Emergency Department Visits with a Drug Overdose Diagnosis
Current Value
57
Definition
Partners with a Role to Play
[Guidance: Partners with a role to play in addressing this priority and contributing to improving the indicator data. These can be current partners or potential partners you would like to engage more actively. Learn about potential new partners at the County Health Rankings Partner Center.]
Partners in our Community Health Improvement Process: [Guidance: you can name and list your team structure and participating agencies in your CHIP process here or simply insert a link if you keep that information on a website. You can also link to partner websites like we have done for the WNC Healthy Impact item listed below. Confirm with your team members that they wish to be listed.]
- Partner 1
- Partner 2
- WNC Healthy Impact
Partners with a Role in Helping Our Community Do Better on This Issue: [Guidance: you can begin this list with the Whole Distance Exercise, but make sure you have asked key community partners who might not have been present for the exercise to contribute to this. Recommendation: do not list an organization/agency/individual on this public facing e-CHIP without talking with them and confirming that they would like to be listed. Offer to link to a website or publication that gives more information about partner organizations.]
- Partner 1
- Partner 2
- Partner 3
Story Behind the Indicator
This section includes story that you collect during your process.
The "Story Behind the Curve" helps us understand why the data on [state the indicator in plain language, e.g. adults with diabetes, children born addicted to drugs, or people dying from drug overdoses] is the way that it is in our community. When we understand the root causes of our community problems, we have a better chance of finding the right solutions, together.
What is helping and what is hurting this issue? What conditions, policies, programs or other factors are helping us do as well as we are doing? What conditions, policies, programs or other factors are contributing to this problem and keeping us from doing better?
You could organize your What's Helping and What's Hurting by what do people most affected by this issue say? What do key stakeholders say? Challenge assumptions. Ask “why” to get to root-causes?
Story data can come from many sources: during Whole Distance Exercise with your coalition or work group; during listening sessions/focus groups with people affected by the issue; prioritization process; the Online Key Informant Survey responses; interviews or surveys with key partners in your community; listening at meetings or community events; etc.
Recommended RBA tool for working on story behind the indicator, identifying partners, and thinking about what works (strategies): Population Turn-the-Curve Report; and Whole Distance Exercise Instructions.
What's Helping? These are the positive forces at work in our community and beyond that influence this issue in our community.
A prompting question can be, "Why are things as good as they are and not worse?" Ask "why?" multiple time to a single cause to get to root causes. Try to get input about what's helping at the individual, organizational, environment and policy levels. You can also include additional number data/indicators that relate to your headline indicator as part of the story of what's helping.
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Example 1
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Example 2
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Example 3
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Example 4
What's Hurting? These are the negative forces at work in our community and beyond that influence this issue in our community.
A prompting question can be, "Why are things as bad as they are and getting in the way of things getting better? Try to get input about what's hurting at the individual, organizational, environment and policy levels. You can also include additional number data/indicators that relate to your headline indicator as part of the story of what's hurting.
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Example 1
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Example 2
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Example 3
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Example 4
What Works to Do Better (Population)?
This section will include:
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Process for Selecting Priority Programs/ Strategies
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Partner ideas of what works to do better, based on Story Behind the Curve and Partners/ Who has a role to play to do better, from a Whole Distance exercise.
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What is currently working in your community
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Evidence-based strategies
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Include evidence-based strategies (including from CDC HI-5 Interventions, CDC Community Health Improvement Navigator, CDC 6/18 Initiative, CDC The Community Guide, County Health Rankings – What Works for Health, and Healthy People 2030 – Evidence-based resources); promising practices in the community; and/or innovative suggestions from stakeholders and residents most affected by the issue.
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What people most affected by the issue think would work
Process for Selecting Priority Program/ Strategies
In this section, write a brief paragraph or include bullets to describe your process to get to the programs/ strategies listed in this Scorecard. Describe process and criterion used to select 3 strategies. Criterion to consider: Can we feasibly implement a strategy? (based on resources available, community will, etc.) Is the strategy high-leverage (i.e. significant impact for small or moderate effort vs. small impact for large effort)? Does this strategy align with our community values? Can you produce a specific action for the strategy? Does the strategy address one or more of the root-causes of the issue that you uncovered in your exploration of the “Story Behind the Indicators”?
The sample headings and text below will help organize this information.
The following actions have been identified by our [team/coalition/partners] and community members as ideas for what can work for our community to make a difference on [name health issue].
Actions and Approaches Identified by Our Partners These are actions and approaches that our partners think can make a difference on [name health issue].
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Action/Approach 1
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Action/Approach 2
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Action/Approach 3
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Action/Approach 4
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Action/Approach 5
What is Currently Working in Our Community These are actions and approaches that are currently in place in our community to make a difference on [name health issue].
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Action/Approach 1
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Action/Approach 2
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Action/Approach 3
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Action/Approach 4
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Action/Approach 5 [Guidance: you can insert links to websites with more information on current actions and approaches in your community]
Evidence-Based Strategies These are actions and approaches that have been shown to make a difference on [name health issue].
Name of Strategy Reviewed |
Level of Intervention |
You can insert links to websites where you learned about these interventions. |
Individual, Interpersonal, Organizational, Community or Policy |
What Community Members Most Affected by [name health issue] Say These are the actions and approaches recommended by members of our community who are most affected by [name health issue]
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Action/Approach 1
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Action/Approach 2
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Action/Approach 3
Recommended tools for selecting priority strategies: Strategy Prioritization Worksheet; Identifying Priority Strategies Worksheet.