1 / 27

Multnomah County Health Department Environmental Health PACE EH

Multnomah County Health Department Environmental Health PACE EH A Tool for Overcoming Health Disparities Lila Wickham, RN MS November 15, 2003. Multnomah County . Multnomah County population 650,000 1/3 of Oregon’s residents Primarily urban with 79% population in the City of Portland

Download Presentation

Multnomah County Health Department Environmental Health PACE EH

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Multnomah County Health Department Environmental Health PACE EH A Tool for Overcoming Health Disparities Lila Wickham, RN MS November 15, 2003

  2. Multnomah County • Multnomah County population 650,000 1/3 of Oregon’s residents • Primarily urban with 79% population in the City of Portland • Majority of diverse population resides in Multnomah County

  3. Oregon’s Inequities • Oregon is one of two states in the nation in which the gap between the wealthy and the poor grew the fastest • The median household income for African Americans is the lowest of any group and 33% lower than the county median income

  4. Why PACE ? • Dealing with “Hazard of the Week” • Lack of “community” involvement in environmental health • Disparity between science and public perception • Limited data at the local level • Seeking available resources rather than community desired resources

  5. Vision of Success • Facilitate an inclusive community process that identifies, analyzes and prioritizes environmental health concerns and builds community capacity

  6. Reach out into the community to engage collaboratively in research not perform research on a community • Biggest ongoing ethical issue remains allocation of resources

  7. Eisenhower 1953 • “Every gun that is fired, every warship launched, every rocket fired, signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed. The world in arms is not spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its labourers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children”.

  8. Definition of Success Goal I. – Develop Functioning Coalition • Diverse Representation (organization, individuals, under represented communities) • Create Steering Committee • Functional Work Groups • Relationship Building • Develop Action Plan for Assessment • Advocate for Implementation of Action Plan

  9. Definition of Success – Continued Goal II. – Complete Environmental Health Assessment • Define Geographic Area of Focus • Define Goals, Objectives and Scope • Identify EH Issues • Analyze EH Issues • Prioritize EH Issues

  10. How do you get to “community”?

  11. Select a Geographic Area • Environmental justice area • large % of people of color • low-income • disproportionately affected by environmental and health threats • people with historically limited access to political & decision-making power • Exposure to multiple environmental problems • Availability of existing data on that area • PACE-EH support is welcomed by the community

  12. People of Color

  13. People of Color

  14. People in Poverty

  15. Exposure to multiple environmental problems

  16. Exposure to multiple environmental problems

  17. Availability of existing data on that area • Income • Diversity • Waste transfer stations • Landfills • Illegal dump sites • Air quality • Age of housing Existing GIS data considered: • Lead poisoning cases • Benzene • Diesel particulate matter • Brownfields • Automobile accidents • Cancer incidence • Pesticide exposures

  18. PACE-EH support is welcomed by the community

  19. Active Neighborhood Coalitions

  20. Passion and Storytelling

  21. Core Functions of Public Health • Assessment • Assurance • Policy Development • Passion

  22. Immediate issues identified by community • See EH screening as a regular medical visit • Neighborhood clean-ups • Education on peeling paint and lead paint • Landlord inspection of property on a regular basis • Mold in basements • Disease carrying rodents

  23. Immediate issues identified by community (cont) • Manage traffic so that children can walk safely to school • Change policy around diesel exhaust, trains, trucks • Stinky garbage cans

  24. Next Steps • Complete community based assessment • Identify and prioritize issues • Create solutions • Change public policy

More Related