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Predictors of capacity in public health, environmental, and agricultural laboratories
- Source :
- Journal of public health management and practice : JPHMP. 20(6)
- Publication Year :
- 2013
-
Abstract
- Objectives Ensuring adequate capacity to address population health concerns has challenged public health for decades. Organizational and workforce characteristics are theorized to contribute to organizational capacity. This article considers 2 possible quantitative measures of organizational capacity using public health, environmental, and agricultural laboratories (PHEALs) as the unit of interest and tests their associations with workforce and human resources variables. Design The National Laboratory Capacity Assessment was developed by the University of Michigan Center of Excellence in Public Health Workforce Studies and the Association of Public Health Laboratories. Online data collection took place from July to September 2011. All statistical analyses were performed in 2013. Setting US PHEALs were invited to participate in the study. All study participants were Association of Public Health Laboratories members. Participants The Association of Public Health Laboratories distributed the National Laboratory Capacity Assessment survey to 105 PHEAL directors in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico, including 50 state public health laboratories, 41 local public health laboratories, 8 environmental laboratories, and 6 agricultural laboratories. Main outcome measures Logistic regression analyses were performed to assess relationships between outcome measures of overall capacity and averaged program capacity and variables representing characteristics of PHEALs and their workforce, including number of workers, proportion of scientists, education, experience, training, and equipment quality. Results The survey achieved a 76% response rate. Both capacity models showed that PHEALs offering an array of training opportunities are 4 times more likely to report higher capacity scores. One model showed a positive association between workforce size and capacity. Worker education and equipment quality were negatively associated with capacity in both models. Conclusions The findings of this study provide empirical evidence that some workforce factors may influence organizational capacity of PHEALs. Techniques used to measure capacity and workforce factors must be improved to produce consistent findings across public health organizational data sets.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Population health
Environment
Environmental health
Health care
medicine
Humans
Health Workforce
Health policy
HRHIS
business.industry
Health Policy
Public health
Research
Puerto Rico
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
International health
Agriculture
Models, Theoretical
United States
Health promotion
Workforce
District of Columbia
Business
Public Health
Laboratories
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15505022
- Volume :
- 20
- Issue :
- 6
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of public health management and practice : JPHMP
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....e979c072c3e54b927a4e474f1f58549a