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Healthy Women Build Healthy Communities

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U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Health Resources and Services ... Women and HIV/AIDS Quilt ... HIV/AIDS Quilt- Recognizing Women's Strengths ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Healthy Women Build Healthy Communities


1
  • Healthy Women Build Healthy Communities
  • August 6, 2007
  • Healthy Start Grantee Meeting
  • Sabrina Matoff-Stepp, M.A.
  • Director
  • U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
  • Health Resources and Services Administration
    (HRSA)
  • Office of Womens Health

2
HRSA Office of Womens Health (OWH) Mission
  • HRSA OWH provides a cross-cutting focus to reduce
  • sex and gender-based disparities and improve
    womens
  • health and wellness in support of the Agencys
  • mission to provide national leadership, program
  • resources and services needed to improve access
    to
  • culturally competent, quality health care.

3
HRSA OWH Functions
  • Serve in a leadership capacity on womens health
    and sex/gender-specific issues and policy.
  • Coordinate and support disease prevention and
    health promotion activities at HRSA and with
    other HHS agencies.
  • Serve as the liaison with other Federal womens
    health and private sector organizations.
  • Support educational efforts on topics related to
    womens health and wellness.

4
HHS Office on Womens Health Collaborations
National Womens Health Information
Center www.womenshealth.gov
  • HHS Minority Womens Health Summit (August 23-26,
    2007)
  • HHS Charting New Frontiers in Rural Womens
    Health (August 13-15, 2007)
  • Quick Health Data Online online access to
    county level data by gender, race/ethnicity
    and age

2007 Womens Health Calendar Daybook
5
Collaborations
  • Womens Health USA Data Books
  • Women and HIV/AIDS Quilt
  • Individual and Systematic Response to Natural and
    Man-Made Disasters for Vulnerable Populations
  • Evidence-based Report on Management of Eating
    Disorders http//www.ahrq.gov/clinic/tp/eatdistp.h
    tm
  • Womens Health in Health Professions Curricula
    Reports
  • Webcasts (www.mchcom.com)
  • The Management of Eating Disorders July 2006
  • Teen Dating Violence February 2006
  • Human Trafficking April 2005
  • GIS Maps of HRSA womens health investments

6
Womens Health USA 2006
7
HIV/AIDS Quilt- Recognizing Womens Strengths
8
BFWHW Vision and Mission
  • Vision Statement to achieve physical, mental,
    social, and spiritual health, Bright Futures for
    Womens Health and Wellness identifies
    opportunities for integrating prevention into
    self-care, culturally competent health care, and
    community action.
  • Mission Statement The mission of the Bright
    Futures for Womens Health and Wellness
    Initiative is to plan, develop, implement, and
    evaluate a variety of culturally competent
    consumer, provider, and community-based products
    to increase awareness and use of preventive
    health services for all women across their
    lifespan.

9
BFWHW Goals
  • Increase the use of preventive services.
  • Empower women to share in health care
    decision-making.
  • Encourage women to practice prevention in their
    daily lives.
  • Increase practitioner utilization of preventive
    health guidelines.
  • Support community-wide health promotion.

10
BFWHW Infrastructure
  • Funding HRSA/Maternal and Child Health Bureau
  • Coordination HRSA OWH and Division of Healthy
    Start and Perinatal Services
  • Organization inclusive, lifespan approach
  • Participants non-Federal and Federal experts
    (consumer and professional)
  • Purpose Develop tools for adolescent young
    women and adult women, clinicians, and
    communities to promote health and wellness

11
BFWHW Steering Committee
  • Non-Federal Steering Committee- a hand-picked
    multi-disciplinary, geographically representative
    group, including both men and women committee
    members and consumer representatives
  • Purpose- to provide overall guidance on both the
    processes and products of this initiative

12
BFWHW Executive Management Committee
  • Chaired by Peter van Dyck, M.D., M.P.H.,
    Associate Administrator for Maternal and Child
    Health
  • Decision-making arm of BFWHW comprised of senior
    management and representatives from across HRSA
  • Staff-level individuals selected by Bureau
    directors
  • Includes BFWHW co-chairs and Wanda K. Jones,
    Dr.PH, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Womens
    Health, HHS

13
Bright Futures for Womens Health and Wellness
(BFWHW), 2001-2002
  • Named the Initiative Bright Futures for Womens
    Health and Wellness (take off from Bright
    Futures for Infants, Children and Adolescents)
  • Developed an Initiative mission and vision
  • Developed an Initiative Logic Model
  • Reviewed U.S. Clinical Preventive and Community
    Services models for establishing evidence-based
    guidelines
  • Discussed the importance of communication and
    evaluation components
  • Agreed on the need for easy-to-use, culturally
    competent tools
  • Agreed on lifespan approach
  • Agreed on consumer, clinician, community target
    audience groups
  • Domains
  • Physical Activity and Healthy Eating
  • Mental Health and Wellness
  • Maternal Wellness

14
Purpose of BFWHW Physical Activity Healthy
Eating Tools
  • Develop tools to promote healthy physical
    activity and eating behaviors among women across
    the lifespan, according to the Dietary Guidelines
    for Americans 2005 encourage shared
    decision-making and goal-setting with primary
    care providers and involve community
    participation.

