WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 2022
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8:15 AM – 10:15 AM Crosswinds Boardroom |
Registered Sanitarian Exam
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10:00 AM – 11:30 AM Salon B |
Kentucky Association of Local Boards of Health Meeting
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10:00 AM – 6:00 PM Hartland Salon |
Deloitte Networking Lounge
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10:30 AM – 11:30 AM Meeting Room 1 |
How Public Health Programs Can Promote Early Childhood Well-Being for Children with Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome
Emily Ferrell, MPH
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Most public health programs were not designed to serve children with Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome (NAS) or families with Substance Use Disorder (SUD). However, as these populations increase, programs must adapt to serve their changing audiences with respect, competence, and skill. Using an ecological model to understand the many factors that influence early childhood well-being can reduce barriers and build on existing strengths to support these families. The 2017 NAS birth cohort and their involvement with two statewide programs in Kentucky provides examples of challenges and opportunities for other public health programs.
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10:30 AM – 11:30 AM Meeting Room 2 |
VR Exergaming: The Virtual Highway to Health
Madeline Aulisio, DrPH
Juanita Wallace, PhD
Emily Payne
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VR exergaming, a booming industry with over 200 million users worldwide, has demonstrated promise in motivating more Americans to move and exercise. The potential public health benefits of VR exergaming-facilitated exercise extend beyond addressing decrements in physical wellness experienced by countless Americans during the COVID-19 pandemic to obesity and overweight more generally.
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10:30 AM – 11:30 AM Ballroom C |
Public Health Transformation...A Ramp onto the Highway to Health
Jan Chamness, MPH
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Kentucky’s Public Health System Is Changing is a brief video which provides a simple explanation of public health transformation. KDPH Office of Health Equity Director Vivian Lasley-Bibbs and Kentucky Public Health Commissioner Dr. Steven Stack narrate this light but informative video about the why and how of public health transformation and what we hope to accomplish throughout this journey of change.
Since the passage of House Bill 129 during the 2020 Legislative Session, PHT has made steady progress toward influencing positive change in public health across the Commonwealth. This presentation will provide an overview of public health transformation and the communication tools developed to inform of the impact up to this point and offer insight into how PHT will continue to redefine Kentucky’s public health system in the future.
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10:30 AM – 11:30 AM Salon A |
Creating Kentucky’s Hepatitis C Elimination Plan
Amanda Wilburn, MPH
Dia J Obonyo, DrPH
Claire Holladay, MPH
Connor Glick, MS
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From coalition building to provider and laboratory surveying, strengthening partnerships, navigating engaging, virtual communication and consensus during COVID, and seeking on-the-ground expertise from individuals with lived experience, the multifaceted process of creating a Hepatitis C Elimination Plan for Kentucky has been simultaneously challenging and enlightening.
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10:30 AM – 11:30 AM Meeting Room 5 |
NEHA Updates and Benefits of Being a Member
D Gary Brown, Dr PH, CIH, RS, DAAS
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Coming soon...
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11:45 AM – 12:30 PM Prefunction Area |
Exhibit Hall Grand Opening - Meet, Greet, and Eat with Exhibitors
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12:45 PM – 2:45 PM Ballroom AB |
Welcome, Presentation of Colors, National Anthem, Opening Remarks, Keynote Speaker
Dr. Molly McKinney, KPHA President
Dana Nickles, KPHA Executive Director
Colene Elridge
Brittany Parker, KPHA President Elect and Conference Co-Chair
Becki Casey, Conference Co-Chair
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Colene Elridge, aka Coach Colene’s decade-plus of HR experience, led to her being known as “the fixer”- she’s called to help organizations and leaders create better workplaces, productive teams, and aligned results. Her career in government focused on Affirmative Action, EEO, and Diversity. She was a successful investigator of harassment and discrimination complaints and implemented strategies that resulted in more diverse and inclusive workplaces.
