Showing posts with label Texas Forest Country Partnership. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Texas Forest Country Partnership. Show all posts

Sunday, August 11, 2019

A True Community Health Needs Assessment

The IRS requires charitable hospital organizations to conduct a community health needs assessment (CHNA) every three years and to adopt an implementation strategy to meet the community health needs identified through the CHNA. CHI St. Luke’s Health Memorial recently completed their 2019 Community Health Needs Assessment and will now begin the process of developing, adopting, and implementing a strategy to address identified needs. Much of this strategy will depend on working together with community stakeholders, many of which participated in the assessment data collection and interview process. Additional data was obtained from sources such as the Texas Department of State Health Services, the US Census Bureau, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Episcopal Health Foundation, and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s County Health Rankings.

The 2019 CHNA was created by the Center for Community Health Development at Texas A&M University at the request of CHI in collaboration with multiple non-profit community organizations, churches, school districts, and individuals. The entire CHNA is published on the CHI website at www.chistlukeshealthmemorial.org/about/health-needs-assessment/. Because CHI St. Luke’s Health Memorial is a regional health system, the assessment covered not only Lufkin and Angelina County, but a seven-county region that included Polk and San Augustine counties, where CHI facilities also are located.

I have a number of thoughts after reviewing this recent assessment.

1. The health of a community is dependent on far more than just availability of health care. This is well-demonstrated by both the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s County Health Rankings (www.countyhealthrankings.org/) and the Episcopal Health Foundation (www.episcopalhealth.org/en/research/county-health-data/). To improve health, we must identify and address everything from education level and health behaviors to racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic factors that affect a community’s health.

2. The 2019 CHNA is community-driven, and solutions to our health needs must include the community as well. So many partners exist, including Burke, the Angelina County & Cities Health District, the Coalition, our many school districts, DETCOG, the Texas Forest Country Partnership, and, of course, our city and county governments. All will need to be engaged in moving the needle to improve the health of our communities.

3. The role of the hospital in the community has changed. In the past, hospitals were primarily a destination to deal with an acute episode, like having surgery or managing a heart attack. Now, hospitals must be part of the chronic care management team for patients with heart disease, diabetes, cancer, mental health issues, and more. Hospitals are being graded – and paid – on how successfully they keep patients out of the hospital, if you can believe it! That requires coordination with community partners to ensure that people get the care they need both before and after they require care in a hospital facility.

4. Risk factors – behaviors – such as smoking, obesity, and exercise must be addressed, as well as substance abuse and mental health needs. We are doing this already, to some extent, across organizations and municipalities. More can be done.

5. Education is widely recognized as one of the primary social determinants of health. The St. Luke’s region has a lower proportion of residents with a college degree (14.2%) than either Texas (28.7%) or the US (30.9%). Within the region, the rate varies from a low of 11.6% in Jasper County to a high of 16.7% in Angelina County, yet both are significantly lower than Texas or the US. Household income and insurance status, which are closely linked to education level, also impact community health. Affecting change in these areas will require a generation of effort.

6. One of the key findings of the CHNA – and one that will require a lot of thought and planning to address – is the inadequacy of local and regional transportation. Lack of transportation impacts access to preventive services and early detection of illness as well as access to treatment and follow up.

As a result of the needs identified in CHI’s 2019 CHNA, with few exceptions, premature death rates in our region are higher than the State in virtually every category. This CHNA must not be an exercise on paper only. Follow up must happen. We have a good idea now of the need. We also have strong communities with excellent resources that can come together to find and implement solutions. Our health depends on it.

Sunday, November 11, 2018

A Health Problem We Can’t Ignore

On Thursday, the Chamber of Commerce hosted the 11th annual Salute to Healthcare Banquet, where we recognized the importance of the healthcare sector and its role in the local economy as well as celebrated four great individuals for their contributions to our local healthcare community.

Amber Warner received the Nurse of the Year award for her work as a certified hospice and palliative nurse at Hospice in the Pines and her volunteer work in the community; Pat Todd was honored as Individual of Merit for her advocacy for suicide awareness and prevention; Sharon Shaw got the Healthcare Professional of the Year nod for her tireless work on behalf of the uninsured and underinsured at the Angelina County & Cities Health District; and Dr. Tom Willis was honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award for 30-plus years as an internist in Lufkin as well as his civic and charitable contributions. It was a wonderful night of celebration.

It was also a night of sober education about the poor state of health in our schools and our community at large. Dr. Jeremy Lyon, a retired Frisco ISD superintendent who has a passion for healthy kids and schools, presented a compelling talk titled, “Strong Kids in Healthy Communities: Creating Our Future.”
Angelina County is not healthy. That unfortunate fact is supported by data used to rank counties nationwide and compiled by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. These rankings are available for anyone to review at http://www.countyhealthrankings.org.

