wisconsin public health association annual conference keynote presentation

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Chicago Department of Public Health Commissioner Bechara Choucair, M.D. City of Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel

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Commissioner Choucair's keynote presentation at the 2014 Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference

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Page 1: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Chicago Department of Public HealthCommissioner Bechara Choucair, M.D.

City of ChicagoMayor Rahm Emanuel

Page 2: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

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Challenges to Change

• Dwindling local health department resources – 12% overall decrease in personnel since 2008 for

all LHDs– Large jurisdictions hit the hardest

• Infrastructure developed over 100 years ago– Tradition creates inertia that impedes change

efforts

• Political environments – One of several City agencies– Accountable to both Mayor and City Council

• Interest groups

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Page 4: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Counseling and Education

Clinical Interventions

Long-Lasting Protection Interventions

Changing the Context to Make Individuals’ Default Decisions Healthy

Socioeconomic Factors

Increasing Population Impact

Increasing Individual Effort Needed

Page 5: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Chicago Department of Public HealthCommissioner Bechara Choucair, M.D.

City of ChicagoMayor Rahm Emanuel

HEALTHY CHICAGOCHICAGO DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH

TRANSFORMING THE HEALTH OF OUR CITY

Page 6: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

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February – May2011

August 20112010

Evolution of Healthy Chicago

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Page 8: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Healthy Chicago Targets

Page 9: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Chicago Department of Public HealthCommissioner Bechara Choucair, M.D.

City of ChicagoMayor Rahm Emanuel

IT’S NOT JUST ABOUT INDIVIDUAL BEHAVIOR

IT’S ABOUT HOW WE BEHAVE AS A CITY

HEALTHY CHICAGOChicago Department of Public Health

Page 10: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Public Health

Public Schools

Transporta- tion

Planning & Devlpt

Park District

Business Affairs

Family Services

Mayors’ Office

Police

Disabilities

Public Housing

City Colleges

Law

Cultural Affairs

Public Transit

Aviation

Buildings

Facilities/Fleet

Streets & Sanitation

Libraries

Interagency Council

Page 11: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Healthy Chicago Partnerships

Page 12: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation
Page 13: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Tobacco

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Opportunities Considerations

Opportunities Considerations

Tobacco: Opportunities and Considerations

Page 15: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Tobacco

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Tobacco Victories

• Increased Cigarette Tax

• Banned Flavored Tobacco Sales Near Schools

• Regulate E-Cigarettes

Page 17: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

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Tobacco Tax Increase

Page 18: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

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Ban of Flavored TobaccoSales Near Schools

• 4 Town Hall Meetings following Mayoral request

• Over 200 residents, local and national content experts participated

• Ordinance passed in December 2013

• Chicago is first City to include menthol in flavored tobacco regulations

• Report included over 25 policy recommendations at local, state and federal levels.

• Adopted by Board in October 2013

• Submitted to Mayor in November 2013

Page 19: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

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Regulating ElectronicCigarettes

Partners advocated for:

• Keeping e-cigarettes behind counters

• Prohibiting sales to minors

• Requiring tobacco licenses for e-cigarette sales

• Adding electronic smoking devices under the Clean Indoor Air Ordinance.

January 15th passage of ordinance

Aldermen noted they wanted to:

• “stand with public health”

and

• “be on the right side of

history”

Page 20: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Public Awareness Campaigns Reinforce Need for Change

BURNED by Menthol campaign generated

22,775,407 media impressions

Take Pride, Leave Cigarettesgenerated 12,492,530

impressions

Page 21: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

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More Smokers SeekingCessation Support

• 24,496 calls in 2013

• 10,000 more calls than 2012

• >73% of callers were African

American or Hispanic

• More than half were uninsured

Page 22: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

University of Illinois at Chicagobecame a Tobacco-Free Campusfor total of:

• 5 smoke-free institutions of higher learning

• 6 smoke-free hospital campuses

Chicago Housing Authority designated 2 new 100% smoke-free complexesfor total of:

