Lessons Learned from the Maine Rural Community Health Improvement Partnership Demonstration

Lessons Learned from the Maine Rural Community Health Improvement Partnership Demonstration

Celia Jewell

Description

Lessons Learned from the Maine Rural Community Health Improvement Partnership Background: From 2022-2023, the Maine Department of Health and Human Services developed the Rural Community Health Improvement Partnership (R-CHIP) demonstration aimed at addressing health related social needs (HRSNs) such as housing, transportation, and social connectiveness that can impede equitable access to health care and contribute to poor health outcomes. R-CHIP funding enabled public health, health care, and social service sectors in three rural communities to develop a partnership with a shared purpose, governance, data sharing, financing structure and plan to address complex HRSNs and mitigate disparities. Purpose: This poster highlights the lessons learned from the September 2023-September 2024 evaluation of the three demonstration sites’ Phase I planning process. Methods: Using a mixed method design, we evaluated the three R-CHIP demonstration sites’ progress towards achieving Phase I goals to develop: 1) a formalized community partnership, 2) a detailed plan describing the targeted populations and HRSNs, 3) an outline of the strategies to address the HRSNs, and 4) a sustainability plan for Phase II Implementation. Results: The three rural communities developed partnerships consisting of organizations from the public health, health care, and social service sectors. To varying degrees, they established a shared vision, governance structure, coalesced their partners around priority HRSNs and strategies to address them, and created a sustainability plan. Lessons learned involved partnership development and management strategies, community engagement, data sharing systems, and accountability measures. Conclusion: The R-CHIP project demonstrates how Maine rural communities can develop partnerships to address HRSNs.