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Volume 4: No.
4, October 2007
SPECIAL TOPIC
Community Health: A Critical Approach to Addressing Chronic Diseases
Lissette M. Flores, MPH, Rachel Davis, MSW, Patti Culross, MD, MPH
Suggested citation for this article: Flores LM, Davis R, Culross P. Community health: a critical approach to addressing chronic diseases. Prev Chronic Dis
2007;4(4).
http://www.cdc.gov/pcd/issues/2007/ oct/07_0080.htm.
Accessed [date].
PEER REVIEWED
Abstract
Many public health solutions to chronic diseases involve individual lifestyle choices: eating
more healthfully, increasing physical activity, and quitting smoking. This approach neglects barriers in the community environment that make modifying unhealthy behaviors challenging.
Addressing environmental barriers is an essential strategy to supporting behavioral changes.
Changing community environments that contribute to unhealthy behaviors can
improve community health.
Community indicator reports can be used to strengthen community environments for optimum health. The reports are comprehensive evaluations of community well-being that reflect community factors that influence health. Prevention Institute
studied community indicator reports for The California Endowment and produced
Good Health Counts: A 21st Century Approach to Health and Community for
California. This commentary on that document highlights recommendations for
the use of community indicator reports.
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Background
Thinking about health as a function of environmental influences in our communities
shifts the focus from individual behaviors to health needs and barriers that can
be addressed through broad strategies such as policy change. Good health is a cornerstone of
community members’ quality of life and productivity and of the community’s economy.
Community indicator reports and report cards can be used to enhance the process
of restoring good health in a community.
Most people understand prevention of chronic disease on an individual level. Accordingly, many public health solutions
involve individual and lifestyle changes: eating
more healthfully, increasing physical activity, and reducing or quitting smoking.
Environmental barriers in the community can make modifying unhealthy behaviors challenging. Poor environmental quality; inadequate access to affordable, nutritious food; and safety issues often make healthy living impractical,
particularly in low-income communities and communities of color. Although education can play a role in influencing individual behavioral choices, addressing environmental variables is an essential strategy to supporting behavioral change. Analyzing the underlying causes of inadequate diets and
low levels of physical activity,
for example, shows that community conditions play an important role in shaping health-related behaviors. To have an impact on rates of chronic disease, community environments must support and encourage healthy habits.
The Institute of Medicine affirmed the need to focus on
changing the environment in order to foster behavior change, asserting:
To prevent disease, we
increasingly ask people to do things that they have not done previously, to
stop doing things they have been doing for years, and to do more of some
things and less of other things. . . . It is unreasonable to expect that people
will change their behavior easily when so many forces in the social,
cultural, and physical environment conspire against such change (1).
For example, environments supportive of reducing
asthma, lung cancer, and cardiovascular disease would address the
availability of tobacco, safe and affordable access to healthy food, safe
access to physical activity, social cohesion and environmental design that
encourage physical activity, and social and behavioral norms that encourage
healthy habits and discourage unhealthy ones (Table). Understanding risk
behaviors associated with chronic diseases and the elements of the community
environment that contribute to those risk behaviors enables communities to develop strategies for addressing environmental
factors. Indicators also serve as a
tool for tracking progress in altering the community environment to
support better health outcomes.
By paying attention to community environments that
contribute to unhealthy behaviors, community indicator reports are an important
tool for improving community health. Community indicator reports are
comprehensive evaluations of community well-being that include multiple
categories, reflecting various aspects of the ways people live and the living
conditions in neighborhoods, cities, counties, states, or countries. They can be used to broaden the definition of health, develop local priorities, track progress, and bring
disparate groups
together in support of community health (2). In 2006, Prevention Institute
studied community indicator reports for The California Endowment and produced
Good Health Counts: A 21st Century Approach to Health and Community for
California (3). This commentary on that document highlights its
recommendations for the use of community indicator reports.
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Methods
Prevention Institute reviewed 79 community indicator reports and 9
popular-culture report cards and interviewed
64 key informants. A review of literature also informed the study. As
defined in Good Health Counts, the term community indicator reports means
published reports that use a carefully selected set of indicators to track the social, health, and economic
conditions in a defined geographic area. Report cards are community indicator reports that use letter grades or rankings for each report element.
Community indicator reports use different naming conventions to categorize information. For example, the term indicator can mean the actual data or can refer to an aggregation of data measures. No standard definition was found among reports. In this paper,
an indicator is defined as a construct consisting of more than one measure, with measures
being the actual data. Indicators either relate to the entire population or subpopulation or, in the case of a performance measurement, the effectiveness of a service or program.
