Leadership Development Opportunities at ASTHO Katie Sellers, DrPH , CPH March 10, 2014
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Transcript of Leadership Development Opportunities at ASTHO Katie Sellers, DrPH , CPH March 10, 2014
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The Beginning:
Cholera(vibrio cholerae)
May 7, 1884—formed the National Conference of State Boards of Health
ASTHO Forms
President Roosevelt signs the Social Security Act of 1935
Association of State & Territorial Health Officers
Incorporated March 23, 1942
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ASTHO Strategic Map 2013-2015
Strengthen the Effectiveness, Value, andRelevance of State and Territorial Public Health
in Promoting Health Equity andImproving Health Outcomes
Support S/THealth Official
Effectiveness andSuccess
Continuously
StrengthenMission-Driven
S/T PublicHealth Practice
Implement aSustainable
ASTHO Economic
Model
Serve as theCollective Voice
& “Go To” Resource for S/T
Public Health
Continue toIncreaseASTHO’s
OrganizationalEffectiveness
Align the Governmental Public Health Enterprise Across Local, State, and Federal Sectors
Leverage Relationships and Expertise Among Members, Affiliates, and Other Strategic Partners
Cultivate Continuous Quality Improvement
59 Voting Members Board of Directors
5 officers + 10 Regional Representatives 4 Ex-Officio Members
ASTHO Infrastructure: Engaged Members
José Montero (NH)Immediate Past
President
John Dreyzehner (TN)
Secretary-Treasurer
Jewel Mullen (CT)President-Elect
Terry Cline (OK)President
David Lakey (TX)Past President
AccessChair: Karyl Rattay (DE)
Environmental HealthChair: VACANT
Infectious DiseaseChair: Terry Dwelle (ND)
e-HealthChair: LaMar Hasbrouck (IL)
ASTHO Policy Committees
Performance Co-Chairs: Ron Chapman (CA)
J.T. Lane (LA)
PreparednessChair: John Dreyzehner (TN)
PreventionChair: Jewel Mullen (CT)
Peer Networks
1. Senior Deputies2. Directors of Public
Health Preparedness3. State Environmental
Health Directors4. Human Resource
Directors\Workforce Development Directors
5. Chief Financial Officers
6. Primary Care Office Directors
7. State Legislative Liaisons
8. Accreditation Coordinators
9. Strategic National Stockpile (SNS) Coordinators
10. Informatics Directors
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ASTHO Today – 20 Affiliates
NAVCO
ASTHO Alumni Society
Where are they now???
Provide forum for networking among former members
Allow former members to continue advancing state public health◦ Internal & External
Committees◦ TA◦ Mentoring
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SHLI, site visits, Kennedy School of Government
Bi-weekly All-SHO calls Technical Assistance 24/7
◦ Example: Pharmacy Compounding Collaboratives
◦ Examples: Million Hearts, United Health Rankings, Prescription Drug Misuse
Networking and Best Practices
Funded by The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation since 1998
ASTHO serves as the National Program Office NGA and Harvard JFK School of Government Accelerates the leadership development of new
SHOs Policymakers Administrators Advocates for the health of the public
State Health Leadership Initiative (SHLI)
Major Components New SHO Site Visit Mentoring Program Winter Member Meeting Professional Development Grant ($5,000) Strategic Planning Grant ($10,000) NGA Policy Academy Leadership in Government Meeting Harvard Kennedy School of Government
Program
State Health Leadership Initiative (SHLI)
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ASTHO plays an important role helping member health agencies coordinate with each other, the federal government, and other parties in times of emergency.
◦ H1N1 Flu Clinics◦ Gulf oil spill◦ Fukushima◦ Hurricane Sandy
Emergency Response
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Healthy Babies March of Dimes
partnership Work with HRSA and
CoIN 50 states, DC, Puerto
Rico agreed to pledge 12 states reduce
prematurity by 8%; 6 have rate of 9.6 or less.
National Partnerships
Integration of Healthcare and Public
Health Cross-cutting group
developed strategic map in response to IOM Report
Collaborative featuring 63 partners across NPO, government, and academia
Stories from all 50 states on integration efforts
ASTHO supports member health agencies by engaging in and leading national partnerships in important public health areas.
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ASTHO is in constant contact with federal agencies and the U.S. Congress advocating on behalf of our members’ public health priorities Example: Prescription drug misuse
programs span many agencies and organizations: CDC, SAMHSA, HRSA, ONDCP, DOD, NIH, NIDA, FDA, and NGA
Met with more than 90 Congressional offices during March 2013 as part of ASTHO’s Hill Day activities.
Federal Engagement