| Worksite wellness programs delivered by HDs |
| Diversity in programming | “There are a number of different things from
stairwell encouragement and walking with the director.
There’s Weight Watchers meetings and health fairs and
fitness challenges between departments and brown-bag
classes. There are employee surveys about what health
policies we want to see. We have daily fitness classes…
And then we have a number of quit lines for tobacco and
gambling…I know that healthcare services is also doing
something with healthy hospitals and like getting
McDonald’s out of children’s hospitals. We have a Health
in All Policies group that’s in the director’s office
that has a foods procurement action plan that they’ve
worked with, with a number of different state
agencies.” – SCDD, Female, Decentralized
“So the prevention task force… is a
mandate through the [state] tobacco program. They are
focusing on a combination of education and outreach in
the community, as well as policy change. And then other
ones like the nutrition and physical activity task force
have done everything from hosting food day events to
participating in recreation exposés, nutrition
proclamations at the board. It’s sort of a combination
of nutrition and the breastfeeding task force and the
promotion of lactation spaces in workplaces and creating
a safe environment for women to lactate at work;
community education and outreach through articles
advertising health fairs. That’s I think a good
collection of what’s happening.” – LHDD,
Female, Decentralized |
| Programs delivered externally and internally | “[Program name] is our public/private collaboration
with the not-for-profit organizations, other
community-based organizations (CBOs) as well as agencies
where their primary focus is nutrition, physical
activity and obesity prevention. We’ve leveraged several
partnerships within this space to I guess expand upon
our existing work, but also support their efforts as
well across the state.” – SCDD, Female, Shared
“We also have the workplace wellness
which is more internal within the county vs. external
partners. We also have the local oral health coalition
which includes dental providers, the hospital, our local
clinics, WIC, and [early childhood development program].
I’ve got listings of all of our partners, but basically
a lot of us from the partnering agencies are at the
table for many of these because we can’t achieve the
work alone.” – LHDD, Female, Decentralized |
| Decision making for chronic disease and worksite
wellness |
| Decision making driven by funding priorities | “So then because we’re so dependent on federal
funds, what we end up finding is that then we aren’t
able to be nimble enough. Those federal funds most often
are restricted to specific conditions or specific
populations or specific activities, and so without an
infusion of some state dollars or even some private
dollars coming in — basically some other pot than these
federal grants — it leaves us unable to kind of adapt or
ebb and flow with the need.” – SCDD, Female,
Mixed “In this last year, however, they’ve
switched some of our deliverables and so even though we
still have that capacity inside our staff to do that
work, in the last six months we have not done any
worksite wellness, if that makes sense. We’ve done it
for years except for the last six months, and hopefully
it will get back into our funded deliverables in the
next funding cycle.” – LHDS, Male,
Decentralized |
| Federal, state, and local entities influence decision
making | “We’re working with a number of LHDs and really
supporting their coalitions. We also had a partner at
the university called [partner name], which worked in
kind of the nutrition and physical activity, policy,
systems and environmental (PSE) change space to do some
of the convening of partners using more of a collective
impact approach. They were funded through more private
foundation dollars through the university.” –
SCDD, Female, Decentralized “[State] does
not have local health departments. We have a centralized
public health system, and so our bureau is within the
Center of Community and Preventive Health. The bureau
director that manages all of our regional and parish
health units, she and I are colleagues together. We
partner on specific initiatives, but all of the
activities that occur within our parishes are kind of
operated and controlled out of our central
office.” – SCDD, Female, Largely
Centralized |
| Wellness program interest, barriers, and
facilitators |
| Lack of capacity a major barrier to program deliver | “[The largest barrier is] the competitive nature of
funding from CDC… We’ll be applying for new funding and
we may get it and we may not.… It’s not enough to do
everything that we need to. So if we look at the chronic
disease burden across the state — we look at the data
and we look at the maps that tell us our communities
with the highest burden of chronic disease. We know it’s
going to take a lot more than we have to really make the
difference that needs to be made.” – SCDD,
Female, Decentralized “I will say just from
what I’m hearing from the LHDs, they’re very overwhelmed
by the program. There has been some pushback in terms of
the number of locals that were trying to get involved in
that and their time commitments. They are overwhelmed,
and I think honestly our state folks to have that are
overwhelmed, too, just because it was a huge add to
their existing work responsibilities. They’re committed
to it, but it’s taking a lot of extra time.” –
SCDD, Female, Decentralized |
| Interest dependent on alignment with current needs and
programs | “As you know, there’s just not enough funding in
public health. Everybody is stretched so thin, and I’m
sure all three of us are. So then why would a local
public health agency take this on? I would say that it
would need to align with their current community
priorities. Since there is no additional funding, it has
to align with something that they’re already trying to
do in their communities, but they just don’t have the
right resources yet.” – SCDD, Female,
Decentralized “I would think that it would
be close to the top, but not the top. I would say that
their most urgent priority is what is happening at that
given time — like I referenced the flu outbreak. They’re
always going to be reactionary first and so that’s going
to come first, but then I think prevention is a close
second. They’re always working to prevent that next
outbreak, and so first is the reaction to what is
happening at that given time and second would be
prevention.” – SCDD, Female, Decentralized |
| Employer buy-in important for program delivery | “I think that some have had good success in working
with worksites — especially in some of our rural areas
where they have large private employers that they’ve
been able to make some of those connections. I think
it’s really hard for people to get in the door, and then
trying to show how it benefits the worksite. When they
can do it, I think that it gives them a lot of
satisfaction in seeing how it helps the community, but
the burnout of trying to get in is frustrating. I think
that it ebbs and flows.” – SCDD, Female,
Decentralized “For us to be involved in
something like this or to be able to be trained by you
guys with something we know already works, because
that’s the hard part a lot of times is starting a
brand-new program and are we doing something that’s
going to appeal to people? Are we doing something that’s
going to get people involved and keep people involved?
How do we make it a successful program?” –
LHDS, Female, Decentralized |