15
Physical Activity Healthy Eating
  • Guide for Adolescent Young Women and Wallet Card
    (English)
  • Guide for Adult Women and Reaching My Goal Tip
    Sheet Set (English and Spanish)
  • Provider Training Materials
  • Administrators Handbook
  • PowerPoint Training Modules
  • Counseling Support Tools
  • Community Toolkit (English)
  • Coming soon Rural Consumer Guides, Tip Sheets
    and Adolescent Bookmark!

16
BFWHW Consumer Guides
  • 4 main components
  • Self-assessment
  • Clinical Assessment/Conversation Starter
  • Goal Setting
  • Resources and Information

17
Tools for Consumers
  • Booklets that encourage a dialogue between female
    patients and their health care providers about
    physical activity and healthy eating.
  • Includes patient self-assessment, tips for
    communication with health care providers, goal
    setting, and resources for more information.
  • My Bright Future for Adult Women Guide and Tip
    Sheets
  • Available in English and Spanish
  • My Bright Future for Young Women Guide and Wallet
    Card
  • Available in English

18
Recommended Use in Clinical Setting
19
Tools for Consumers
  • Rural Adaptation
  • The core BFWHW physical activity and healthy
    eating tools were used as the foundation to
    create tools tailored for adult and young women
    living in rural communities in the United States.
    Rural adult and young women face unique
    challenges to improving physical activity and
    healthy eating including geographic isolation and
    access, limited transportation, provider
    shortages and poverty.
  • Adult Women Guide and Tip Sheets
  • Young Women Guide and Bookmark

20
Tools for Clinicians
  • Administrators Handbook Training and
    Implementation of BFWHW Physical Activity and
    Healthy Eating Guides
  • This Handbook describes the My Bright Future
    Physical Activity and Healthy Eating Guides and
    other patient and provider materials. It also
    contains information on how to train health care
    providers to implement the Guides in the clinical
    setting, using PowerPoint presentations, and
    counseling support tools for adult and young
    women patients.

21
Tools for Communities
  • Healthy Women Build Healthy Communities Toolkit
  • Designed to help young and adult women who want
    to improve the health of their communities take
    action and plan activities and events promoting
    physical activity and healthy eating. The toolkit
    provides 10 Building Blocks to help women plan
    community activities.

22
Intermediate Evaluation
  • In June 2005, an intermediate exploratory
    assessment
  • using the physical activity and healthy eating
  • consumer tools was funded to identify
    characteristics
  • of individuals (consumers and providers) who are
  • more likely to use the tools, and to integrate
    them into
  • primary care practice. Up to six sites will be
    included
  • from Federally Qualified Health Centers,
    faith-based
  • organizations, workplace wellness centers, and
    school-
  • based health clinics.

23
BFWWW Mental Health and Wellness Tools
  • Extensive background work to define mental
    wellness from a positive perspective.
  • Three concepts interwoven throughout family of
    tools
  • Value yourself
  • Develop sense of balance, meaning and purpose in
    life
  • Connect to your community
  • Tools
  • Guide for Adolescent Young Women
  • Guide for Adult Women
  • Provider Booklet
  • Exam or Waiting Room Flyer
  • Community Idea Kit

24
BFWHW Mental Health and Wellness Tools
Characteristics
  • Gender-specific
  • Evidence-based
  • Wellness focused (vs. disease focused)
  • Address mental wellness constructs and protective
    factors

25
Evidence Base Delphi Study
Three-round, electronic survey of Mental Health
Expert Panel to identify and score search terms
for the literature review and environmental scan.
The following 21 terms received the highest
consensus scores
  • Hardiness
  • Mental Health
  • High Positive Affect, Low Negative Affect
  • Hope
  • Meaningful Interpersonal Relationships
  • Life Satisfaction
  • Subjective Well-being
  • Work
  • Ego Strength
  • Self-confidence
  • Connectedness
  • Resiliency
  • Coping Skills
  • Family and Community Support
  • Faith and Spiritual Life
  • Optimism
  • Self-efficacy
  • Adaptability
  • Self-esteem
  • Positive Psychology
  • Protective Factors for Wellness

