On this page: About the National Data | Methodology | History
About the National Data
Data
Baseline: 82.4 percent of state and territorial public health jurisdictions had developed or participated in developing a health improvement plan in 2016
Target: 86.0 percent
Methodology
Questions used to obtain the national baseline data
From the 2016 ASTHO Profile of State and Territorial Public Health:
Numerator:
Has your state/territorial public health agency developed or participated in developing a health improvement plan for your state/territory?By "health improvement plan" we mean a series of timely and meaningful action steps that define and direct the distribution of services, programs, and resources to improve your state/territory's health, or definite strategic action steps to improve health status in the state/territory.
- Yes, within the last three years
- Yes, more than three but less than five years ago
- Yes, more than five years ago
- No, but plan to in the next year
- No
Methodology notes
A critical aspect of public health infrastructure assessment is monitoring the status of health improvement plans at the state and local level. A health improvement plan is a long-term, systematic effort to address health problems on the basis of the results of a community needs assessment. This plan is used by health and other governmental education and human service agencies, in collaboration with community partners, to set priorities and coordinate and target resources.
The ASTHO Profile Survey is the only comprehensive source of information about state and territorial public health agency activities, structure, and resources. ASTHO sends a link to the web-based survey to senior deputies at state health agencies in the 50 states and the District of Columbia. ASTHO develops a modified version of its survey for the territories. ASTHO sends a link of the web-based survey to senior deputies in territorial public health agencies. The eight U.S. territories and freely associated states are collectively referred to as the insular areas. The U.S. territories include three island jurisdictions in the Pacific—American Samoa, Guam, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands—and the two Caribbean territories of Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The remaining insular areas include three sovereign nation states holding compacts of free association with the United States, also known as compact nations: the Republic of Palau, the Federated States of Micronesia, and the Republic of the Marshall Islands.
The approximately 120-question instrument covers the following topic areas: 1. Structure, governance, and priorities; 2. Workforce; 3. State health agency activities; 4. Planning and quality improvement; 5. Health information management; 6. Finance.
Along with general instructions, senior deputies received recommendations on the most appropriate staff/departments to fill out each section of the survey. Surveys could be filled out by multiple personnel in multiple sittings. If response errors were identified, ASTHO's Survey Research team worked with the state to correct these responses. In instances where the state did not respond to multiple follow-up attempts, the Survey Research team used their expertise to determine whether to retain the data.
Responding health agencies that responded "Yes, within the last three years" or "Yes, more than three but less than five years ago" to the survey question "Has your state/territorial public health agency developed or participated in developing a health improvement plan for your state/territory?" were counted in the numerator.
History
1. Effect size h=0.1 was chosen to correspond with 10% improvement from a baseline of 50%.