Building Blocks

October 16th, 2009

Present: Josefina Alvarado Mena (Safe Passages), Kay Adams (ACPHD), Ayannakai Nalo (CHO), Susan Greenwald (CHRCO/EIS), Lynn Chung (ACPHD), Pam Brett (ACPHD), Dynell Garron Lewis (Brighter Beginnings), Kathleen Paulo (ACPHD), Allison Pulice (ACPHD), Kathryn Horsley (Cal Family Health Council), Nancy Frank (Community Financial Resources), Dana Harvey (Mandela Marketplace), Ellen Strunin (ACPHD), Debra Richardson (ACPHD), Mylene Cahambing (ACPHD), Toby Furash (ACPHD/Centering Healthcare Institute), Relda Robertson-Beckley (ACPHD), Yvette Leung (Health Care Services Agency), Rona Renner (Interactive Parenting Media), Dani Taylor (ACPHD), Marge Deichman (ACPHD), Anita Siegel (ACPHD), Elizabeth Hales (East Bay Regional Park District), Deborrah Bremond (First 5 Alameda County), Bina Patel Shrimali (ACPHD), Olis Simmons (Youth Uprising), Sean Heron (Oakland Housing Authority)

Recorder: Allison Pulice

Item / Discussion / Outcome/Action
Welcome / Anita Siegel, Interim Director of Alameda County Public Health Department, welcomed the group and announced that the health department is currently working on a planning grant.
Introduction / Marge Deichman gave a brief introduction to our work together, expressing urgency about the 7,000 babies born into poverty every year in AlamedaCounty. She emphasized that together we can change the circumstances and improve the odds for these children to reach their full potential.
All group members were asked to respond to the following question: If you could do one thing right now to improve the lives of these young children & their families, what would that one thing be? (Responses in Exhibit A)
Framework: Life Course Model / Bina Patel provided a context for the group by explaining the Life Course Perspective & the “Puzzle Piece” model. Handouts were distributed.
Focused Conversations / The facilitator led the group through a series of questions that shaped a focused conversation around what our partnership can do to ensure that all children start life with more equitable opportunities.
(See Exhibit B for full answers & Exhibit C for themed answers)
Activity: All group members were asked to place colored dots on the Life Course Perspective graph that correspond to services they provide and the targeted age groups.
Next Steps & Closing / This group will continue to convene. / Next meeting: December 4th

Exhibit A

Q: If you could do one thing right now to improve the lives of these young children & their families, what would that one thing be?

Community

Ensure that each child has one caring adult in their lives

Ensure each child felt loved

One caring, loving adult

Strong communities that children & families can be a part of

Helping parents be whole & complete

Increase support services to support growth & development of children

Build on support systems

For young people to know they have options

Education

Start a baby college

Keeping kids in school

Good public education

Be read to every day

Support parents as their children’s first teacher

Increase high school graduation rates by 20%

Each child has education that teaches them to think

Physical Environment

Safe places for children to be

Safe, affordable, sustainable housing

Safe neighborhoods (a place to play)

Neighborhood safety

Economics

Families have economic opportunity to sustain their needs

Equal distribution of wealth

Help families feel less isolated, use microfinance

Money & a system of accountability

Policy

Paid maternity leave

Livable wage for parents

Easy access to medical & mental health care

Services

Ensure linkages between services so things don’t fall apart or fall through the cracks

Spread group perinatal care

Other

A successful project in AlamedaCounty

Exhibit B

Responses to focused conversation

(flip charts)

Q: What do you need clarity about (with regard to this collaborative)?

Responses:

Funding sources create silos and are short in their vision (short funding cycles). How do we sustain ourselves for the long haul? How do we educate our funders?

What expertise is needed?

What are the strategic points to intervene?

(Michael Lu responded to this saying that it may be beneficial to look at known periods of accelerated growth and development – e.g. Pre-conception, Pregnancy, 0-5, Early adolescence/puberty)

……………………………………………………..

Q: What can we do in this broader partnership that is at the heart of this effort to ensure that all children start life with more equitable opportunities? How might this framework contribute to our efforts?

Responses:

In program development bring parents to the table & ensure that approaches are covering the life course

Identify who is here and our capacity/expertise

Identify centers that encompass all of these services (comprehensive)

Need a combination of centralized & decentralized services

Must think about integration from the beginning

Define our services and how they are linked to other services

Where can we have critical impacts?

Need to solidify linkages

Address immediate needs while maintaining focus on the social movement aspect of this work

Division of labor: 1) Here & Now, 2) Long term vision

Allow families to speak to elements that would transform their lives

We need capacity to do our day jobs, but also work on the future (human capital deployed/dedicated to work on the future)

We can do things differently in our day jobs & transform our organizational culture to work on the future

Need to do things at all critical steps & connect to other interventions (best practices)

Should we look for funds for data system?

