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Assessing Local Health Department Performance in Diabetes Prevention and Control — North Carolina, 2005

INTRODUCTION: To improve the public health system's ability to prevent and control chronic diseases, we must first understand current practice and develop appropriate strategies for measuring performance. The objectives of this study were to measure capacity and performance of local health depa...

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Autores principales: Porterfield, Deborah S., Reaves, Janet, Plescia, Marcus, Konrad, Thomas R., Weiner, Bryan J., Davis, Mary, Baker, Edward L., Garrett, Joanne M., Dickson, Curtis W., Alexander, Janet
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2722401/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19527588
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author Porterfield, Deborah S.
Reaves, Janet
Plescia, Marcus
Konrad, Thomas R.
Weiner, Bryan J.
Davis, Mary
Baker, Edward L.
Garrett, Joanne M.
Dickson, Curtis W.
Alexander, Janet
author_facet Porterfield, Deborah S.
Reaves, Janet
Plescia, Marcus
Konrad, Thomas R.
Weiner, Bryan J.
Davis, Mary
Baker, Edward L.
Garrett, Joanne M.
Dickson, Curtis W.
Alexander, Janet
author_sort Porterfield, Deborah S.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: To improve the public health system's ability to prevent and control chronic diseases, we must first understand current practice and develop appropriate strategies for measuring performance. The objectives of this study were to measure capacity and performance of local health departments in diabetes prevention and control and to investigate characteristics associated with performance. METHODS: In 2005, we conducted a cross-sectional mailed survey of all 85 North Carolina local health departments to assess capacity and performance in diabetes prevention and control based on the 10 Essential Public Health Services and adapted from the Local Public Health System Performance Assessment Instrument. We linked survey responses to county-level data, including data from a national survey of local health departments. RESULTS: Local health departments reported a median of 0.05 full-time equivalent employees in diabetes prevention and 0.1 in control. Performance varied across the 10 Essential Services; activities most commonly reported included providing information to the public and to policy makers (76%), providing diabetes education (58%), and screening (74%). The mean score on a 10-point performance index was 3.5. Characteristics associated with performance were population size, health department size and accreditation status, and diabetes-specific external funding. Performance was not better in localities where the prevalence of diabetes was high or availability of primary care was low. CONCLUSION: Most North Carolina local health departments had limited capacity to conduct diabetes prevention or control programs in their communities. Diabetes is a major cause of illness and death, yet it is neglected in public health practice. These findings suggest opportunities to enhance local public health practice, particularly through targeted funding and technical assistance.
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spelling pubmed-27224012009-08-25 Assessing Local Health Department Performance in Diabetes Prevention and Control — North Carolina, 2005 Porterfield, Deborah S. Reaves, Janet Plescia, Marcus Konrad, Thomas R. Weiner, Bryan J. Davis, Mary Baker, Edward L. Garrett, Joanne M. Dickson, Curtis W. Alexander, Janet Prev Chronic Dis Original Research INTRODUCTION: To improve the public health system's ability to prevent and control chronic diseases, we must first understand current practice and develop appropriate strategies for measuring performance. The objectives of this study were to measure capacity and performance of local health departments in diabetes prevention and control and to investigate characteristics associated with performance. METHODS: In 2005, we conducted a cross-sectional mailed survey of all 85 North Carolina local health departments to assess capacity and performance in diabetes prevention and control based on the 10 Essential Public Health Services and adapted from the Local Public Health System Performance Assessment Instrument. We linked survey responses to county-level data, including data from a national survey of local health departments. RESULTS: Local health departments reported a median of 0.05 full-time equivalent employees in diabetes prevention and 0.1 in control. Performance varied across the 10 Essential Services; activities most commonly reported included providing information to the public and to policy makers (76%), providing diabetes education (58%), and screening (74%). The mean score on a 10-point performance index was 3.5. Characteristics associated with performance were population size, health department size and accreditation status, and diabetes-specific external funding. Performance was not better in localities where the prevalence of diabetes was high or availability of primary care was low. CONCLUSION: Most North Carolina local health departments had limited capacity to conduct diabetes prevention or control programs in their communities. Diabetes is a major cause of illness and death, yet it is neglected in public health practice. These findings suggest opportunities to enhance local public health practice, particularly through targeted funding and technical assistance. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2009-06-15 /pmc/articles/PMC2722401/ /pubmed/19527588 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is a publication of the U.S. Government. This publication is in the public domain and is therefore without copyright. All text from this work may be reprinted freely. Use of these materials should be properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Porterfield, Deborah S.
Reaves, Janet
Plescia, Marcus
Konrad, Thomas R.
Weiner, Bryan J.
Davis, Mary
Baker, Edward L.
Garrett, Joanne M.
Dickson, Curtis W.
Alexander, Janet
Assessing Local Health Department Performance in Diabetes Prevention and Control — North Carolina, 2005
title Assessing Local Health Department Performance in Diabetes Prevention and Control — North Carolina, 2005
title_full Assessing Local Health Department Performance in Diabetes Prevention and Control — North Carolina, 2005
title_fullStr Assessing Local Health Department Performance in Diabetes Prevention and Control — North Carolina, 2005
title_full_unstemmed Assessing Local Health Department Performance in Diabetes Prevention and Control — North Carolina, 2005
title_short Assessing Local Health Department Performance in Diabetes Prevention and Control — North Carolina, 2005
title_sort assessing local health department performance in diabetes prevention and control — north carolina, 2005
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2722401/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19527588
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