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1.
Am J Public Health ; 112(S3): S275-S278, 2022 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2054653

ABSTRACT

With Minneapolis, Minnesota, partners, we developed a community-based participatory intervention using a mobile health application to provide actionable data to communities. More than 550 participants completed the survey. Key messages included strengths in our homes, neighborhoods, and faith communities. Key challenges were related to substance use and sleeping. We jointly conducted virtual community meetings such as webinars, Facebook Live shows, and online newsletters to begin to shift the community narrative from deficits to whole-person health, including strengths. (Am J Public Health. 2022;112(S3):S275-S278. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2022.306852).


Subject(s)
Substance-Related Disorders , Telemedicine , Community Participation , Community-Based Participatory Research , Humans , Minnesota , Narration , United States
2.
J Am Med Inform Assoc ; 29(11): 1958-1966, 2022 10 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1973187

ABSTRACT

Electronic case reporting (eCR) is the automated generation and transmission of case reports from electronic health records to public health for review and action. These reports (electronic initial case reports: eICRs) adhere to recommended exchange and terminology standards. eCR is a partnership of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Association of Public Health Laboratories (APHL) and Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists (CSTE). The Minnesota Department of Health (MDH) received eICRs for COVID-19 from April 2020 (3 sites, manual process), automated eCR implementation in August 2020 (7 sites), and on-boarded ∼1780 clinical units in 460 sites across 6 integrated healthcare systems (through March 2022). Approximately 20 000 eICRs/month were reported to MDH during high-volume timeframes. With increasing provider/health system implementation, the proportion of COVID-19 cases with an eICR increased to 30% (March 2022). Evaluation of data quality for select demographic variables (gender, race, ethnicity, email, phone, language) across the 6 reporting health systems revealed a high proportion of completeness (>80%) for half of variables and less complete data for rest (ethnicity, email, language) along with low ethnicity data (<50%) for one health system. Presently eCR implementation at MDH includes only one EHR vendor. Next steps will focus on onboarding other EHRs, additional eICR data extraction/utilization, detailed analysis, outreach to address data quality issues, and expanding to other reportable conditions.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Public Health , Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. , Electronics , Humans , Minnesota/epidemiology , United States
3.
JMIR Nurs ; 5(1): e38063, 2022 May 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1847088

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic has prompted an interest in whole-person health and emotional well-being. Informatics solutions through user-friendly tools such as mobile health apps offer immense value. Prior research developed a consumer-facing app MyStrengths + MyHealth using Simplified Omaha System Terms (SOST) to assess whole-person health. The MyStrengths + MyHealth app assesses strengths, challenges, and needs (SCN) for 42 concepts across four domains (My Living, My Mind and Networks, My Body, My Self-care; eg, Income, Emotions, Pain, and Nutrition, respectively). Given that emotional well-being was a predominant concern during the COVID-19 pandemic, we sought to understand whole-person health for participants with/without Emotions challenges. OBJECTIVE: This study aims to use visualization techniques and data from attendees at a Midwest state fair to examine SCN overall and by groups with/without Emotions challenges, and to explore the resilience of participants. METHODS: This cross-sectional and descriptive correlational study surveyed adult attendees at a 2021 Midwest state fair. Data were visualized using Excel and analyzed using descriptive and inferential statistics using SPSS. RESULTS: The study participants (N=182) were primarily female (n=123, 67.6%), aged ≥45 years (n=112, 61.5%), White (n=154, 84.6%), and non-Hispanic (n=177, 97.3%). Compared to those without Emotions challenges, those with Emotions challenges were aged 18-44 (P<.001) years, more often female (P=.02), and not married (P=.01). Overall, participants had more strengths (mean 28.6, SD 10.5) than challenges (mean 12, SD 7.5) and needs (mean 4.2, SD 7.5). The most frequent needs were in Emotions, Nutrition, Income, Sleeping, and Exercising. Compared to those without Emotions challenges, those with Emotions challenges had fewer strengths (P<.001), more challenges (P<.001), and more needs (P<.001), along with fewer strengths for Emotions (P<.001) and for the cluster of health-related behaviors domain concepts, Sleeping (P=.002), Nutrition (P<.001), and Exercising (P<.001). Resilience was operationalized as correlations among strengths for SOST concepts and visualized for participants with/without an Emotions challenge. Those without Emotions challenges had more positive strengths correlations across multiple concepts/domains. CONCLUSIONS: This survey study explored a large community-generated data set to understand whole-person health and showed between-group differences in SCN and resilience for participants with/without Emotions challenges. It contributes to the literature regarding an app-aided and data-driven approach to whole-person health and resilience. This research demonstrates the power of health informatics and provides researchers with a data-driven methodology for additional studies to build evidence on whole-person health and resilience.

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