……………………………………………..

Reflections on “Dot Grid”

CBOs rely on Public Health to take care of “health”

Opportunities to distribute our resources more broadly

Need for collaboration & connectivity that we need to serve clients

CBOs need Public Health Department to leverage resources

Opportunities for mutuality or combined work

Need to broaden our perspective

Should be talking about policy & shaping society

Moving beyond “patients” Helping people move beyond being consumers of health care

Barriers to linkages – agencies serve same people but not linked

Excited by broad vision and brining in community

Expand how we think about service delivery

Need to build community capacity

Need to rise above the day-to-day work to envision & strategize

Many different groups are looking at equity from different lenses

Are the “abundant” services really accessible to everyone (e.g. undocumented)

There is a disconnect between needs and services

Policies that help families thrive

Need to engage public

Missing community voice

There are partners not yet at the table

Allow ourselves to be open to criticism/feedback from the community or partners

Need to build trust

Need to tie into other efforts

Process of collaboration is important

Need to “connect the dots”

Decision-makers need to be at the table

A lot of collective experience in the room; need to use it

………………………………………..

Q: What are the critical areas of need?

Responses

Reducing barriers to our work together

Lack of awareness of how to work in all sectors

Raise awareness of interconnectedness of domains

Need to connect “dots”

Articulate vision and short-term projects

Get to work on short term projects to deep people engaged

Know impact of programs

Develop common indicators

Identify critical points of intervention/outcomes and focus work there (e.g. reading by 3rd grade)

Places where people live

Pull together resources that are more concentrated and purposeful to get a positive effect

Think long-term

Build interconnected relationships

………………………………………….

Q: Intention of this group

Responses

Clarify a unifying vision, mission & goals

Identify short term projects that are connected to the larger vision

Work on both levels (short-term & long-term) and connect the two

Share data (i.e. universal chart)

Connect to other members (website, e-mail, blog)

Create relationships by doing & achieving success

Develop a logic model

Exhibit C

Themes from focused conversation

(flip charts)

Funding

Funding sources create silos and are short in their vision (short funding cycles). How do we sustain ourselves for the long haul? How do we educate our funders?

Should we look for funds for data system?

CBOs need Public Health Department to leverage resources

Service Linkages

Identify centers that encompass all of these services (comprehensive)

Must think about integration from the beginning

Need a combination of centralized & decentralized services

Define our services and how they are linked to other services

Need to solidify linkages

Need for collaboration & connectivity that we need to serve clients

Barriers to linkages – agencies serve same people but not linked

Expand how we think about service delivery

Are the “abundant” services really accessible to everyone (e.g. undocumented)

There is a disconnect between needs and services

Tension between “Services” and Broader Vision for Social Change

Address immediate needs while maintaining focus on the social movement aspect of this work

Division of labor: 1) Here & Now, 2) Long term vision

We need capacity to do our day jobs, but also work on the future (human capital deployed/dedicated to work on the future)

We can do things differently in our day jobs & transform our organizational culture to work on the future

Need to broaden our perspective

Should be talking about policy & shaping society

Moving beyond “patients” Helping people move beyond being consumers of health care

Need to rise above the day-to-day work to envision & strategize

Policies that help families thrive

Think long-term

Working Together

Identify who is here and our capacity/expertise

Reducing barriers to our work together

Lack of awareness of how to work in all sectors

Raise awareness of interconnectedness of domains

Need to connect “dots”

Know impact of programs

Develop common indicators

Pull together resources that are more concentrated and purposeful to get a positive effect

Build interconnected relationships

CBOs rely on Public Health to take care of “health”

Opportunities to distribute our resources more broadly

CBOs need Public Health Department to leverage resources

Opportunities for mutuality or combined work

There are partners not yet at the table

Need to build trust

Process of collaboration is important

Need to “connect the dots”

Decision-makers need to be at the table

A lot of collective experience in the room; need to use it

Share data (i.e. universal chart)

Connect to other members (website, e-mail, blog)

Work on both levels (short-term & long-term) and connect the two

Intervention Points

What are the strategic points to intervene?

(Michael Lu responded to this saying that it may be beneficial to look at known periods of accelerated growth and development – e.g. Pre-conception, Pregnancy, 0-5, Early adolescence/puberty)

Where can we have critical impacts?

Need to do things at all critical steps & connect to other interventions (best practices)

Identify critical points of intervention/outcomes and focus work there (e.g. reading by 3rd grade)

Places where people live

Community Engagement

In program development bring parents to the table & ensure that approaches are covering the life course

Allow families to speak to elements that would transform their lives

Excited by broad vision and brining in community

Need to build community capacity

Need to engage public

Missing community voice

Allow ourselves to be open to criticism/feedback from the community or partners

Other Health Equity Activities

Many different groups are looking at equity from different lenses

Need to tie into other efforts