She is the CEO of Be More Consulting, a boutique agency designed to support organizations in creating cultures of inclusion, and developing women leaders. Her first book, Monday Morning Pep Talks, was named by Success Magazine as a top book for professional women. Colene is the founder of EmpowHer Conference, a women’s leadership event that focuses on building women into leaders both at work and in their lives.
Colene has a bachelor’s degree in Cultural Anthropology from Transylvania University, where she currently serves on the Board of Regents, and an MBA from Sullivan University. She loves yoga, her family, movies, and laughing!
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2:45 PM – 3:15 PM Prefunction Area |
Break with Exhibitors
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3:30 PM – 4:30 PM Meeting Room 2 |
The Importance of Death Scene Investigation in Understanding and Preventing Sudden Unexpected Infant Death
Emily Ferrell, MPH
Lori Armstrong, MA
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Sudden Unexpected Infant Death (SUID) is one of the top causes of child fatality in Kentucky. Death scene investigation (DSI) provides the case details necessary to understand the underlying causes of SUID and areas for intervention. DSI quality has increased in recent years for SUID cases, thanks to support from the Kentucky Child Fatality Review Team. The COVID-19 pandemic critically limited this work, and as recovery continues, local health departments have an opportunity to support coroners in performing and documenting DSI to better characterize and prevent SUID.
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3:30 PM – 4:30 PM Salon B |
Roadmap for Promoting Data Unity and Modernization
Carrie Conia, MBA
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Developing community health measurements does not have to be an uphill battle, but we know that it can certainly feel that way. Traditional measurement development strategies impose a variety of challenges to local governmental public health professionals. For example, navigation of the complicated data collection process, inconsistent data benchmarks, and expensive survey software are some of the most frequently reported issues voiced by members of NACCHO (NACCHO, 2021). In response to these ongoing issues, the Local Health Department Academy of Sciences (AOS) is committed to increasing measurement transparency through the establishment of a collaborative framework.
During this session, leadership from the AOS Kentucky Group will share more about the AOS values and what we can do for you to improve efficiency and effectiveness of survey development, implementation, and data comparison at the local, state, and national level. This session will culminate with a facilitated workshop for participants, in which they will have the opportunity to review the game plan created by current AOS members and have the opportunity to provide feedback on their needs at the local or state level.
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3:30 PM – 4:30 PM Meeting Room 1 |
The MOMMA Project: Maternal Outcomes of Morbidity and Mortality in Appalachia
Anna Hansen, MD/PhD Candidate at the University of Kentucky
Kennedy Dotson, Undergraduate Student at the University of Kentucky
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This study elucidates social and medical determinants underlying death and severe morbidity attributable to pregnancy among Appalachian women in Kentucky. We present insights from diverse stakeholders, including patients, obstetric providers, paramedics, and emergency medical technicians. Results may inform the development of evidence-based, culturally competent interventions among this population.
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3:30 PM – 4:30 PM Salon A |
The Forgotten Class: A comparison of psychological health among pre pandemic and pandemic college graduates
Lauren Roberson, PhD, MS, RD, LD and D. Gage Jordan, PhD
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A college graduation represents a monumental achievement, and an opportunity to share successes with friends, mentors, and family. Many of these celebratory activities ceased in the early part of the pandemic. This session highlights the influence of the absence of celebratory activities surrounding college graduation on psychological health (anxiety, depression, and stress). Strategies for meeting the psychological needs of the 2020 college graduate population are discussed.
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3:30 PM – 4:30 PM Meeting Room 3/4 |
Take A Shot In Bourbon County
Andrea Davis-Viney, MPH
Drew Becket, MPH
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During the largest community-wide vaccination effort in history, the Bourbon County Health Department and the Paris-Bourbon County YMCA will discuss their community partnership in a mass-media campaign to increase COVID 19 vaccinations in specific populations in Bourbon County.
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3:30 PM - 4:30 PM Ballroom C |
Legislation and Regulations 101
Sarah A Cooper, Deputy Executive Director OLRA
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In this session, we will provide all of the information you have ever wanted to know about legislation and administrative regulations, including the legislative process, the difference between a statute and an administrative regulation, the regulatory process, and navigation of the Legislative Research Commission's website.
