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Differential impact of hospital and community factors on breadth and depth of hospital population health partnerships.

Authors :
Puro, Neeraj
Cronin, Cory E.
Franz, Berkeley
Singh, Simone
Feyereisen, Scott
Source :
Health Services Research. 2024 Suppl 1, Vol. 59, p1-11. 11p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Objective: The aim was to identify hospital and county characteristics associated with variation in breadth and depth of hospital partnerships with a broad range of organizations to improve population health. Data Sources: The American Hospital Association Annual Survey provided data on hospital partnerships to improve population health for the years 2017–2019. Design: The study adopts the dimensional publicness theory and social capital framework to examine hospital and county characteristics that facilitate hospital population health partnerships. The two dependent variables were number of local community organizations that hospitals partner with (breadth) and level of engagement with the partners (depth) to improve population health. The independent variables include three dimensions of publicness: Regulative, Normative and Cultural‐cognitive measured by various hospital factors and presence of social capital present at county level. Covariates in the multivariate analysis included hospital factors such as bed‐size and system membership. Methods: We used hierarchical linear regression models to assess various hospital and county factors associated with breadth and depth of hospital‐community partnerships, adjusting for covariates. Principal Findings: Nonprofit and public hospitals provided a greater breadth (coefficient, 1.61; SE, 0.11; p < 0.001 and coefficient, 0.95; SE, 0.14; p < 0.001) and depth (coefficient, 0.26, SE, 0.04; p < 0.001 & coefficient, 0.13; SE, 0.05; p < 0.05) of partnerships than their for‐profit counterparts, partially supporting regulative dimension of publicness. At a county level, we found community social capital positively associated with breadth of partnerships (coefficient, 0.13; SE, 0.08; p < 0.001). Conclusions: An environment that promotes collaboration between hospitals and organizations to improve population health may impact the health of the community by identifying health needs of the community, targeting social determinants of health, or by addressing patient social needs. However, findings suggest that publicness dimensions at an organizational level, which involves a culture of public value, maybe more important than county factors to achieve community building through partnerships. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00179124
Volume :
59
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Health Services Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175195850
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-6773.14238