In Texas, Angelina County is in the lowest 20% for the state for Health Outcomes. Sadly, for Health Behaviors we rank dead last. Eighteen percent of adults smoke, compared with 14% for the state at large (and may states smoke much less than that). One-third of Angelina County residents are physically inactive. And fully 40% of Angelina County citizens are obese! On average in Texas, 28% are obese, with some counties as low as 21% - nearly half of where we are in Angelina County. Finally, life expectancy in Angelina County is almost 2 years and 9 months shorter than for the US as a whole.

All of these factors can be traced back to habits and behaviors we pick up as kids. In 1982, The Dallas-based Cooper Institute launched FitnessGram, a health-related fitness assessment used annually in tens of thousands of schools, reaching over 10 million children across the United States. But even with FitnessGram assessments in our schools, we are not changing behaviors.

Dr. Lyon presented factors in our culture that contribute to negative youth health outcomes as well as barriers and opportunities to improve youth health outcomes within schools and communities. One model - the Center for Disease Control’s (CDC) Whole School, Whole Community, Whole Child (WSCC) model, developed in cooperation with the Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development (ASCD) - is designed to improve learning and health in our nation’s schools. That model starts with the premise that every child in every school deserves to be healthy, safe, engaged, supported, and challenged. The CDC and ASCD understand that health and learning are inextricably intertwined.

The Texas Forest Country Partnership, the Chamber, the Angelina County & Cities Health District, Angelina College, LISD, and hospital and community leaders have already had an information-gathering meeting with Dr. Lyon to consider what steps we may take in Angelina County to improve our county health rankings. Goodness knows, they can’t get much worse. This will require a long-term, coordinated, multi-institutional approach to health and wellness with the entire community providing support.

Together, we can - we must - move the needle toward a healthier Angelina County. Literally, our children’s lives depend on it.

Sunday, August 13, 2017

Moving the Needle on Health in Angelina County

Back in January, I wrote about the abysmal county health rankings in Deep East Texas and the fact that Angelina County has been named the county with the highest obesity rate in Texas. Almost four out of ten of us aren't merely overweight, we are downright obese. Let’s just admit it; we’re fat. And that fatness is a major factor in the development of high blood pressure, diabetes, heart disease, and many cancers, among other illnesses. 

Obesity is a two-edged sword that is both killing us early and costing us a lot in terms of ongoing healthcare expenditures and lost productivity. Smoking is, of course, another huge factor in our high cost of healthcare and poorer health outcomes. We must do better.

The rhetoric on the national stage is all about the skyrocketing cost of health insurance and how to tweak (or get rid of) Obamacare, as if that would solve our healthcare problems. The government can’t do it for us, folks. Regardless of what happens with healthcare reform, we need to collectively get off our fat behinds and take more responsibility for our own health. We need to do this individually, yes, but we also need to work on this as a community.

I mentioned in January the groundwork being laid by the Texas Forest Country Partnership. They hosted a series of strategic planning sessions to set goals for growth across a broad spectrum of our regional economy, from forestry and tourism to manufacturing and healthcare. Part of their healthcare recommendation was to raise our county health rankings in the region.

Since then, the $1 billion Episcopal Health Foundation, whose goal is to improve the health of the 10 million people living throughout the 57-county region served by the Episcopal Diocese of Texas, hosted a community meeting in Nacogdoches specifically to deepen their relationship with organizations working to improve community health in this area. Other foundations have expressed a similar interest.

But let’s be very clear: no foundation or partnership is going to do the work for us. We all have to be involved. The amazing thing about Angelina County is the number of resources we already have, along with the incredible people behind them! These resources need to intentionally focus on both individual and community health and work in a coordinated effort to put the pieces of our health puzzle together.

Hospitals must strengthen community outreach, especially with diabetes, heart disease, stroke, and cancer education. Physicians must expand care for the indigent in our communities. It is our duty. The Angelina County & Cities Health District deserves our full support for the incredible care they already provide, but they can and must do more. That requires funding, whether from grant support, state government, or from within Angelina County. Their primary care outreach is crucial to the health of our county.

Organizations like the American Cancer Society, The Coalition, ADAC, and the Burke Center must expand outreach and education about healthy lifestyles and disease prevention, cancer screening, smoking cessation, and immunizations. Women’s Special Services at CHI St. Luke’s Health Memorial will continue to apply for grants for low income women to get breast and cervical cancer screening. 

Lufkin went smoke free years ago and is better off for it. What about other cities? Diboll? Angelina County? Texas? Our state legislators need to use that proposed bathroom bill as toilet paper and instead pass smoke free legislation, which we know will both improve the health of our communities and save taxpayer dollars.

Chamber businesses need to provide or strengthen wellness programs for their employees, encouraging healthier lifestyles, diet, exercise, and smoking cessation. Maybe if people had to climb two flights of stairs to buy their cigarettes rather than drive through a barn or stop at a convenience store, fewer people would smoke. And they’d lose weight while they were at it! Is it just as easy for us to shop for healthy foods as it is tobacco and junk food? How do we encourage and facilitate healthy eating?

