outcomes associated with Community Health Worker interventions from the CHW program at Dartmouth Health will also be presented. Learning Objectives Upon completion, session attendees will:
Moderator
Speakers
Breakout Session 4: Pro-Vaccine Advocacy in the State House: Why Diverse Grassroots Coalitions are Key Partners in Public Health Efforts In this session, SAFE Communities Coalition will present SAFE’s work on pro-vaccine political campaigns in Maine and Louisiana as case studies about why final mile vaccine advocacy matters and how it has evolved over the past decade. Before the pandemic, the coalition recognized the need for pro-vaccine parent and family voices in state houses as anti-vaccine activists overwhelmed the legislative process. In 2022, SAFE helped launch Louisiana Families for Vaccines, a grassroots network of activists, healthcare providers, science and public health experts, nonprofits, industry partners, and advocates for children and underserved populations organized to support strong public health legislation. Session speaker will share strategies for building diverse and powerful cross-sector coalitions, identifying, empowering, and activating the pro-vaccine majority, and supporting new organizations as they build capacity and their collective goals for opposing or supporting legislation in state houses. Learning Objectives Upon completion, session participants will:
Moderator
Speaker
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4:30 - 5:30 PM
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Entertainment
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Betsy Rosenfeld, JD
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Anne N. Sosin, MPHA
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NEW HAMPSHIRE PUBLIC HEALTH ASSOCIATION (NHPHA)
4 Park Street, Ste 403 Concord, NH 03301 United States Email: info@nhpha.org Phone: 603.228.2983 |
The New Hampshire Public Health Association is an affiliated association of the American Public Health Association (APHA). We have collaborated with APHA to grow stronger as organizations, to share expertise, influence, and resources, and to advocate for common priorities at the local, state and federal levels.
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