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3:30 PM - 4:30 PM Meeting Room 5 |
Exploring Service Provider Perspectives on Facilitators and Barriers to Syringe Service Program Participation by Females who Inject Drugs
Tammi Alvey Thomas, PhD, MSSW
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As the opioid epidemic lingers on across the country, areas have set up syringe services programs (SSPs) to combat the consequences of injection drug use. Most substance abuse research is gender neutral which makes it difficult to discern issues specifically related to females. Females who inject drugs are an underserved and marginalized population who are viewed as bridges to disease because of their involvement in multiple social networks. They endure heightened consequences associated with injection drug use. This presentation will discuss data collected from SSP staff from Kentucky and the seven bordering states about facilitators and barriers to SSP usage by females who inject drugs.
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3:30 PM - 4:30 PM Salon C |
Getting Schooled on E-Cigarettes: Kentucky’s Tobacco-Free Schools Toolkit
Ellen H. Cartmell, BA, MPA
Jaclyn Hodges, BS, CHES
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Schools are in a uniquely powerful position to empower and protect young people from e-cigarettes and other threats to their health. With over half of Kentucky’s high schoolers having tried e-cigarettes, and more than 1 in 4 being regular users, it’s vital that teachers and school administrators have effective tools at their fingertips to prevent and address use. This session will illustrate the Kentucky Department for Public Health’s initiative to proactively mail tobacco-free schools toolkits to over one thousand schools across the commonwealth at the start of the 2021-2022 school year.
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4:45 PM - 6:00 PM Prefunction Area |
Reception
Hosted By University of Kentucky College of Public Health with Appetizers and Cash Bar
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THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 2022
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8:00 AM - 9:00 AM Prefunction Area |
Break with Exhibitors
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8:00 AM - 9:00 AM Ballroom D |
Poster Presentation
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8:00 AM - 8:30 AM Salon B |
Nurses Breakfast (Pre-registration Via TRAIN Required)
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Dr. Mary Bennett, Dean, WKU College of Nursing and an appointed member of the Team Kentucky’s Better Nursing Advisory Committee will present an hour-long interactive workshop on the state of the nursing shortage in Kentucky, the identified causes from state nursing surveys and the proposed solutions by various state and national representations. A short Q&A session will be held at the end of the presentation with LHD Nurse Leaders, the KDPH Director of Nursing and the Deputy Commissioner of Medical Affairs.
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8:00 AM - 6:00 PM Hartland Salon |
Deloitte Networking Lounge
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9:15 AM - 10:15AM Ballroom AB |
Keynote Address Kaye Bender, APHA President
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10:30 AM - 11:30 AM Meeting Room 3/4 |
Derail Depression: Kentucky on Track
Rebecca Stachurski, MPH
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The 2018 Kentucky Incentives for Prevention (KIPS) Trends related to Youth and Substance Use, Mental Health, and School Safety found that 12% of eighth graders in Kentucky reported feeling depressed in the last 30 days, yet screening rates for depression remain lower than recommended by the US Preventative Services Task Force. This session reviews the success of a quality improvement initiative which improved depression screening rates in Kentucky clinics, the importance of social determinants of health when accessing depression treatment, and how COVID-19 has affected over all health in patients with MDD.
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10:30 AM - 11:30 AM Salon A |
Healthy Food Transforms Communities
Jennifer A. Wilson, MPH
Michelle Howell, BS
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WellCare Health Plans and the Community Farmers Market in Bowling Green, KY began partnering in 2014, working to increase healthy food access. This partnership grew in 2018 with the creation of a new program, focused on mothers to be on Medicaid: Fresh Rx for MOMs. WellCare provided the initial funding for incentives and now this grassroots program is growing to other communities, after being awarded a nearly $500,000 grant to expand. Come ready to learn about how partnerships make all the difference in transforming our communities locally.
