5000.0: Wednesday, October 24, 2001 - Board 6

Abstract #27470

Preparing health educators to assets map: The interface between assessment training and the practice of building community capacity through Assets Mapping

Micky D. Roberts, MDiv, CHES, Knox County Health Department, 140 Dameron Ave, Knoxvile, TN 37917, 865-215-5185, mickyr@esper.com, Bobby Abdolrasulnia, MPH, CHES, University of Alabama at Birmingham, and Katherine M. Anderson, MS, CHES, Community Health Planning and Initiatves, Knox County Health department.

The health status of a community can be assessed by public health practitioners who are adequately trained in the core competency of needs assessment. However, traditionally health educators are trained to conduct deficiency-based data gathering inorder to create a composite of the community in question. More of often than not this approach only tells half the story. It is the social context of a community, influenced by broader social determinants of health, that supplies the potential to improve a community's health status. An approach to determining this potential has been referred to as community Assets Mapping. Based upon social science principles, the Assets Mapping tool captures the capacity of mobilizing a community for action. As a result new linkages and connections formed amongst individuals, institutions, and associations become a critical component for program planning. With this in mind the Knox County Health Department in a campus-community partnership, partnered with the University of Tennessee Knoxville to conduct a survey of 184 college/Unversity Health Education Programs and faculities in 1999. The purpose of the study was to determine if schools of Public Health, and Universities/Colleges, with health education/promotion programs were teaching Assets Mapping and,if so, where in the curriculum sequence and to what scope? Highlighted outcomes from the completed surveys (28.3% response rate)include: 59.6% of responding schools were aware of Assets Mapping, 16% were teaching it at the undergradute level, and 41.9% were teaching it at the graduate level. The discusion will highlight ramifications for teaching an assets based approach to community needs assesment. See www.nwu.edu/IPR/abcd.html

Learning Objectives: At the end of the session, participants will be able to: 1)describe the Assets Mapping process, and 2) discuss the feasability of incorporating the tool as a topic for instruction.

Keywords: Community-Based Partnership, Community Assets

Presenting author's disclosure statement:
Organization/institution whose products or services will be discussed: The Asset-Based Community developmentInstitute, Institute for Policy Research, Northwestern University
I do not have any significant financial interest/arrangement or affiliation with any organization/institution whose products or services are being discussed in this session.

Handout (.ppt format, 91.0 kb)

The 129th Annual Meeting of APHA