The reports reviewed for Good Health Counts were self-identified as indicator reports,
were available on the Internet, and were published in English. Additional reports were suggested by individuals or mentioned in other indicator reports or in the community indicators literature. The geographic scope was limited to the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, other English-speaking countries, Europe, Japan, and
Hong Kong. Reports from international nongovernmental agencies, such as the World Health Organization, were also reviewed.
Community indicator reports
Community indicator reports share many common features and criteria for development, even though they often differ in their approaches. The reports reviewed were categorized as quality of life, sustainability, health status, social well-being, and government performance. Many of the reports
were not specifically referred to as community health reports, yet they offered valuable information about one
or more elements in the community environment that contribute to the health of the community they describe.
Report cards
Generally, community indicator reports are comprehensive summaries of community conditions, including health status, that include explanations about what each indicator means and why it is important. Occasionally, community report cards will feature highlights from larger reports and provide additional meaning to the information by adding grades, rankings, or comparisons as a way to track
progress or performance over time in a way that readers recognize. They are, by definition, selective in what they report, but the use of grades and other types of judgments
can be effective in improving community health outcomes. For example, providing
incentives for change, especially when the grades identify key indicators and
establish priorities, contributes to ownership and to action around potential
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Recommendations
Elements of an effective report tool
Box 1. Elements of an Effective Report Tool
• Tracks progress and trends
• Is actionable
• Establishes accountability
• Focuses on community assets
• Captures what is important
• Is grounded in a plausible theory of change
• Uses credible and trustworthy data
• Uses meaningful language
• Is accessible and user-friendly
• Is values-based
Although community indicator reports and report cards serve various purposes, a number of elements emerged that facilitate their use by advocates, community members, health departments, and other stakeholders (Box
1). The most comprehensive and valuable reports are able to monitor trends over time and offer some interpretation about the magnitude and direction of any changes. Simply making indicators available will not result in change. Effective indicator reports frame the information in a way that can lead to action; they identify relevant policies and steps that can be
undertaken to improve the indicator. Reports and report cards also work best in a context of accountability (i.e., when the agencies or organizations responsible for acting on the information are clearly identified).
Elements of an effective process
Box 2. Elements of an Effective Process
•
Presents a vision for community health
•
Focuses goals based on key opportunities
•
Fosters collaboration based on relationships
between sectors
•
Selects key indicators for maximum
leverage in a given sector
•
Establishes accountability
•
Makes a commitment to data source
development
•
Promotes and continues to seek ongoing
community input
Community indicator reports facilitate community improvement in a number of different ways. They may foster community engagement and collaboration, improve health care quality, identify agendas for public resource distribution, set baselines for government performance, monitor progress in government performance or community health and well-being, inform public policy development and advocate
for specific policies, or do a combination of these. Some reports focus on improving community health through a particular sector, whereas others suggest multisector collaborations to achieve the desired outcome.
The process of developing community indicators is aimed at report creation, but several additional elements of the process are important for a successful outcome
(Box 2). One of the most important considerations is a commitment to ongoing community input. Community input ensures that reports and the process of developing reports reflect local priorities and keep the meaning of indicators transparent
and clearly understood by populations for whom the report is intended. A related process involves the inclusion and participation of various sectors that can affect community health, including public health, transportation, education, housing,
and employment, among others. Community members who are accountable for making progress should be included early
in the process, allowing trust and
relationships to develop. The process of developing a community indicator report can facilitate dialogue on
issues that matter, translate collaboration into a meaningful product, and allow communities to think through a vision for a healthy future. The process of taking an interest in and contributing to the improvement of the conditions for health in
a community can also be valuable
to a community’s overall health. The process is what makes the difference; the report is a tool that results from the process.
Community indicator reports in action: three case studies
The following case studies illustrate many of the possible outcomes of
community indicator reports. In West Oakland, California, a powerful coalition
of local organizations worked together to rid the community of a source of air
pollution. Their efforts educated and empowered the community, forming the
foundation for further community action. In King County, Washington, the local
public health department initiated a report that revealed county strengths and
needs, enabling the community to identify its priorities, guide funding
decisions, and suggest actions that strengthened the community environment.
The example of Jacksonville, Florida, shows that long-term tracking of community
indicators can influence public policy and planning in support of comprehensive
social services.