Our educational institutions from elementary school through college should have comprehensive, intentional programs to promote health and exercise. It is discouraging when I see employees at both our local hospitals riding the elevator to go up one floor when taking the stairs is much more beneficial.

Active events like the Neches River Rendezvous, Pineywoods Purgatory and Relay for Life are fantastic. What other events can we organize that will involve an even larger and broader swath of people year round? Find a reason to get outside. Participate in a fun run, even if you simply walk a mile or two. A stroll around the zoo can be good exercise and lots of fun. Or, spend an hour or two hiking the trails at Kit McConnico Park. It’ll do your heart and soul good! 

City sidewalks have been a great addition in recent years. Use them! Our Parks and Recreation Department has a website with programs and classes as well. Do we have a master plan for parks and recreation activities? If not, maybe we should.

I have a dream of a coordinated community effort where healthy living concepts infuse everything we do. Will Angelina County catch the vision to join in this effort? Lifestyle changes are hard. Nothing happens overnight. Changes in community health are measured over years - decades, even. We cannot get discouraged. Slow, meaningful progress over time will make a difference.

One early step coming up is the Texas Forest Country Partnership Economic Summit November 7-8, 2017 at the Pitser Garrison Convention Center. Included in that Summit will be a Rural Healthcare Symposium. Though it will address more than just Angelina County healthcare, it will be an important venue to discuss and brainstorm together. The Texas Forest Country Partnership should continue to take the lead in bringing groups together, applying for and administering grants, and monitoring progress and effectiveness.

As we plan for a healthy new direction in Angelina County, I encourage everyone to get involved. Be prepared to work! Come up with concrete ideas that you (or your business or organization) are willing to implement. Where philanthropic support is necessary, we will approach local, regional, and national foundations for assistance.

We must become the change we want to see and move the needle on health in Angelina County out of the red zone and into the green. Who’s with me?

Tuesday, January 3, 2017

Resolve to Improve the Health of our Region

January is a time of resolution, and often our New Year resolutions focus on diet and exercise. My friends, we need a city, county, and region resolution to lose weight!

In July, 2016, Sabrina Perry wrote an article for HealthGrove.com – a health data analysis and visualization site – titled, The County with the Highest Obesity Rate in Every State. She repeated the American Medical Association’s contention that obesity is a disease and noted that the World Health Organization considers obesity a global epidemic. I perused the article with interest, looking for the county in Texas that got the dubious honor of being the fattest. Unfortunately, it was our very own Angelina County.

Look around and it is evident. Angelina County has the highest obesity rate in Texas, coming in at 37.5%. That means nearly 4 out of 10 of us aren’t just overweight; we are downright fat. To achieve the dubious distinction of being fat, you have to get to a body mass index (BMI) of over 30. To give you an idea what it takes to qualify as obese, consider a 5’11” male such as myself. My appropriate weight is less than 180 pounds (and probably more like 160 pounds). Any more than that and I am considered overweight. But to be considered obese – which is what 37.5% of Angelina County residents are – I would need to weigh 215 pounds or more. For me, that would be at least 35 pounds overweight, if not more. I routinely see patients with a BMI of 40 or more, which is considered extreme (or morbid) obesity. That would be a whopping 100 pounds overweight for me.

What can we do?

Dan Buettner, author and founder of bluezones.com, has been writing for years about particular geographic pockets around the world where people live longer. According to the website, “Residents of the Blue Zones live in very different parts of the world. Yet they have nine commonalities that lead to longer, healthier, happier lives.” So much of this is what has been preached to us for decades: don’t smoke, eat your vegetables and legumes, exercise, don’t overeat, and drink wine in moderation. On top of this are stress-related factors, having strong family and friend relationships, and spirituality.

It’s not just that we are obese. Our overall health is terrible. The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation ranks population health by county. In Texas, many of the lowest ranked counties are in deep East Texas. Wouldn’t it be great if Lufkin could be known not just for pump jacks and forests, but also for the health of our citizens? This can only work for communities if each of us individually works at it. We have family, friends, and lots of churches. Strengthen those relationships. And, let’s stop smoking, exercise, and eat right!

I recently participated in a set of strategic planning sessions hosted by the Texas Forest Country Partnership called Stronger Economies Together, or SET. The purpose was to set goals for growth across a broad spectrum of our regional economy, from forestry and tourism to manufacturing and healthcare. Our SET healthcare workgroup noted that we have significant work to do if we are going to impact the poor healthcare factors and outcomes the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation identified in the deep East Texas region. We set an ambitious goal simply to raise our overall health ranking from the lowest 20% to the next lowest; in other words, from poor to still below average. But we have to start somewhere.

This will require a multi-year effort working with all aspects of the healthcare and social service community to start to move the dial toward a healthier region. We can do it, but we all need to make – and keep – that that resolution for better health!