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Making the Case for Collaborative CHI

The community health improvement (CHI) process brings together health care, public health, and other stakeholders to identify and address the health needs of communities—because working together has a greater impact on health and economic vitality than working alone.

The community health improvement (CHI) process brings together health care, public health, and other stakeholders to identify and address the health needs of communities—because working together has a greater impact on health and economic vitality than working alone.

Below are examples—organized by initiative type—of how hospitals have successfully engaged in collaborative, innovative work to improve the health of their patients and others in their communities. Hospitals are not doing this work alone; they are addressing critical health issues with public health, social services, and other partners in their communities. Several hospitals initiated these activities as a result of findings from their community health needs assessments (CHNAs). Many undertook community-based initiatives to address the needs of patients who are often clustered geographically and who interact frequently with the healthcare system (super utilizers).

Several of these examples are cutting edge initiatives that are demonstrating promising early results. A few can be found in the CHI Navigator Database of Interventions . Most of these examples highlight the impact of this kind of work on the financial bottom line, which is important as the health care system moves to value-based payments.

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Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Office of the Associate Director for Policy
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The Daily Show: Along Came Pollen

Sponsoring Program: 
In the worst allergy season since last year, the media declare a natural-disaster level of pollen.

Check out this funny and educational clip on pollen and climate change with Asthma & Allergy Foundation of America. Watch the latest full episode of The Daily Show with Jon StewartAlong Came Pollen: http://thedailyshow.cc.com/videos/kjc2ca/along-came-pollen 

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Online Training for Public Health Capacity Building Among Professionals Working with Youth

We are excited to announce that in collaboration with Frontiers in Public Health, section Public Health Education and Promotion, we are organizing a Research Topic titled "Online Training for Public Health Capacity Building among Professionals Working with Youth”.

We are excited to announce that in collaboration with Frontiers in Public Health, section Public Health Education and Promotion, we are organizing a Research Topic titled "Online Training for Public Health Capacity Building among Professionals Working with Youth”.

As host editors, we would like to encourage you to contribute to this topic. Please find more information about Research Topics below, including the publishing fees that apply. You can also visit the homepage we have created on the Frontiers website, which defines the focus of the topic, and where all published articles will appear.

http://www.frontiersin.org/Public_Health_Education_and_Promotion/researchtopics/Online_Training_for_Public_Hea/3975

Please note the submission deadlines for this Research Topic are:

Abstracts - June 30, 2015
Full draft manuscripts - August 31, 2015
Revisions on accepted manuscripts - Dec 31, 2015

Should you wish to participate--and we hope that you will--we request that you submit an abstract in advance of any manuscript submission you choose to make.  The deadline for abstracts is identified at our Research Topic homepage and in the list above. Abstracts should be submitted from this webpage:

http://journal.frontiersin.org/researchtopic/online-training-for-public-health-capacity-building-among-professionals-working-with-youth-3975

Contact Name: 
Alexandra "Xan" C.H. Nowakowski, PhD, MPH
Contact Email: 
xnowakowski@fsu.edu
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