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Research and Data Gathering for the Grant Writing Process

Research and Data Gathering for the Grant Writing Process. Helena VonVille Texas Public Health Association Annual Conference February 25, 2007. Problem.

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Research and Data Gathering for the Grant Writing Process

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  1. Research and Data Gathering for the Grant Writing Process Helena VonVille Texas Public Health Association Annual Conference February 25, 2007

  2. Problem • Lack of access to health data and the research literature can have a negative impact on the ability of PH practitioners to write effective grants

  3. Objectives • Participants will learn how to access and use: • Health data • Research literature • Resources for evidence-based public health

  4. To accomplish the objectives • Case scenario: • You’ve come across a great grant opportunity • Diabetes-related project • You’re pretty sure you have a diabetes problem in your community • Requires collaboration • Lots o’ money for 2 years • Renewable for 2 more years for a smaller amount

  5. Now What? • Start gathering data • Can’t go by gut feeling • Where to begin?? • Go to UTSPH Library • http://www.sph.uth.tmc.edu/library/ • Click on Health Data Library

  6. Health Data Library • One-stop source for freely accessible: • State data • CHARTing Health Information for Texas • Federal data • Regularly updated

  7. Health Data Library Begin with Federal data

  8. Why Federal Data First? • CDC grant • Most likely refers to Healthy People 2010 • Healthy People 2010 publications available at http://www.healthypeople.gov • Need to get HP 2010 data • Good way to set goals of project • Help define reasonable objectives

  9. Federal Data Web Site • Includes links to major national data sets • CDC: NHANES, NHIS, BRFSS, YRBSS • CDC Wonder • SAMHSA: NSDUH (NHSDA), DAWN • Census Bureau: 2000 census, American Community Survey, State & Metropolitan Area Data Book • Not organized by subject • Laundry list approach

  10. More Help Finding Federal Data • Produced by the National Library of Medicine • Deep indexing of surveys, data sets, and software

  11. Healthy People 2010 • Includes data by focus areas • 28 focus areas, 467 objectives

  12. HP 2010 Data Site 1. Click here to select focus area 2. Click here to select state (county data not available) 3. Read objective specification info

  13. Objective Specification Info • Describes how objective defined • ICD-10 codes used for mortality • Target setting method • What data is used • Helps you compare apples to apples when you gather county or community data

  14. Diabetes Objective 5-5 • Reduce diabetes death rate • ICD-10 codes E10 – E14 • 43% improvement from baseline year • Data derived from multiple-cause-of-death files, not underlying cause • 3 times as likely to be listed • Most data tables use underlying cause • HP 2010 data for TX: 91.4 per 100,000 (2003) • TX Health Data: 31.4 per 100,000 (2003)

  15. HP 2010Data Results Page • Base line year and data • Data for 1998 – 2006 • 2004 tends to be most current • HP 2010 target and target setting method • Sources of data • Comments

  16. Save Data Results in Excel • Bottom of data results page • Save data results • Add data for your community or county

  17. Diabetes: Multiple-Cause of Death • On CD-ROM with SETS (Statistical Export and Tabulation System) • Contact CDC Mortality Statistics Branch, Division of Vital Statistics for 2000-2003 data • County-level data available

  18. Now that you have HP 2010 data • Impact of diabetes on TX/your county/your community • County level data typically available • Census data is exception • MSA level data available on many sites • Go back to Health Data Library page • Select “Texas Data (CHARTing Health Information for Texas)”

  19. Texas Data

  20. CHARTing Health Information for Texas • Organized by broad categories • Illness/Disease • Community and Sociodemographic Characteristics • Links only to freely accessible data • County or MSA level • Minimal data by Census tract or zip code • Sources: US, Texas, non-profits

  21. http://www.sph.uth.tmc.edu/charting

  22. Data for: Cause of Illness or Death

  23. Chronic Disease • Broken out by morbidity, mortality, and other resources • Start with morbidity

  24. Diabetes: Morbidity • Includes: link to data; producer/provider; dates covered; geography

  25. Diabetes: Mortality • Data uses underlying cause of death • Can’t use it to compare HP 2010 objective

  26. Diabetes: Mortality • Can use it to demonstrate trends and/or health disparities Harris County Death Statistics for diabetes mellitus (E10-E14) from TX Health Data

  27. What About the Community? • Sociodemographic & community characteristics is broken out in 8 broad areas

  28. Sociodemographic & Community Characteristics • Circled items are those probably most relevant for diabetes

  29. Access to Health Care • Includes: Insurance & CHIP; Medicare & Medicaid enrollment; Medically Underserved Areas; special reports, etc.

  30. Risk Behaviors • BRFSS includes ?’s on diabetes and overweight/obesity

  31. Sociodemographic Data Data includes: Poverty/income Language spoken at home Disabilities Place of birth Age

  32. Other Components of CHARTing • Common Data Problems • Explores data anomalies • If it looks too weird to be true, check it out! • Frequently used public health formulas • Incidence rate, mortality rate, pregnancy rate, etc. • Brief glossary of terms

  33. Researching the Literature • TexShare database program • Evidence-Based Public Health (EBPH) http://www.sph.uth.tmc.edu/library/default.asp?id=2909 • Links to evidence-based practice Web sites • Lots of abstracts • Some full text • Document delivery of articles

  34. TexShare Database Program • Funded by (your) tax dollars • Public and academic libraries • Extensive collection of relevant databases • Online access to thousands of journals, and newspapers

  35. Academic Search Premier Alt HealthWatch Business Source Complete Consumer Health Complete Health and Wellness Resource Center with Alternative Health Health Reference Center Academic Health Source: Consumer Health Source: Nursing/Academic Medline MedicLatina Newspaper Source Selective TexShare Databases

  36. TexShare Databases • Academic Search Premier: 3,610+ FT peer-reviewed titles • American Journal of Public Health; AIDS Education & Prevention; Drugs: Education, Prevention & Policy; Journal of Public Health Management & Practice • Medline • Subset of PubMed with indexing to more than 4,800 current biomedical journals

  37. TexShare Databases • Health Reference Center Academic: 750+ FT titles • AIDS and Behavior; Behavioral Medicine; Journal of School Health; Prevention Science • Health Source: Nursing/Academic: 540+ FT titles • American Journal of Health Behavior; Contemporary Drug Problems; Mental Health Practice

  38. TexShare Databases • Completely free through your public library • Get a library card! • Ex: Houston PL database access

  39. ASP Sample Search • Each line covers a different concept • OR used to connect similar concepts

  40. ASP Results (37 total)

  41. EBPH Site from UTSPH Library http://www.sph.uth.tmc.edu/library/default.asp?id=2909

  42. EBPH Web Site: Contents • Resources of note: • PHpartners.org • Includes pre-defined PubMed searches for HP 2010 focus areas • Cochrane Reviews • Systematic reviews on many health interventions • TRIP (Turning Research Into Practice) • Searches multiple EB databases in one fell swoop

  43. Document Delivery of Articles • TDSHS Library • Flexible policy • Available to DSHS & DARS employees • Is your health department funded by DSHS? • If so, you are eligible (but contact them to be sure) • Home page: http://www.dshs.state.tx.us/library/default.shtm

  44. Thank you! Please feel free to contact me: Helena.M.VonVille@uth.tmc.edu 713.500.9131

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