West Oakland, California
Released in 2002, Neighborhood Knowledge for Change: the West Oakland Environmental Indicators Project
(4) is a collaboration between the 7th St/McClymonds Corridor Neighborhood Improvement Initiative and the Pacific Institute for Studies in Development, Environment, and Security. For 2 years these two organizations, West Oakland residents, and other partners worked together to research and identify
17 indicators to monitor environmental, health, and social conditions for the West Oakland
neighborhood. West Oakland residents used the report data to garner support from the media, elected Oakland officials, and
the public health community to close down the Red Star Yeast factory, the
largest toxic air polluter in West Oakland. The West Oakland Environmental
Indicators Project is now an independent nonprofit organization and continues to work on community issues, such as land use, air
quality, and the effect on the community of the movement of goods at the Port of Oakland.
King County, Washington
In 2005, the Seattle-King County Public Health Department published Communities Count: Social and Health Indicators Across King County
(5). Now in its third generation, this report was developed to identify the strengths and needs in Seattle-King County. Over the years the
report has influenced many community endeavors. For example, the United Way looks to the report for direction in strategic planning for safety services
and programs on focus areas such as early childhood development and homelessness. In 2002, the Seattle Foundation used the report to inform local donors on where to invest in the community. One indicator, the measure of time parents spend
reading to their children, motivated the public health department to facilitate a
South County coalition of library staff; employees of the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC); and others to promote reading to children among WIC clients. Community-based organizations use data in the report for grant applications; the county's Children and Communities Commission
(6) requires that grant applicants choose an indicator from the report to address when seeking funding.
Jacksonville, Florida
Now in its 22nd year, the Quality of Life Progress Report (7), produced annually by the Jacksonville Community Council, Inc (JCCI), is one of the oldest continuous reports of its type in the country. Much of the report’s influence results from JCCI’s early collaboration with the Jacksonville
Chamber of Commerce and a key funder, the United Way of Northeast Florida. In general, the report functions as an annual accountability measure of government and community services that underscores the value of data-driven decision making. It has become an essential tool in funding decisions by the United Way and has been used in government benchmarking initiatives by the
Jacksonville Chamber of Commerce. The
report informed the creation of new early childhood development and senior programs in the community and serves to monitor the impact and effectiveness of services provided by various community-based organizations, not only among their own client population but also in the larger community.
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Conclusion
Developing a strategy for promoting community health requires understanding the places where people live, work, and play. Community indicator reports can be an important tool to assess and strengthen community environments for good health, enabling people to be productive, to learn,
and to live healthy lives with dignity and self-determination.
Over the past 2 decades, community indicators and indicator reports
have proliferated. Three broad themes are associated with the widespread use
of indicator reports: the existence of many local initiatives aimed at
improving general community well-being and quality of life; the evolution of
a broadened definition of health, which has shaped the content of
indicators; and the influence of the expanded availability and use of data.
The quality and accessibility of data have improved
markedly over the past 25 years, which has strengthened the capacity to
measure and monitor health. Information technology, combined with new and
expanded sources of data, has transformed health assessment dramatically.
With these increases in data capacity, community
indicator reports can facilitate community improvement by fostering
community engagement and collaboration, framing accountability, informing
policy, and gaining media attention. As evidence mounts about
elements in the community environment that contribute to the onset or
prevention of chronic disease, indicators are a valuable tool to track
progress and hold ourselves accountable for addressing the critical
determinants of chronic disease.
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Acknowledgments
This paper is an adaptation of a forthcoming document prepared for The California Endowment: Good Health Counts: A 21st Century Approach to Health and Community for California.
The authors acknowledge the many individuals and organizations who contributed to this
work, in particular, Larry Cohen, MSW, Jeremy Cantor, MPH, and Michele Silver from
Prevention Institute, Oakland, California. Ms Silver is now with the
Partnership for the Public’s Health in Oakland, California, a project of the
Public Health Institute.
We also thank Cheryl Wold, MPH,
of Wold and Associates, Pasadena, California, for her contribution to this research.
The research described in this paper was funded through a contract with The California Endowment.
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Author Information
Corresponding Author: Rachel Davis, MSW, Prevention Institute, 221 Oak St, Oakland, CA 94607. Telephone: 510-444-7738. E-mail: Rachel@preventioninstitute.org.
Author Affiliations: Lissette M. Flores, Patti Culross, Prevention Institute, Oakland, California.
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- Jacksonville Community Council, Inc. 2006 Quality
of life progress report. www.jcci.org * Accessed June 25, 2007.
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