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Cross-jurisdictional sharing in public health: what we do (and do not) know Gianfranco Pezzino, Co-Director Center for Sharing Public Health Services phsharing.org.

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Presentation on theme: "Cross-jurisdictional sharing in public health: what we do (and do not) know Gianfranco Pezzino, Co-Director Center for Sharing Public Health Services phsharing.org."— Presentation transcript:

1 Cross-jurisdictional sharing in public health: what we do (and do not) know Gianfranco Pezzino, Co-Director Center for Sharing Public Health Services phsharing.org

2 Overview of This Session Introduce the Center for Sharing PH Services Describe success factors for CJS projects Frame efficiency issue Review available information on impact of CJS projects

3 Center for Sharing Public Health Services  DOB: May 2012  National initiative  Managed by the Kansas Health Institute  Funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation  Goal:  Explore, inform, track and disseminate learning about shared approaches to delivering public health services

4 Definitions  Cross-jurisdictional sharing is the deliberate exercise of public authority to enable collaboration across jurisdictional boundaries to deliver essential public health services.  Collaboration means working across boundaries and in multi-organizational arrangements to solve problems that cannot be solved – or easily solved – by single organizations or jurisdictions.* *Source: Rosemary O’Leary, School of Public Affairs and Administration, University of Kansas

5

6 Does It Work?

7 Available Data About Impact  Qualitative information from demonstration projects  75 LHDs, 125 jurisdictions  5 in-depth case studies (ICMA)*  Quantitative information  Survey administered to local jurisdictions (ICMA)*  1,119 responses * ICMA data focused on back-office service sharing

8 Summary of Factors for Success  Prerequisites:  Take care of these before you even start planning  Facilitating factors:  Leverage them if they apply to your team and project  Project characteristics:  Build them in your project

9 Factors for Success Prerequisites Clarity of objectives A balanced approach (mutual advantages) TRUST!

10 Factors for Success PrerequisitesFacilitating factors Clarity of objectives Success in prior collaborations A balanced approach (mutual advantages) A sense of “regional” identity TRUST!Positive personal relationships

11 Factors for Success PrerequisitesFacilitating factorsProject characteristics Clarity of objectivesSuccess in prior collaborations Senior-level support A balanced approach (mutual advantages) A sense of “regional” identity Strong project management skills TRUST!Positive personal relationships Strong change management plans Effective communication

12 Does It Work???

13 “Does It Work?”  A common question from policymakers about sharing agreements:

14 “Does It Work?”  A common question from policymakers about sharing agreements: “HOW MUCH MONEY WOULD IT SAVE US?”

15 Framing the Cost Issue  “Return on Investment”:  How much money will be generated by our “investment”?  Investment: “the action or process of investing money for profit or material result”  Government is not a for-profit entity  Focus on material results

16 Framing the Cost Issue  “Return on objectives:”  What is the impact of our program/service/capability?  How does our “investment” position us closer to achieving our goals/objectives?  Shifting focus from $$ to impact.

17 Efficiency  Achieving maximum results for a given investment  Achieving a given result (“goal”) at the smallest possible cost Output Input

18 Efficiency  Achieving maximum results for a given investment  Achieving a given result (“goal”) at the smallest possible cost Output Bang Input Buck Or,

19 Does It Work??!!

20 Anecdotes Versus Evidence  Subject to bias  Distortion  Exaggeration  Often from a single source  Untestable  Lack of standardized conditions  Potentially harmful  Multiple anecdotes do not constitute evidence

21 Most preliminary evidence of impact of CJS activities is “semi-anecdotal”

22 Improved Effectiveness  Greater range of public health services and/or functional capacities available  Improved quality of services Timeliness Accessibility Professional level  Ability to meet state or other performance standards

23 Improved Efficiency  Reduced costs – both overall costs and unit costs  Greater productivity and economy of scale  Ability to employ more robust and current service management systems  Increased eligibility in some instances for state and federal grants

24 ICMA Survey: Cost Savings  55% report cost savings  Cost saving reported more often among smaller jurisdictions  Greatest savings reported in:  Executive leadership  Billing  Office and facility maintenance  Communications and outreach  Little or no hard data available

25 ICMA Survey: Improved Efficiency  From ICMA survey:

26 Consolidation of Three Summit County, OH Health Departments: Pre/Post 2011 Merger Local PH Revenue Fiscal Year City of Akron City of Barberton Balance of Summit County Combined Public Health Spending 2008$16,445,449$1,992,618$12,769,359$31,207,426 2009$18,584,664$1,548,593$12,662,176$32,795,433 2010$15,993,025$1,009,468$13,655,691$30,658,184 2011$8,856,632$135,800$19,620,983$28,613,415 2012$4,020,810$135,163$ ??

27 Integration in Genesee & Orleans Counties, NY CriteriaDescription Genesee Co. Enhanced Benefit Orleans Co. Enhanced Benefit TOTAL Enhanced Benefit Shared Staffing Savings Public Health Director Environ Hlth Director Patient Svcs Director $66,000/yr $21,941/yr $51,000/yr $66,000/yr $ -0- /yr $51,000/yr $132,000/yr $ 21,941/yr $102,000/yr Travel Expense Savings PH Director attending conferences and trainings $514/yr$652/yr$1,166/yr Shared Consultation Savings Existing Genesee Co. consultation shared with Orleans Co. $ -0- /yr Medical: $ 7,500/yr Environ Eng: $13,000/yr $20,500/yr CDC PHAP Associate Benefit Provided and paid for by CDC to assist with research /analysis $21,843/yr $43,686/yr Shared Transportation Savings Joint RFP for 3-5 Preschool and Early Intervention Transportation $ -0- /yr $107,295/yr TOTAL$428,588/yr

28 What Is Next?  Focus on implementation:  Measuring effectiveness (i.e., changes in quality/quantity of services) AND efficiency (i.e., ROO)  Moving from anecdotes to evidence  Is what we learned applicable to CJS involving:  States?  Tribes?  System-wide changes?  Public-private and public-non profit collaborations?  What are fiscal implications?  Cost of sharing services:  We need to measure costs before we measure savings  Apportionment

29 A New Resource

30 www.PHSharing.org PHSharing@KHI.org (855) 476-3671 The Center for Sharing Public Health Services is a national initiative managed by the Kansas Health Institute with support from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.


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