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10:30 AM - 11:30 AM Meeting Room 5 |
HISTORY OF TUBERCULOSIS:"PHTHISIS TO CONSUMPTION"
DR. DARRYL B. BARNETT, ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR, ASSOCIATE DEAN: SCHOOL OF NURSING AND ALLIED HEALTH SCIENCES
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A TRIP THROUGH THE PEOPLE AND PLACES THAT IMPACTED TUBERCULOSIS
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10:30 AM - 11:30 AM Meeting Room 1 |
Listening to Communities for improved COVID response
Deborah Payne, MPH
Leanne French, MS
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The Louisville Metro Department of Public Health and Wellness partnered with over 20 community organizations to host mobile vaccine clinics as well as listening sessions to identify community needs during the pandemic. Learn more about how listening to the community dramatically changed the department’s pandemic response and shifted long term goals for community engagement.
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10:30 AM - 11:30 AM Ballroom D |
Black Lives Matter, COVID, and the Lived Experiences of African American Mothers/Caregivers in Louisville, Kentucky.
Toluwani E. Adekunle- MA, MBA, MPH
Phd Student- Health Promotion and Health Behavior
School of Public Health and Information Sciences
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African American (AA) mothers and caregivers confront myriad challenges to raising their children. Structural and systemic racism, police violence, economic insecurity, COVID, and unequal access to healthcare are added pressures these women confront. In this photovoice project, AA women utilized photography and narratives to describe their lived experiences. Using a community-based participatory research approach, researchers at Louisville worked with staff at the Bridges of Hope Neighborhood Place. African America mothers/caregivers were recruited and developed themes for their photo stories, curating and narrating their experiences.
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10:30 AM - 11:30 AM Salon B |
Employment Considerations in Public Health
Stacey Blankenship
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This seminar will weave its way through the complicated issues of employment and discipline in the public health arena. It will also touch on general employment issues all managers should know, including how to prevent discrimination and/or perceived discrimination in the workplace.
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10:30 AM - 11:30 AM Salon C |
Preventing Farmer Suicide through Cultural Respect and Humility
Dr. Dawn Garrett-Wright, PhD, PMHNP-BC, CNE - Professor, School of Nursing and Allied Health, WKU
Dr. M. Susan Jones, PhD, RN, CNE - Professor Emerita, School of Nursing and Allied Health, WKU
Catherine Malin, MPH - Director of South Central KY AHEC
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As an occupational group, farmers have one of the highest rates of suicide, and unfortunately mental health providers are limited in rural areas where farmers reside. Colleagues at Western Kentucky University (WKU) created a training program to educate healthcare professionals from multiple disciplines to address these issues. This presentation describes the process and outcome of developing, implementing, and evaluating a 1-credit hour continuing education course, CRUSHing Farmer Suicide—Cultural Respect, Understanding, Sensitivity, and Humility.
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10:30 AM - 11:30 AM Meeting Room 2 |
Weight Bias: How it Hurts and How to Help
Elizabeth Anderson-Hoagland, MPH
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While much is known about the harmful impact of overweight and obesity, less attention is displayed to how weight bias impacts health. In this presentation learn how weight bias increases risk for overweight and negative health outcomes and how to reduce that bias in your public health work.
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11:45 AM - 1:00 PM Ballroom AB |
KPHA Awards Lunch
CHFS Secretary Eric Friedlander
Dr. Steven Stack
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1:30 PM - 2:30 PM Meeting Room 1 |
Building a Culture of Quality One Trained Staff Member at a Time
Jonathan Vorbeck, MPH
Carrie Conia
Carissa Adams, MPH
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Improve and innovate public health functions through ongoing evaluation, research, and continuous quality improvement is an essential public health service all communities should undertake. When focusing on continuous quality improvement, public health professionals in state, local, and academic agencies must first have an understanding of what this means and why it is important for public health practice. This basic understanding can be acquired through training.
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1:30 PM - 2:30 PM Meeting Room 5 |
BATA: Bat Rabies Identification Project
Kelly H. Giesbrecht, DVM, MPH, State Public Health Veterinarian, Kentucky Department for Public Health
Michaela Rogers, MS, Biologist, Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources
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Over the past two years, species identification of bats submitted to the Kentucky State Public Health Laboratory (Division of Laboratory Services), for rabies testing has been conducted. Although bats have been tested for rabies for decades at the Kentucky state lab, they had not previously been identified to species. This project describes the species of bats submitted for testing, county of submission, and rabies results.
