The Secwepemc Nation Our Beginning / Our Vision Injury Surveillance Cycle ACCISS Background OCAP

21
Evolving Directions & Initiatives Secwepemc Nation Injury Surveillance & Prevention Program Mary McCullough Three Corners Health Services Society Williams Lake BC Injury Research and Prevention Unit Teleconferencing Series – Thursday, July 16, 2009

description

Evolving Directions & Initiatives Secwepemc Nation Injury Surveillance & Prevention Program Mary McCullough Three Corners Health Services Society Williams Lake BC Injury Research and Prevention Unit Teleconferencing Series – Thursday, July 16, 2009. Information Overview. The Secwepemc Nation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Secwepemc Nation Our Beginning / Our Vision Injury Surveillance Cycle ACCISS Background OCAP

Page 1: The Secwepemc Nation Our Beginning / Our Vision Injury Surveillance Cycle ACCISS Background OCAP

Evolving Directions & InitiativesSecwepemc NationInjury Surveillance & Prevention Program

Mary McCulloughThree Corners Health Services SocietyWilliams Lake

BC Injury Research and Prevention Unit Teleconferencing Series – Thursday, July 16, 2009

Page 2: The Secwepemc Nation Our Beginning / Our Vision Injury Surveillance Cycle ACCISS Background OCAP

• The Secwepemc Nation• Our Beginning / Our

Vision• Injury Surveillance Cycle• ACCISS Background• OCAP• Project Phases• Years 1-2-3• Outcomes To Date• Project evaluation• Evolving Directions

-1Year

-2Year

-3Year

OurBeginning

Information Overview

Page 3: The Secwepemc Nation Our Beginning / Our Vision Injury Surveillance Cycle ACCISS Background OCAP

Secwepemc Nation

Page 4: The Secwepemc Nation Our Beginning / Our Vision Injury Surveillance Cycle ACCISS Background OCAP

• Recognition of the limitations associated with regional, provincial and national level health data

• Driven by an interest to collect and manage our own health data

• Injury surveillance viewed as a means to address a significant health issue while providing a means to build our capacity to manage our health data.

OurBeginning

Our Beginning - 2003

Page 5: The Secwepemc Nation Our Beginning / Our Vision Injury Surveillance Cycle ACCISS Background OCAP

COMMUNITYCENTERED

SYSTEM CHARACTERISTICS

Aboriginal

Community

Centered

Injury

Surveillance

System

(ACCISS)

Page 6: The Secwepemc Nation Our Beginning / Our Vision Injury Surveillance Cycle ACCISS Background OCAP

SYSTEM CHARACTERISTICS

COMMUNITY CENTERED • Uses a minimal

dataset approach• Tailored data management

processes • (based on individual

community needs)• Both ‘paper-based’ &

‘electronic’

Aboriginal

Community

Centered

Injury

Surveillance

System

(ACCISS)

Page 7: The Secwepemc Nation Our Beginning / Our Vision Injury Surveillance Cycle ACCISS Background OCAP

Minimal Dataset Approach

WHO

is getting injured?

WHENdo injuries happen?

WHATare the

circumstances leading to an

injury?

HOW & WHYare injuries happening?

WHERE

are the injuries happening?

Page 8: The Secwepemc Nation Our Beginning / Our Vision Injury Surveillance Cycle ACCISS Background OCAP

AgeDate of Birth

GenderCommunity of Injury

Community of ResidenceDate of Injury

Time of Injury () box

Page 9: The Secwepemc Nation Our Beginning / Our Vision Injury Surveillance Cycle ACCISS Background OCAP

Minimal Dataset Approach (other data variables)

Additionalcircumstances

Cause of injury

Intent of injury

Nature & type of injury

Outcome

Page 10: The Secwepemc Nation Our Beginning / Our Vision Injury Surveillance Cycle ACCISS Background OCAP

OCAP Principles - pulls together key principles advocated by Aboriginal people for years

• Ownership-a community owns information collectively in the same way as an individual owns his/her personal information (cultural knowledge/information/data

• Control-First Nations are within their rights in seeking control over all aspects of research & information management processes that impact them

