Maternal and Child Health Needs Assessment Meeting in Augusta, Maine

Slide Note
Embed
Share

Explore the details of the Maternal and Child Health Needs Assessment Priorities Setting Meeting that took place in Augusta, Maine in January 2020. The meeting involved key officials from various organizations focusing on Title V, needs assessment, priority setting, targeted interventions, data analysis, and top issues identification related to maternal and child health.


Uploaded on Oct 06, 2024 | 0 Views


Download Presentation

Please find below an Image/Link to download the presentation.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author. Download presentation by click this link. If you encounter any issues during the download, it is possible that the publisher has removed the file from their server.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MCH Needs Assessment Priorities Setting Meeting Augusta, Maine January 21, 2020

  2. The Team Maine Center for Disease Control Maryann Harakall, Maternal and Child Health Program Director Altarum Brenda Wolford, Project Director Renee Schwalberg, Consultant University of Southern Maine Erika Lichter, Associate Research Professor Barbara Poirier, Policy Associate Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention 2

  3. What is Title V? Maternal and Child Health Block Grant Title V of the Social Security Act of 1935 The oldest public health program in the nation States submit a report and plan annually and a needs assessment every 5 years Block Grant to states for the health of women, infants, children, and children with special health care needs Federal funds provided with a State maintenance of effort The needs assessment forms the basis for the 5-year action plan Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention 3

  4. Needs Assessment Population health status in 5 domains: women s and maternal health, perinatal and infant health, child health, adolescent health, and CSHCN Analyses of health data Surveys, advisory groups, feedback from the community Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention 4

  5. Priority Needs Seven to 10 priority needs Targeted interventions Monitor progress using National and State performance measures Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention 5

  6. Key Informant Interviews Survey Methods Domain listening sessions Input forums Data analysis Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention

  7. Findings to Date Compiled the data and identified the top 5 issues among all data sources Under each issue, identified sub-issues that were discussed across the multiple data sources Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention 7

  8. Perinatal and Infant Health Data Source Top Priorities by Data Source 1. 2. 3. 4. Access to Care (score: 16) Drug-affected Babies (score: 11) Infant and Fetal Mortality (score: 10) Infant Care (score: 10) Domain Listening Sessions 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Social determinants of health Infant and maternal mental health/post-partum depression Substance exposed babies Infant mortality Breastfeeding Community Input Forums 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Trauma /Abuse/ACEs Infant Mortality Substance Exposure Safe Sleep Breastfeeding Key Informant Interviews 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Child abuse and neglect (56%) Parental drug and alcohol use during pregnancy (43%) Vaccinations (43%) Breastfeeding (37%) Parental mental illness (32%) Priorities Survey Non-professional (n = 909) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Child abuse and neglect (50%) Parental mental illness (50%) Parental drug and alcohol use during pregnancy (46%) Parental substance abuse (46%) Vaccinations (27%) Breastfeeding (27%) Priorities Survey Professional (n = 401) Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention 8

  9. Perinatal and Infant Health Top 5 Priorities Access to care Infant mortality Drug-affected babies Social determinants (ACEs) Breastfeeding Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention 9

  10. Women and Maternal Health Top 5 Priorities Access to care Mental health Substance use disorders Maternal morbidity and mortality Obesity Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention 10

  11. Child Health Top 5 Priorities Access to care Early childhood services Social determinants Mental health Physical and oral health Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention 11

  12. Adolescent Health Top 5 Priorities Mental health Substance use Access to family planning services Bullying/harassment Violence Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention 12

  13. Children with Special Health Care Needs Top 5 Priorities Transition Care coordination State-level coordination Access to care Caregiver stress Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention 13

  14. Overview for Today Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention 14

  15. Background Handouts Information to assist with the priority rating process includes the following: Epidemiological data on prevalence, trends, and disparities Basic background information on the economic impact of the issue List of current priorities National performance measures as a reference Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention 15

  16. Priority Rating Criteria 1. Prevalence/magnitude 2. Trend 3. Impact across the lifespan 4. Evidence-based interventions 5. Health equity 6. Measurable 7. Leadership support 8. Stakeholder support 9. Economic impact Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention 16

  17. Criteria Rating Process Review the priority rating tool for an explanation of criteria and rating scale. Briefly discuss each criterion and use the blank template to rate each criterion on a scale of 1-5. The notetaker will tally the ratings and identify the top two issues in each domain. Review the top two issues to ensure this is what the group wants for priorities. Present top two priority issues to the full group, with rationale for choosing these issues based on the criteria. Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention 17

  18. National Performance Measures NPM Women/ Maternal Health Perinatal/ Infant Health Child Health Adolescent Health Children with Special Health Care Needs Well-woman visit Low-risk cesarean delivery Risk-appropriate perinatal care Breastfeeding Safe sleep Developmental screening Injury hospitalization Physical activity Bullying Adolescent well-visit Medical home Transition Preventive dental visit Smoking Adequate insurance 18 Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention

  19. Your Mission Break into groups by Domain. Review the background materials provided. Using the Priority Rating Tool, discuss the topics and rate the identified priority issues within your Domain. Tally the results to identify 1-2 priority needs. Report out to the larger group. Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention 19

  20. Questions? Maryann Harakall Maternal and Child Health Program Director Maryann.harakall@maine.gov 207-557-2470 20

Related


More Related Content