1. Baseline assessment of public health informatics competencies in two Hudson Valley health departments
- Author
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Paul Visintainer, Deborah Viola, Marie T. Ascher, and Diana J. Cunningham
- Subjects
Gerontology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Status quo ,media_common.quotation_subject ,New York ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Government Agencies ,Professional Competence ,Computer literacy ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,media_common ,Medical education ,Practice ,030505 public health ,business.industry ,Public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Information technology ,Project team ,Public health informatics ,Informatics ,Workforce ,Computer Literacy ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Public Health Administration ,Information Systems - Abstract
Information technology has the capability to improve the way public health is practiced. Realization of this potential is possible only with a workforce ready to utilize these technologies. This project team assessed informatics competencies of employees in two county departments of health. The goal was to determine the status quo in terms of informatics competencies by surveying current levels of proficiency and relevance, and identify areas of needed training. A survey was adapted from the recommendations of a Working Group document by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and administered to all employees in the two health departments. Respondents evaluated proficiency and relevance for each of 26 recommended competencies. A gap score was generated between these two measures; results were compared to the recommendations of the Working Group. The following data for each job level are presented: mean gap scores by competency class; the percentage of respondents demonstrating a gap in the competencies reported to be most relevant; and the percentage of respondents meeting the target recommendations of the Working Group. The percentage of respondents who reached the targets was low in higher-level staff. And overall, employees reported low levels of relevance for most of the competencies. The average public health employee does not feel that prescribed informatics competencies are relevant to their work. Before the public health system can take advantage of information technology, relevant employee skills should be identified or developed. There needs to be a shift in thinking that will recognize the promise of information technology in everyday work.
- Published
- 2007