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1:30 PM - 2:30 PM Meeting Room 2 |
Measuring Cross-Sector Alignment with Network Analysis: Lessons from the SHERO Study
Madeline Shipley, BS
Stephanie Hoskins, Director of Rural Addiction Services, Volunteers of America
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The SHERO (Strengthening Health Equity in Recovery Outcomes) Study examines systems of care that serve pregnant and parenting women in recovery, specifically assessing cross-sector alignment in both rural and urban contexts. The study centers around Freedom House (FH), an evidence-based model to provide substance use treatment and parenting supports for women and their families, focusing on FH’s coordinated efforts with public health, healthcare, and social services organizations in two communities. The study is guided by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s Framework for Cross-Sector Alignment and uses social network analysis to evaluate and visualize the community networks.
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1:30 PM - 2:30 PM Meeting Room 3/4 |
Who pays for healthcare in Bangladesh? An analysis of progressivity in health systems financing
Azaher Molla,
Associate Professor,
Murray State University
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The relationship between payments towards healthcare and ability to pay is a measure of financial fairness. Analysis of progressivity is important from an equity perspective as well as for macroeconomic and political analysis of healthcare systems. Bangladesh health systems financing is characterized by high out-of-pocket payments (63.3%), which is increasing. Hence, we aimed to see who pays what part of this high out-of-pocket expenditure. To our knowledge, this was the first progressivity analysis of health systems financing in Bangladesh.
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1:30 PM - 2:30 PM Salon A |
Kentucky COVID-19 Mortality Analysis by Age and Race; Simpson’s Paradox
Steven Auche, MPH, CSTE Applied Epidemiology Fellow, Kentucky Department for Public Health
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The way we analyze data in public health determines the conclusions that we make and ultimately the recommendations given to key stakeholders. However, what decision should be made when a seemingly statistical impossibility occurs, what are the correct conclusions to draw? Join us for a session describing this very phenomenon that has occurred regarding COVID-19 age/race mortality data in the commonwealth.
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1:30 PM - 2:30 PM Ballroom C |
Human Trafficking as a Public Health Issue
Debra Hunt Young, MSW, EdS, EdD, LGSW
Kayla Thomas, BSW, BCJ, MSW (Candidate)
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We cannot end human trafficking through victim services alone. As an emerging public health issue, it is imperative to take an approach that involves organized, multidisciplinary strategies that aim to impact entire populations. This session will identify underlying vulnerability and protective factors, evaluate prevention strategies, and ensure widespread awareness of the issue from a public health perspective. A public health paradigm broadens our ability to address trafficking and recognize the widespread impact human trafficking has on the health and well-being of society.
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2:30 PM - 3:00 PM Prefunction Area |
Break with Exhibitors
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2:30 PM - 3:00 PM Ballroom D |
Poster Presentations
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3:00 PM - 4:00 PM Meeting Room 2 |
SKY is the Limit: Supporting Kentucky’s Youth through a Collaborative Population Health Management Approach to Lower Psychotropic Polypharmacy Rates in System Involved Youth
Kelly Pullen, LCSW - SKY Executive Director
Susan Vickers, MSW, CSW - SKY Director of Quality Improvement
Megan Johnson, APRN, FNP, CCM - SKY QM Nurse Consultant
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Medicaid‐insured youth are three times more likely to be prescribed antipsychotic medications as compared to those commercially insured, while youth in foster care are prescribed antipsychotic medications at twice the rate of other Medicaid‐insured youth. How can the system of care collaborate to reverse these trends? This presentation explores trends in antipsychotic prescribing among Medicaid-insured youth in the foster system and the application of a population health management approach with multi-modal interventions aimed to lower rates of psychotropic polypharmacy found in this population.