• Access-First Nations must have access to information/data about themselves & their communities regardless of where it is currently held

• Possession-identifies the relationship between a people & their information (possession or stewardship)

Emerged in 1998 as OCA - by the National Steering Committee of the First Nations and Inuit Regional Longitudinal Health Survey

Page 11: The Secwepemc Nation Our Beginning / Our Vision Injury Surveillance Cycle ACCISS Background OCAP

INJURY SURVEILLANCE CYCLE(focuses on linking knowledge with action)

Page 12: The Secwepemc Nation Our Beginning / Our Vision Injury Surveillance Cycle ACCISS Background OCAP

Secwepemc Injury Surveillance Project Cycle

Collecting

Analyzing

Sharing &Using

Interpreting

Year - 3

Year - 1

Year - 2Year - 3

Page 13: The Secwepemc Nation Our Beginning / Our Vision Injury Surveillance Cycle ACCISS Background OCAP
Page 14: The Secwepemc Nation Our Beginning / Our Vision Injury Surveillance Cycle ACCISS Background OCAP
Page 15: The Secwepemc Nation Our Beginning / Our Vision Injury Surveillance Cycle ACCISS Background OCAP

injury prevention training & action

planning

ACCISS user manual

advisory input-health data reports

& projectsknowledge transfer

opportunities

project evaluation

best-better practices

integration project

Growing & Evolving Capacity Building Opportunities

Page 16: The Secwepemc Nation Our Beginning / Our Vision Injury Surveillance Cycle ACCISS Background OCAP

Phase Three(Broadening the Scope of the Project)

Year-1Develop data access protocolsFacilitate inter-jurisdictional access to services

Year-2Conduct feasibility testing

Year-3Enhance comprehensivenessof injury dataIncrease knowledge re: health data management Develop model (inter-jurisdictional data management & planning)

Page 17: The Secwepemc Nation Our Beginning / Our Vision Injury Surveillance Cycle ACCISS Background OCAP

Challenges and Roadblocks

Role adaptation for community health practitioners

Start-up dates

Geographic diversity of project communities

Sustainability

Population sensitivities

Data collection points

Page 18: The Secwepemc Nation Our Beginning / Our Vision Injury Surveillance Cycle ACCISS Background OCAP

Stagesof

Learning

AWARENESS

with awareness

comes reasoning

UNDERSTANDING

with understanding

comes accountability

KNOWLEDGE

with knowledge

comes courage

Elder:

Mark Philips

Peterborough ON, Turtle Clan

WISDOM

with wisdom

comes responsibility

Page 19: The Secwepemc Nation Our Beginning / Our Vision Injury Surveillance Cycle ACCISS Background OCAP

1. To identify key implementation barriers & facilitating factors

2. To gain insights about key project learnings & promising practices

3. To identify factors related to community readiness to begin implementation of ACCISS

4. To identify & describe project outcomes

5. To explore external partnership interests

6. To explore from a community-based perspective, ACCISS database capabilities & usefulness

Secwepemc Injury Surveillance ProjectEvaluation Objectives

Page 20: The Secwepemc Nation Our Beginning / Our Vision Injury Surveillance Cycle ACCISS Background OCAP

CAPACITY BUILDINGVISION: to reduce the burden of injury in our Nation

ACHIEVED OUTCOMES (2004-2007)

• (initiated) increased awareness in communities about injuries

• increased commitment to injury prevention

• effective data collection

• sharing & use of data

SHORT(1-2 yrs)

• ongoing programming initiated

• knowledge-based planning using injury data

• enhanced analysis & report generation skills

• community development activities in evidence

INTERMEDIATE (3-5 yrs)

• ongoing programming

• active community engagement

•policy development

•inter-connected initiatives

• community-based & Secwepemc program planning established

LONG(6-10 yrs)

• emerging culture of safety•Injury trends actively monitored to evaluate injury prevention strategies & activities•continued impact on the burden of injury• transferred skill sets contributing to improving health, safety & well-being

Page 21: The Secwepemc Nation Our Beginning / Our Vision Injury Surveillance Cycle ACCISS Background OCAP

Evolving Directions & Initiatives