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Community
Organizing/Building and
   Health Promotion
    Programming


        Chapter 5
Introduction
• Social ecological approach to behavior change
  • Interaction between and interdependence of
    factors within and across all levels of a health
    problem
  • Behavior has multiple levels of influence
  • Behavior change usually a combination of
    individual and environmental/policy-level
    interventions
Community Organizing/Building
• Community health problems range from small
  to complex
• Community organizing
  • Process through which communities are helped
    to identify common problems or goals,
    mobilize resources, and develop and implement
    strategies for reaching the goals they have
    collectively set
  • Not a science, but an art of consensus building
Community Organizing/Building Terms
•   Community capacity
•   Empowerment
•   Participation and relevance
•   Social capital
Need for Organizing Communities
• Changes in community social structure has
  lead to loss in sense of community
  • Advances in electronics
  • Communications
  • Increased mobility
• Community organizing skills extend beyond
  community health
Assumptions of Community Organizing
• Those who organize communities do so while
  making certain assumptions
Community Organizing Methods
• No single preferred method
• All incorporate fundamental principles
  • Start where the people are
  • Participation
  • Create environments in which people and
    communities can become empowered as they
    increase problem-solving abilities
Community Organizing Methods
• Locality development
     • Broad self participation; process oriented;
       stresses consensus and cooperation; builds
       group identity and sense of community
• Social planning
     • Heavily task oriented; involves people and
       outside planners
• Social action
     • Task and process oriented; disadvantaged
       segments of the population
Community Organizing Methods
Process of Community Organizing/Building
Recognizing the Issue
• Initial organizer
  • recognizes that a problem exists and decides to
    do something about it
  • Gets things started
  • Can be from within or outside of the
    community
     • Grass-roots, citizen initiated, bottom-up
     • Top-down, outside-in
Gaining Entry into the Community
• Organizers need:
  • Cultural sensitivity, cultural competence,
    cultural humility
• Organizers need to know:
  • Who is causing problem and why; how
    problem has been addressed in past; who
    supports and opposes idea of addressing
    problem; who could provide more insight
• Gatekeepers
Organizing the People
• Executive participants
• Leadership identification
• Recruitment
  • Expanding constituencies
• Task Force
• Coalition
Assessing the Community
• Community building
• Needs assessment vs. mapping community
  capacity
• Community assets
  • Primary building blocks
  • Secondary building blocks
  • Potential building blocks
Determining the Priorities and Setting Goals
• Criteria to consider when selecting priority
  issue
  •   Problem must be winnable
  •   Must be simple and specific
  •   Must unite members of organizing group
  •   Should affect many people
  •   Should be part of larger plan
• Goals written to serve as guide for problem
  solving
Arriving at a Solution and Selecting
            Intervention Strategies
• Alternate solutions exist for every problem
  •   Probable outcomes
  •   Acceptability to the community
  •   Probable long- and short-term effects
  •   Costs of resources
Final Steps
•   Implementing
•   Evaluating
•   Maintaining
•   Looping Back
Process of Community Organizing/Building
Health Promotion Programming
• Important tool for community health
  professionals
• Health education – part of health promotion
• Health promotion – more encompassing than
  health education
• Program planning
  • May or may not be associated with community
    organizing/building
  • Process by which an intervention is planned
Creating a Health Promotion Program
• Involves a series of steps
• Success depends on many factors
• Experienced planners use models to guide
  work
• Before process begins, important to understand
  and engage priority population
Generalized Model for Program Planning
Assessing Needs of the Priority Population
• Determining purpose and scope of needs
  assessment
• Gathering data
• Analyzing data
• Identifying factors linked to health problem
• Identifying program focus
• Validating prioritized need
Setting Appropriate Goals and Objectives
• Foundation of the program
• Portions of the programming process are
  designed to achieve the goals by meeting the
  objectives
Goals
•   More encompassing than objectives
•   Written to cover all aspects of the program
•   Provide overall program direction
•   Are more general in nature
•   Usually take longer to complete
•   Do not have a deadline
•   Are usually not observed, but inferred
•   Often not measured in exact terms
Objectives
• More precise than goals
• Steps to achieve the program goals
• The more complex a program, the more
  objectives needed
• Composed of who, what, when, and how much
Creating an Intervention
• Intervention
  • Activities that will help the priority population
    meet the objectives and achieve the program
    goals
  • The program that the priority population will
    experience
  • May be several or a few activities
Intervention Considerations
•   Multiplicity
•   Dose
•   Best practices
•   Best experience
•   Best processes
Implementing the Intervention
• Implementation
   • Putting a planned program into action
• Pilot test
   • Trial run-implementation to a small group
   • Determine problems and fix before full
     implementation
• Phasing in
   • Step-by-step implementation; implementation
     with small groups
Evaluating the Results
• Determine the value or worth of an object of
  interest
• Evaluation should occur during first steps of
  program development
• Formative evaluation
• Summative evaluation
• Impact evaluation
• Outcome evaluation
Steps to Evaluation
•   Planning the evaluation
•   Collecting the data
•   Analyzing the data
•   Reporting the results
•   Applying the results
Discussion Questions
• How would you explain the difference
  between health education and health
  promotion?

