1. Implementing a Needs Assessment to Advance Health Equity in Overdose Prevention and Surveillance Initiatives.
- Author
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Winston, Tiffany R., Reed, Minda, Roberts, Marissa, Panjwani, Aashna, Farfalla, Jennifer, Pless, Victoria, Miles, Ayana, Rooks-Peck, Cherie, and Underwood, Natasha L.
- Subjects
SUBSTANCE abuse prevention ,DRUG overdose ,HEALTH services accessibility ,PUBLIC health surveillance ,SOCIAL determinants of health ,RESEARCH funding ,NEEDS assessment ,HEALTH equity ,QUALITY assurance ,PUBLIC health ,GOVERNMENT regulation - Abstract
Objectives: State, local, and federal agencies have expanded efforts to address the root causes of overdoses, including health inequity and related social determinants of health. As an Overdose Data to Action (OD2A) technical assistance provider, the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials (ASTHO) conducted the first national needs assessment to understand capacity and technical assistance needs of OD2A jurisdictions in advancing health equity. Methods: ASTHO designed and disseminated the OD2A Recipient Health Equity Needs Assessment (RHENA) to 66 OD2A-funded jurisdictions from February to March 2022. OD2A principal investigators and staff were contacted via email and asked to complete the needs assessment within 6 weeks. One coder manually coded open-ended responses, conducted a thematic analysis on the qualitative data, and performed a simple frequency analysis on the quantitative data. Results: Fifty-two jurisdictions (78.8%) responded, including 36 states, 12 cities/counties, and 2 territories. Most jurisdictions (n = 46; 88.5%) reported having a formal or informal health equity lead in place. Common barriers included a lack of access to data sources (n = 37; 71.2%), lack of partnerships (n = 20; 38.5%), and lack of funding (n = 14; 26.9%). Respondents reported needing more information sharing among jurisdictions and partner organizations, coaching on best practices, and routine discussions such as peer-to-peer learning sessions. Conclusion: Findings suggest that gaps remain in programmatic policies and principles to address inequities in overdose prevention. Results are being used to identify additional technical assistance opportunities, jurisdictional capacity, and approaches to advance health equity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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