Skip to main content
Public Health Reports logoLink to Public Health Reports
. 1994 Sep-Oct;109(5):659–664.

A screening survey to assess local public health performance.

C A Miller 1, K S Moore 1, T B Richards 1, C McKaig 1
PMCID: PMC1403554  PMID: 7938387

Abstract

Current studies are attempting to develop a national surveillance system to measure the extent that populations are served by local departments carrying out the core functions of public health. Early phases of the study featured observations on 14 health departments that have been subjects of a longitudinal study. These departments were surveyed using a protocol with 81 different indicators. The results permitted distinctions to be made among the departments on levels of performance according to core functions and their associated practices. To simplify the survey protocol so that it might be suitable for use with a large number of local public health jurisdictions, a subset of 26 indicators was selected from the previously developed protocol. Each indicator in the subset was linked with one of the three core functions of public health and with one of the associated practices. In an effort to display correlation between scores on the simplified survey and those in the full survey, scatter plots were prepared for overall scores and for those pertaining to each function and practice. Stepwise regressions were done to determine which queries or groups of queries were most predictive of variations in the screening responses. Four questions accounted for 96 percent of the variance in responses for overall performance. Results suggest that a three-tiered approach to the evaluation of local public health performance might be feasible.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Full text

PDF
659

Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

  1. Miller C. A., Moore K. S., Richards T. B., Kotelchuck M., Kaluzny A. D. Longitudinal observations on a selected group of local health departments: a preliminary report. J Public Health Policy. 1993 Spring;14(1):34–50. [PubMed] [Google Scholar]

Articles from Public Health Reports are provided here courtesy of SAGE Publications

RESOURCES