• 610 smoke-free units in six developments

• 3,250 units of private multi-unit housing

22

More Smoke-Free Environments

Page 23: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

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Chicago Leads the Nation

Mayor Emanuel receiving African American Tobacco Leadership Council’s Visionary Elected Official Award

The federal government is currently considering:

• Cigarette tax increase• Stronger rules on menthol• Regulating electronic cigarettes

Page 24: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

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Adult Smoking is Down

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Youth Smoking is Down…

Page 26: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

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… and Taxes are Up

Page 27: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Obesity

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Opportunities Considerations

Opportunities Considerations

Obesity: Opportunities and Considerations

Page 29: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Obesity

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Obesity Successes

• Increased access to healthy & affordable food

• More opportunities for physical activity

• Focus on CPS students

Page 31: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

• Build healthier neighborhoods

• Grow food

• Expand healthy food enterprises

• Strengthen the food safety net

• Serve healthy food and beverages

• Improve eating habits

• Healthy vending machines in all City buildings

• Launched Healthy Vending Challenge

• Follow efforts of Parks and CPS

Increasing Access to Healthy FoodCitywide Food Plan Healthy Vending

Page 32: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

• 15 carts in neighborhoods for 2013

• 15 planned for 2014

• ~20 jobs created

• 40 persons trained in retail sales

Farmers for Chicago• Partnership with Growing Power • 5 acres of vacant lots available• Training for local farmers and help installing equipment• 15 acres overall operate as farms or

breaking ground

Produce Carts Urban Farms

Increasing Access to Healthy Food

Page 33: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Increased Opportunities forPhysical Activity

Page 34: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

• 2,035 bikes, 300 stations• 12,133 annual memberships• 131,984 24-hour passes• >1M trips, >2million miles

Dearborn St. Complete Street

Divvy Bike Share Program

• 200 miles of on-street protected, buffered and shared bike lanes

• More than 13,000 bike racks, and sheltered parking

• A 645-mile network of biking facilities by 2020 will provide a provide a bicycle accommodation within half-mile of every Chicagoan. 

Before After

Page 35: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

• 61 events• 13,173 participants• Twice the number from

2012

Page 36: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

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Focus on CPS Students New PE policy requires

• 30 minutes of daily PE (or 150 minutes weekly) at elementary schools

• Daily PE for high schools

$2.25M grant will support implementation

Page 37: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Estimates of obesity prevalence for CPS students in kindergarten, 2003-12

Page 38: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Access to Care

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Opportunities Considerations

Opportunities Considerations

Access to Care: Opportunities and Considerations

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Access to Care

Page 41: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

• 108 librarians trained • > 100 events at 26 branches

Engaging Libraries

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2013 study of 3,402 artists found:

• 43% did not have insurance

88% said they couldn’t afford it

• 37% of the 1,927 with coverage paid for it themselves

6 times greater than general pop that pays for private, non-group insurance.

• 55% did not understand or were unclear about the ACA

• 3 hour event; 50 navigators

• 1-hour appointments• 125 persons completed

or began enrollment process

Page 44: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

• 12,000 licensed public chauffeurs in Chicago

• 300 present daily for license renewal at a single City location with waits of up to 2 hours

• Many self-employed

• Chicago study of cab drivers found:

70% uninsured (v. 20%)

4.6% eat enough produce (v.22%)

6% meet exercise standards

(v. 21%)

~ 50% of drivers in NYC and San Francisco uninsured

Reaching Chicago’s Taxi Drivers

• 3 onsite navigators• Education in waiting area• 7-9 enrollments daily

Page 45: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

• Chicago City Colleges

• 7 campuses• ~ 120,000 students• ~6,000 faculty

• Events at 6 campuses

• 206 Enrolled• 472 Educated

The Young Invincibles

Page 46: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Public Housing ResidentsThrough CHA events and partners, 537 residents have either enrolled or started the insurance enrollment process

Operation Warm

Page 47: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

11 Community Service and Senior Centers

655 enrolled

Family and Support Services & CDPH Sites Uptown and Englewood HIV

Sites

Enrollment at Family Flu Clinics

423 enrolled

Page 48: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Aviation~200 non-City employees work at O’Hare