26
Evidence Base Key Findings
  • Some studies suggest resiliency, hardiness, and
    optimism can be learned
  • Coping skills are linked with health outcomes as
    early as mid-adolescence
  • Meditations and aerobic exercise have been shown
    to increase well-being
  • Happy people tend to
  • Have high self-esteem, be optimistic, outgoing,
    agreeable
  • Have close friendships or a satisfying marriage
  • Have work and leisure that engage their skills
  • Have a meaningful religious faith
  • Exercise

27
Draft Definition Core Elements
Elements of psychological wellness developed by
the Mental Health Expert Panel
  • Identification with/or Connection with Community
  • Meaningful, Rewarding and Supportive
    Relationships
  • Meaningful and Rewarding Activities
  • Sense of Balance, Meaning and Purpose in Life
  • Healthy Emotional, Cognitive and Physical Habits
  • Compassion for Others
  • Ability to Adapt to Change and Cope Successfully
    with Adversity
  • Meaningful Spiritual Beliefs and Practices
  • Valuing and Appreciation of Self

28
BFWHW Mental Health and Wellness, Primary Care
Clinic Flyer
29
BFWHW Mental Health Wellness Adult Womens
Guide
30
Maternal Wellness Tools
  • Three Target Audiences
  • Consumers reproductive age women, from pregnancy
    through one year after pregnancy (perinatal)
  • Community individuals and organizations with
    whom perinatal women come into contact
  • Healthcare Providers physicians, nurses,
    counselors and others providing care to perinatal
    women
  • Draft Products
  • Tailored to specific audiences
  • Similar conceptual messages across products
  • Anticipatory in nature

31
Maternal Wellness Tools
  • Evidence-based
  • Address maternal emotional/mental wellness
    constructs
  • Raise awareness of physical and psychosocial
    changes
  • Present strategies to increase healthy adaptation
    to changes and reduce adverse outcomes
  • Encourage conversations about perinatal emotional
    wellness

32
BFWHW Logic Model Promotion Connections
  • Advocacy within organization and professional
    associations
  • Resource distribution
  • Training materials with resource requests
  • Journal articles, reports, and presentations
  • Changes in awareness, attitudes, and practices
    related to preventive health for women across the
    lifespan
  • Increased awareness of BFWHW at Federal, State
    and local levels, and among professional and
    consumer based organizations
  • Policy and program initiatives integrating to
    BFWHW messages

33
Promotion Dissemination Opportunities
  • Raise awareness of BFWHW tools and support
    dissemination.
  • Partner with BFWHW Steering Committee members to
    form strategic partnerships with public health
    organizations, educational, worksite,
    faith-based, and community groups to put BFWHW
    tools to use outside of Washington D.C.
  • Outreach to underserved women through natural
    leaders in rural and border communities on the
    importance of preventive health and wellness.

34
Promotion Dissemination Opportunities
  • Consider adaptation of existing domains for
    specialized groups. Form partnerships to develop
    BFWHW tools focused on other preventive health
    issues.
  • Conduct process, impact, and outcome evaluations.
  • Continue to support health and wellness for all
    women, their families, and their communities.

35
Lessons Learned
  • Develop conceptual and theoretical framework for
    program planning.
  • Develop a logic model (program goal(s), inputs,
    short-term, long-term outputs).
  • Build evaluation into programs from the start
    (process, impact, outcome).
  • Gather information from a variety of stakeholders
    (consumer, professional, community-based)
  • Learn as much as you can about your target
    audience(s).
  • Gain buy-in from your target audience(s).
  • Develop partnerships.

36
Lessons Learned (continued)
  • Put together a steering committee, council, or
    board group to advise you.
  • Have regular meetings and conference calls.
  • Develop marketing, promotion, and dissemination
    plans early.
  • Do what you do best let others do what they do
    best.
  • Culturally competency includes more than just
    race/ethnic diversity.
  • Use technology wisely.
  • Allow extra time for reviews, clearances, and
    approvals.
  • Take time to thank people who support your
    program.

37
For More Information
A variety of BFWHW Tools and other
publications are available free of charge at the
HRSA Information Center 1-888-ASK-HRSA or
online at www.hrsa.gov/womenshealth HRSA
Office of Womens Health 5600 Fishers Lane,
18A-44 Rockville, Maryland 20857 (301) 443-8695
(office) (301) 443-8587 (fax)
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