Year: 2014
Funding: Dissemination and Implementation Research to Improve Value Study (DIRECTIVE)
Status: Completed
Back to Oregon PBRN Page
Overview
Evidence regarding the ways in which cross-jurisdictional sharing (CJS) by local health districts (LHDs) affects volume, intensity and unit cost of services is important for informing real-world decisions. This Dissemination and Implementation Research to Improve Value (DIRECTIVE) project supports a consortium of the Washington, Wisconsin, and New York PBRNs, along with investigators from the emerging Oregon PBRN, in focusing on CJS in the domain of communicable disease. Led by the University of Washington, this four state consortium is collecting existing measures from the Multi-Network Practice Outcome Variation Examination (MPROVE) and administering a survey to LHDs to determine the extent and structure of CJS. Survey results will be combined with results of a similar survey of Wisconsin LHDs, and MPROVE-CJS data will be combined with LHD-level financial information (as available) to allow the observation of the relationship over time between LHD-level CJS and the costs, volume, and quality of service delivery.
Publication
- Cross-Jurisdictional Sharing in Local Public Health Systems: Implications for Costs, Impact, and Management Capacity (Research Brief, September 2016)
Presentations
- Inter-Organizational Collaboration in Local Public Health Systems (Systems for Action Research in Progress Webinar, January 2017 recording)
- Exploring Cross-Jurisdictional Sharing Among Local Health Departments in Four States (Poster Presentation at National Association of County and City Health Officials Annual Conference, July 2016)
- Inter-Organizational Collaboration in Local Public Health Systems: Implications for Costs, Impact, and Management Capacity (PHSSR Research in Progress Webinar, February 2016 recording)
- Calculating and Apportioning the Costs of Shared Service Activities (PHSSR Keeneland Conference, April 2015 recording)
Tool
Research Areas
Contact
Justin Marlowe, PhD
Betty Bekemeier, PhD
University of Washington