• How can community members work together
  to solve health problems?

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Ch05 outline

  • 1. Community Organizing/Building and Health Promotion Programming Chapter 5
  • 2. Introduction • Social ecological approach to behavior change • Interaction between and interdependence of factors within and across all levels of a health problem • Behavior has multiple levels of influence • Behavior change usually a combination of individual and environmental/policy-level interventions
  • 3. Community Organizing/Building • Community health problems range from small to complex • Community organizing • Process through which communities are helped to identify common problems or goals, mobilize resources, and develop and implement strategies for reaching the goals they have collectively set • Not a science, but an art of consensus building
  • 4. Community Organizing/Building Terms • Community capacity • Empowerment • Participation and relevance • Social capital
  • 5. Need for Organizing Communities • Changes in community social structure has lead to loss in sense of community • Advances in electronics • Communications • Increased mobility • Community organizing skills extend beyond community health
  • 6. Assumptions of Community Organizing • Those who organize communities do so while making certain assumptions
  • 7. Community Organizing Methods • No single preferred method • All incorporate fundamental principles • Start where the people are • Participation • Create environments in which people and communities can become empowered as they increase problem-solving abilities
  • 8. Community Organizing Methods • Locality development • Broad self participation; process oriented; stresses consensus and cooperation; builds group identity and sense of community • Social planning • Heavily task oriented; involves people and outside planners • Social action • Task and process oriented; disadvantaged segments of the population
  • 10. Process of Community Organizing/Building
  • 11. Recognizing the Issue • Initial organizer • recognizes that a problem exists and decides to do something about it • Gets things started • Can be from within or outside of the community • Grass-roots, citizen initiated, bottom-up • Top-down, outside-in
  • 12. Gaining Entry into the Community • Organizers need: • Cultural sensitivity, cultural competence, cultural humility • Organizers need to know: • Who is causing problem and why; how problem has been addressed in past; who supports and opposes idea of addressing problem; who could provide more insight • Gatekeepers
  • 13. Organizing the People • Executive participants • Leadership identification • Recruitment • Expanding constituencies • Task Force • Coalition
  • 14. Assessing the Community • Community building • Needs assessment vs. mapping community capacity • Community assets • Primary building blocks • Secondary building blocks • Potential building blocks
  • 15. Determining the Priorities and Setting Goals • Criteria to consider when selecting priority issue • Problem must be winnable • Must be simple and specific • Must unite members of organizing group • Should affect many people • Should be part of larger plan • Goals written to serve as guide for problem solving
  • 16. Arriving at a Solution and Selecting Intervention Strategies • Alternate solutions exist for every problem • Probable outcomes • Acceptability to the community • Probable long- and short-term effects • Costs of resources
  • 17. Final Steps • Implementing • Evaluating • Maintaining • Looping Back
  • 18. Process of Community Organizing/Building
  • 19. Health Promotion Programming • Important tool for community health professionals • Health education – part of health promotion • Health promotion – more encompassing than health education • Program planning • May or may not be associated with community organizing/building • Process by which an intervention is planned
  • 20.
  • 21. Creating a Health Promotion Program • Involves a series of steps • Success depends on many factors • Experienced planners use models to guide work • Before process begins, important to understand and engage priority population
  • 22. Generalized Model for Program Planning
  • 23. Assessing Needs of the Priority Population • Determining purpose and scope of needs assessment • Gathering data • Analyzing data • Identifying factors linked to health problem • Identifying program focus • Validating prioritized need
  • 24. Setting Appropriate Goals and Objectives • Foundation of the program • Portions of the programming process are designed to achieve the goals by meeting the objectives
  • 25. Goals • More encompassing than objectives • Written to cover all aspects of the program • Provide overall program direction • Are more general in nature • Usually take longer to complete • Do not have a deadline • Are usually not observed, but inferred • Often not measured in exact terms
  • 26. Objectives • More precise than goals • Steps to achieve the program goals • The more complex a program, the more objectives needed • Composed of who, what, when, and how much
  • 27.
  • 28. Creating an Intervention • Intervention • Activities that will help the priority population meet the objectives and achieve the program goals • The program that the priority population will experience • May be several or a few activities
  • 29. Intervention Considerations • Multiplicity • Dose • Best practices • Best experience • Best processes
  • 30. Implementing the Intervention • Implementation • Putting a planned program into action • Pilot test • Trial run-implementation to a small group • Determine problems and fix before full implementation • Phasing in • Step-by-step implementation; implementation with small groups
  • 31. Evaluating the Results • Determine the value or worth of an object of interest • Evaluation should occur during first steps of program development • Formative evaluation • Summative evaluation • Impact evaluation • Outcome evaluation
  • 32. Steps to Evaluation • Planning the evaluation • Collecting the data • Analyzing the data • Reporting the results • Applying the results
  • 33. Discussion Questions • How would you explain the difference between health education and health promotion? • How can community members work together to solve health problems?