6-hour education & enrollment event

Focus on small businesses later in year

Page 49: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Enroll 15,000 students over 2 years

Grant period: Oct. 2013 – Sept. 2015LISC - $1,550,000

Four Partners• North River• South West Organizing Project• Logan Square Neighborhood

Assn.• Enlace

The Children’s Initiative

Over 20,000 uninsured children were eligiblefor coverage prior to the passage of the ACA

Page 50: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Illinois ACA Insurance Enrollment 10/1/ 2013 through 4/15/ 2014

~ 504,000 Illinois residents gained coverage

Page 51: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Innovations in Technology

Page 52: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

AdvancingHealthy ChicagoThrough Technology

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Innovations in TechnologyProjects

Page 54: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Innovations in TechnologyStrategy

Page 55: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Open Data PortalSpurs Innovation

Page 56: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Chicago Health Atlas is aDatabase

• De-identified electronic health record data for ~1 million Chicagoans

• In-patient and out-patient visits spanning 2006-2011

• Individual patient records matched across institutions

Page 57: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Chicago Health Atlas is aCollaboration• Informatics researchers from multiple

healthcare institutions

• Chicago Health Information Technology Regional Extension Center (CHITREC)

• Chicago Community Trust

• Chicago Department of Public Health

Page 58: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Chicago Health Atlas is aWebsite

ChicagoHealthAtlas.org

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Social Network AnalysisTwitter

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Current Applications

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FoodBorne Chicago

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FoodBorne Chicago

OpenPeople Tweet about their health 4 days beforeseeing their doctor

SurveillanceTweets lead us to illnesses in real time

ActionableSubmissions are investigated if warranted

Social Media is Changing How We CommunicateMeeting conversations on Twitter with aPublic Health Service

Page 63: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

FoodBorne ChicagoCompleting the Service Circle

CLICKS & REPORT

RESIDENT TWEETS

ONLINE RESULTS

Page 64: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

FoodBorne Chicago

Page 65: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

FoodBorne Chicago

• 2,848 Tweets Classified

• 313 Tweets Responded To

• 275 Reports Submitted

• 175 Inspections

Page 66: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Predictive AnalyticsFood Inspections

Currently• 32 Inspectors• 623 Inspections/Inspector• 15,176 Food Establishments• 2,715,000 Chicagoans

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention• Many food borne illnesses go unreported• 1 in 6 Americans (48 million people) get sick• 128,000 are hospitalized• 3,000 die of foodborne diseases

To Meet Requirements of Inspections• Do we increase productivity?• Do we increase workforce?

Page 67: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Predictive AnalyticsFood Inspections

Page 68: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Predictive AnalyticsFood Inspections

Project managed by: • CDPH Food Safety Division

• Department of Innovation and Technology

• Civic Consulting Alliance

• Allstate

Page 69: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Predictive AnalyticsFood Inspections Test of Model

Page 70: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

While Data Mining for the Analytics Project…

• While the number of food inspections is trending up, the number of fails is down, as is the rate of fails.

• Nine months of 2013 had fewer fails than any of the same months in the previous 3 years.

• Every month of 2013 had a lower rate of fails than any of the same months in the previous 3 years.

Page 71: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Predictive AnalyticsLead

WhereDiscover where greatest risk for lead is in homes for inspectors to test.

WhoDiscover areas of highest risk for child lead poisoning to prevent poisoning.

Actively Prevent IllnessesPrioritizes inspections instead of passively waiting for lead poisoning to occur.

Page 72: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Why Healthy Chicagois Making a Difference

Partnerships Policies

Technology and

Innovation

Public Awareness

Page 73: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

City Participation is Growing

Page 74: Wisconsin Public Health Association Annual Conference Keynote Presentation

Healthy Chicago Partnerships

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@ChiPublicHealth

312.747.9884

facebook.com/ChicagoPublicHealth

[email protected]

www.CityofChicago.org/Health