THURSTON THRIVES

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Thurston County Public Health and Social Services March 2014 For more information visit: www.ThurstonThrives.org or contact: Chris Hawkins, Coordinator (360) 867-2513 [email protected] Don Sloma, Director (360) 867-2502 [email protected]

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Thurston County Public Health and Social Services March 2014. THURSTON THRIVES. For more information visit: www.ThurstonThrives.org or contact: Chris Hawkins, Coordinator (360) 867-2513 [email protected] Don Sloma, Director (360) 867-2502 [email protected]. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of THURSTON THRIVES

Page 1: THURSTON THRIVES

Thurston County Public Health and Social Services

March 2014For more information visit:www.ThurstonThrives.org

or contact:

Chris Hawkins, Coordinator(360) 867-2513

[email protected]

Don Sloma, Director(360) 867-2502

[email protected]

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We Believe: Good health comes from:

We Believe our choices matter.

We Believe health comes from the way we live, work, and play.

• fresh air • decent housing

• pleasant compassionate neighborhoods

• clean water • great schools

• thriving kids and families

• safe nutritious food

• living wage jobs

• quality, affordable healthcare

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Thurston Thrives is bringing together community partners around the work we share to honor those who make this a healthy and safe place and to align efforts to make an even

bigger difference by creating a “Collective Impact”.

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“Channeling Change: Making Collective Impact Work” 2012 Stanford Social Innovation Review

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Increase community engagement and alignment around health priorities. Integrate --- do not reinvent --- existing plans &

groups. A Board of Health led process — focused and

engaging — to create Collective Impact. Products:

A few, simply stated community outcomes Lead organizations and main helpers for each outcome A limited number of clear milestones.

Communicate outcomes frequently and widely as an ongoing community “call to action.”

That is Thurston Thrives!

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Requires the collective impacts

of Thurston Thrives

Requires the collective impacts

of Thurston Thrives

Health Care & Social ServicesHealth Care & Social Services

EducationEducation

Employment, Income, WealthEmployment,

Income, Wealth

Child & Youth Resilience (ACEs)

Child & Youth Resilience (ACEs)

EnvironmentCommunity Design

Housing/ShelterFood

EnvironmentCommunity Design

Housing/ShelterFood

Social ResilienceSocial Resilience

Physical environment

Social and economic factors

Community safety

Education

Employment

Income

Family & social support

Environmental quality

Built environment

Health Outcomes

Health Factors

Policies and Programs

Length of life

Quality of life

Clinical careAccess to care

Quality of care*

Health behaviors

Alcohol use

Nutrition & physical activity

Sexual activity

Tobacco use

Adapted from U. of Wisconsin Population Health Institute 2012. County Health Rankings Model. *Model takes as given various significant factors in the health of a community, such as the availability of antibiotics, clean drinking water and sanitary wastewater disposal, immunizations, etc.

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THURSTON THRIVES PHASES

Phase I: 2013 - 2014

Phase II: 2014 - 2020

Phase III: 2020 - 2021

Develop

•Name advisors & action leads•Map strategies•Set measures•Continue action strategies already underway•Name ‘backbone’ organizations

Implement

•Carry out and continue action strategies•Communicate continuously•Engage public in action•Celebrate progress annually

Re-assess

•Review strategies•Adjust targets•Complete revised action agenda

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Food: Reclaim more food; Remind about healthy eating; better connect

farms & places people eat; assure safety; more gardens• Action: CDC grant submitted with key action team members

Economy: Revitalize connections to employers, employees &

entrepreneurs; help new employers and workers build skills• Action: Developing entrepreneur center; partners in CDC grant

Community Design: Revamp paths & trails; Reimagine community places as

walkable & bike-able for shopping, work and play• Action: Continue corridor emphasis of Sustainable

Thurston, new connections from housing to trails

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Housing: Reduce entry costs; teach about home ownership; rapidly

Re-house the homeless; increase permanent supported housing

Education: Better connect kids with timely supports & broaden learning

choices to increase HS graduation & post-secondary success

Child & Youth Resilience: Prevent ACEs (like child abuse & DV); help kids & families

Rebound from ACEs; Redouble social connections

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Complete initial strategy maps – 3 teams Environment – May Clinical Care – June Community Resilience – July

Better Align: within strategies & across teams CIP, PHSS programs, new contracts

Build backbone(s) Review, Celebrate & Reissue the call to

action – last quarter of 2014

} throughout2014

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