| Literature DB >> 33813944 |
Kay Schaffer1, Dorothy Cilenti1, Diana M Urlaub1, Erin P Magee1, Tara Owens Shuler2, Cathy Henderson3, Christine Tucker1.
Abstract
In 2016, the North Carolina Division of Public Health launched the Improving Community Outcomes for Maternal and Child Health program to invest in evidence-based programs to address three aims: improve birth outcomes, reduce infant mortality, and improve health outcomes for children 0 to 5 years old. Five grantees representing 14 counties were awarded 2 years of funding to implement one evidence-based strategy per aim using a collective impact framework, the principles of implementation science, and a health equity approach. Local health departments served as the backbone organization and provided ongoing support to grantees and helped them form community action teams (CATs) comprising implementation team members, community experts, and relevant stakeholders who met regularly. Focus groups with each grantee's CAT were held during 2017 and 2019 to explore how CATs used a collective impact framework to implement their chosen evidence-based strategies. Results show that grantees made the most progress engaging diverse sectors in implementing a common agenda, continuous communication, and mutually reinforcing activities. Overall, grantees struggled with a shared measurement system but found that a formal tool to assess equity helped use data to drive decision making and program adaptations. Grantees faced logistical challenges holding regular CAT meetings and sustaining community expert engagement. Overtime, CATs cultivated community partnerships and multicounty collaboratives viewed cross-county knowledge sharing as an asset. Future collective impact initiatives should allow grantees more time upfront to form their CAT to plan for sustained community engagement before implementing programs and to incorporate a tool to center equity in their work.Entities:
Keywords: community intervention; health disparities; maternal and infant health; minority health; partnerships/coalitions; program planning and evaluation; qualitative evaluation; reproductive health; women’s health
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33813944 PMCID: PMC9096576 DOI: 10.1177/1524839921998806
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Promot Pract ISSN: 1524-8399
Figure 1The Five Conditions of Collective Impact
Figure 2ICO4MCH Grantees in North Carolina, June 2018–May 2020
Note. ICO4MCH = Improving Community Outcomes for Maternal and Child Health.
Total Number of Participants in 2017 and 2019 Focus Groups for the ICO4MCH Evaluation
| Variable | 2017 focus group participants ( | 2019 focus group participants ( |
|---|---|---|
| Role of participants | ||
| Local health department staff | 37 | 27 |
| Community experts | 2 | 6 |
| Other agency staff | 4 | 2 |
| Length of time involved on community action or implementation team | ||
| Less than 12 months | 9 | 14 |
| Between 1 and 2 years | 29 | 8 |
| More than 2 years | 5 | 13 |
| Age (years) | ||
| <35 | 13 | 13 |
| 35–54 | 20 | 14 |
| >55 | 9 | 8 |
| Gender | ||
| Female | 40 | 30 |
| Male | 3 | 5 |
| Race/ethnicity | ||
| Black | 10 | 12 |
| White | 30 | 16 |
| Other | 3 | 7 |
Results Related to Application of Collective Impact Conditions
| Collective impact condition | Results summary |
|---|---|
| Backbone organization | • Having LHDs as the |
| Common agenda, continuous communication, and mutually reinforcing activities | • Grantees had the most success implementing these three conditions of collective impact. |
|
| • The performance measures outlined in the contracts between grantees and the funder and in the evaluation plan designed by a stakeholder group served as the |
Note. LHD = local health department; CAT = community action teams.