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High Priority Interventions: The Division of Community Health’s Intervention ListProgram Development and Implementation Branch Team Leads
Wendy Heirendt April BankstonLorraine ReedDecember 9, 2014
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Learning Objectives
By the end of the Webinar, awardees are expected to:•Know how the intervention list can be used to inform their work plans•Describe how the list will be used to frame future DCH feedback and technical assistance•Use the list to guide conversations between DCH and awardees
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• Assist communities with:• Identifying high impact interventions• Selecting and/or refining interventions
• Aligns with DCH Core Principles
Purpose of the List
.
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DCH Core Principles
• Maximize health impact
• Advance health equity and reduce health disparities
• Use and expand the evidence base
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FOA Intervention Expectations• PICH Awardees implement priority
interventions and related supportive and/or tailored
• REACH Awardees identify existing improvements not reaching priority racial/ethnic populations
• National Organization awardees support local communities in implementation
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Strategies and Interventions
• Strategy: broad categories of approaches to change health behaviors• Improving access to healthy foods and
beverages• Improving access to smoke free
environments
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Strategies and Interventions
• Intervention: specific efforts that when implemented will impact a broader strategy • Improving food procurement guidelines• Increasing smoke-free protections in
multi-housing
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Types of Interventions
Priority interventions - a subset of primary interventions that we believe will have the greatest potential reach and impact for the outcomes associated with the FOAs
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Types of Interventions
Supportive interventions - interventions that may not have high impact on their own, but can enhance the reach, effectiveness or knowledge about a priority intervention
Tailored interventions – targeted culturally-tailored interventions to address subgroup population(s) experiencing the greatest burden
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Key Points to Remember:
• The List• Is a collection of priority, supportive,
and tailored interventions• Is not an all-encompassing list of do’s
and don’ts• Can be used to refine your objectives
and activities
• Use a combination of interventions to achieve your objectives
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1. Are Innovative/practice-based Interventions OK?
• Supported in the workplans• Required to be rigorously evaluated• Supportive or tailored interventions
to expand or enhance the reach of a primary intervention
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2: What about other interventions that we may have selected? • Not restricted to only those on the
list• To include an intervention in your
workplan, it must meet these criteria:• Legal• Evidence-based• High reach
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3. Can we conduct lower impact interventions?• Can do these in conjunction with
other high impact interventions• Low impact examples include
• breastfeeding • community gardens• walking groups
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4. Do we have to use the exact wording from the list in our CAPs? • Use the wording from the list• Can be a PPO or AO
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5. How does the list align with the CAP format? • Interventions can be included as a
PPO or an AO• It is based on your intent and defined
outcomes
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6. How will the list be used by the Division?
• Used to inform on-going work• One part of a larger technical
package• Project Officers and other DCH staff
may use the list to guide and focus your regular calls