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3:00 PM - 4:00 PM Ballroom C |
Changing the Narrative and Flipping the Script, Implementing an Equity Approach to Population Health
Jennifer Robinson, MA, Health Education Coordinator, Franklin County Health Department
Vivian Lasley-Bibbs, MPH, Director, Office of Health Equity, KY Dept. for Public Health
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This local health department primer is a resource with inspiring examples of how health departments can advance health equity — both internally within their departments and externally with communities and other government agencies. We will present a set of strategic practices to advance health equity in local health departments to advance their current practice towards health equity. There are examples and case scenarios and other resources and tools, to start conversation and initiate change as LHD’s work toward infusing equity across programs and operations.
As Dr. Renee Canady stated, doing health equity work is like trying to get to the middle of a pool — it doesn’t matter where we dive in, as long as we dive in. Regardless of where we start with these transformative and strategic practices, the most important thing is to dive into the pool!
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3:00 PM - 4:00 PM Meeting Room 5 |
The Role of the Kentucky Eating Disorder Council in Helping Address Eating Disorders: Prevention, Education, Advocacy and Legislation
Laurie J. Larkin, MS, PhD
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In 2020, Governor Brashear appointed members throughout the state to serve on the Kentucky Eating Disorder Council for the purpose of overseeing the development and implementation of eating disorder awareness, education, and prevention programs. This session will summarize the Council's activities as well as address the importance of identifying eating disorders, strategies for prevention, and various treatment options for those in need of services in Kentucky.
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3:00 PM - 4:00 PM Salon B |
We believe that we will win: Reaching youth for vaccine confidence
Marcy Rein, RN MPH
Ashley Lawson, BS
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Learn from the adventures of a local health department working on messaging to increase COVID-19 vaccine confidence among youth in our small, rural, wary Appalachian community. Assess the community; it’ll be easy. Build partnerships; it’ll be fun. Communicate clearly; what could go wrong?
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3:00 PM - 4:00 PM Meeting Room 3/4 |
Using Syndromic Surveillance to Monitor Statewide Emergency Department and Inpatient Encounters for Environmental Health Hazards
John Prather, MBA, Syndromic Surveillance Coordinator
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This session will contain a demonstration of the ESSENCE platform using Syndromic Surveillance. The presentation will showcase several pre-built queries related to summer and winter environmental health hazards. An R script will show how the ESSENCE query builder’s API URL is connected to generate reports and display trend lines and slopes for inpatient and emergency department encounters across the state of Kentucky.
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3:00 PM - 4:00 PM Salon C |
Assessing Barriers and Facilitators: HIV Testing Among African American College Students at a Predominately White Institution
Kendra Helm, MPH
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While there is abundant research regarding African American HIV rates, there are no known studies in the state of Kentucky that have focused on African American college students and HIV testing in current literature. This session will cover a cross-sectional study that was conducted at a Predominately White Institution in the state of Kentucky to compare barriers and facilitators to HIV testing in African American and Non-African American Kentucky college students. This presentation will include an in-depth analysis of a study, including HIV information and literature, as well as the methodology and results of conducting adequate research.
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3:00 PM - 4:00 PM Meeting Room 1 |
Drivers for Change in the Future of Healthcare
Robin Curnel
Kelly Fountain, MPA
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Healthcare systems, practices and clinicians are stepping into a future that moves beyond monitoring quality and financial performance and into improving patient outcomes. The future of healthcare is in leveraging technology and resources to address the whole patient, reduce barriers to care, implement chronic care models, increase innovation and navigate reporting transparency. To be successful in value-based care, addressing social determinants is critical to creating sustainable healthcare.
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3:00 PM - 4:00 PM Salon A |
Creating a student centered public health practice experience with your area health department.
Linda Omer, PhD
Tammi Alvey Thomas, PhD, MSSW
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Interested in training the next generation of public health professionals? Learn how to create a dynamic student practice experience with your area health department.
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4:00 PM – 4:15 PM Prefunction Area |
Break with Exhibitors
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4:15 PM - 5:15 PM Ballroom AB |
Legislative Panel: Featuring Julie Babbage, Rebecca Hartsough, and Legislators
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FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2022
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8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Hartland Salon |
Deloitte Networking Lounge
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8:30 AM - 9:30 AM Salon A |
Technology Today for a Healthy Tomorrow
Megan Wilkinson, MA Medical Anthropology
Nicole Fairchild, MPA, MBA
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People in recovery from opioids face social and lifestyle challenges outside of their medical recovery, especially if they are pregnant or have recently been pregnant. One way to support them through these challenges is through health education using innovative technology. This interactive session focuses on supporting individuals with opioid use disorder who are pregnant or who have recently been pregnant through the use of technology instead of 'just another brochure.' Participants of this session will understand the importance of health education using multiple learning strategies in supporting individuals with opioid use disorder.
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8:30 AM - 9:30 AM Meeting Room 2 |
Qualitative Assessment of Prenatal Care and Prenatal Care Access in Louisville / Jefferson County
Trey Allen, PhD - Epidemiologist - Center for Health Equity
Oluwatomisin A. Ogungbenle - Student Intern - Center for Health Equity
Michele Ledbetter - Student Intern - Center for Health Equity
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In 2020, the Ready for K Alliance commissioned a qualitative research project from the Center for Health Equity at Louisville Metro Department of Public Health and Wellness to better understand the experiences of new parents in Louisville / Jefferson County in accessing prenatal care. The information gathered will be used to inform local and state policymakers, along with policies and practices of OB hospitals and maternal supporting community organizations to best allocate resources and assets to provide greater access to culturally competent prenatal care for all Louisville Metro residents. In this session, researchers discuss the research process, lessons learned, and their partnership with Ready for K.
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8:30 AM - 9:30 AM Meeting Room 1 |
Stop the Insanity: Cultural Humility as a Viable Alternative to Cultural Competence
Dr. Shannon Emory Cambron, EdD, MSW
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As organizations wrestle with finding ways to create climates that embrace multiple experiences and expressions of culture, engaging the tried and true consistently leads to frustration and failure. Though it feels like a complexity too difficult to conquer, the solution is as simple as embracing curiosity, committing to lifelong learning and finding our individual and collective voices. Stopping the Insanity discusses the experience of a pilot training program conducted by Spalding University's School of Social Work for the Department of Public Health's BREATH program focusing on Cultural Humility as an effective alternative to cultural competence. Experiences and implications for future work will be shared along with a brief discussion of basic components of the model.
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8:30 AM - 9:30 AM Ballroom AB |
KDPH Health Transformation and Health Equity in Transportation
Troy Hearn
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Kentucky and Kentuckians needs your help! You have the power to change our transportation system to include more and better accommodations for people to walk and bicycle to everyday destinations. It doesn't change unless people and organizations like you get involved.
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8:30 AM - 9:30 AM Salon C |
Adapting Outreach Services: Discreet HIV Testing for Rural Kentucky MSM Populations & More
Jim Thacker, MPH
Chelsey Reid, MPH
Laura Nagle, Ba
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The Target4 project with the Kentucky Income Reinvestment Program (KIRP) has developed unique outreach strategies to better serve rural MSM populations impacted by cultural, geographic, and resource-related barriers to HIV testing. Panelists will review the project’s discreet testing campaign for rural MSMs, findings, and initiatives developed out of these efforts.
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9:45 AM - 10:45 AM Ballroom AB |
KPHA Business Meeting ( All Attendees Welcome)
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11:00 AM - 12:00 PM Ballroom AB |
Closing Keynote: Recovery Capital: Assets, Not Abstinence
Alex Elswick, PhD, Assistant Extension Professor, Substance Use Prevention & Recovery
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What do people need to recover from addiction? The purpose of this workshop is to describe recovery capital as a predictor of long-term addiction recovery. In part one, we begin by characterizing substance use disorder (SUD) as a chronic condition. In part two, we lean into the complexity of the heterogeneity of SUD and recovery as a process of change. Finally, in part three, we focus on building community recovery capital to promote recovery in our communities.
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