View
0
Download
0
Category
Preview:
Citation preview
Celebrating 10 Years of Partnering to
Improve the Health of Our Communities
2010 Annual Report
Mission Advancing population health research and education to improve the health of urban communities.
Vision A nationally recognized center that inspires collaborative, innovative, community-relevant urban population health research and education.
Table of Contents
Power of 10…………………………………………..3
History…………………………………………………..5
Project Profiles………………………………………6
Performance Score Card ……………………..10
Human Capacity…………………………………..11
Partner List…………………………………………..12
Dear Colleagues and Partners,
It is our pleasure to invite you to join Center faculty, staff, scientists, affiliates, and partners as we celebrate our tenth anniversary through this year’s Annual Report. We have continued to be blessed with the ability to advance our mission and vision in these difficult economic times.
In 2010, the Center experienced unprecedented levels of productivity, collaborating on 135+ research and education projects, supporting 89+ academic and community researchers, and joining with over 260 community partners to advance population health research and education to improve the health of our communities.
In research, it is important to build on the evidence and experience of the time. As the Center looks forward and embarks on a new decade, it builds upon its first ten years of relationships, expertise and organizational memory. Our history provides a strong foundation for innovation and positive community impact. The growth and maturity we have experienced has taught us to be responsive to our environment. This has led us to update our principles and values to better reflect our understanding and desire:
•Promoting a population health framework as a unifying approach for addressing health determinants, interventions and outcomes
•Forging equitable and sustainable partnerships with community and academic experts from diverse organizations, backgrounds and disciplines
•Creating an environment of innovation
•Using research to impact effective policies, programs and practices
•Fostering knowledge transfer through clinical- and community-based learning
•Reducing health disparities
•Delivering exceptional value by integrating the best available resources and methodologies to address key issues with integrity, objectivity and responsiveness.
We invite you to celebrate with the Center and our partners this year. Each month we will share with you a more in-depth profile of current projects, partnerships and future plans, and demonstrate how our principles and values have guided us along the way. We look forward to sharing our notes from the community with you.
2010 Annual Report 2
Deborah Blanks, CCP
Chief Executive Officer
Social Development Commission
Executive Committee Chair
Center for Urban Population Health
Robert N. Golden, MD
Robert Turell Professor in Medical Leadership
Dean, School of Medicine and Public Health
Vice Chancellor for Medical Affairs
University of Wisconsin–Madison
Randall S. Lambrecht, PhD
Vice President of Research
and Academic Relations
Aurora Health Care
Chukuka J. Enwemeka, PhD, FACSM
Dean and Professor
College of Health Sciences
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Celebrating 10 Years of Partnering to
Improve the Health of Our Communities
Join the Center as We Celebrate 10 Years of Partnerships.
Ten years of creating deep and meaningful relationships with our
community, academic and governmental partners. Our institutional
partner support and collaborative efforts over the past decade have
assisted in building capacity, synergistic connections and a fertile
foundation for improved health in Milwaukee. This Annual Report is
the kick off of our year-long celebration. We briefly profile a dozen
projects here. Each month this year we will provide an in-depth look
at one of these projects—sharing the work to date and future plans as
well as demonstrating the benefits of 10 years of relationships and
organizational memory. We look forward to sharing this celebration
with you.
3
2010 Annual Report 5
H I S T O R Y
It All Began 10 Years Ago…..
The Center for Urban Population Health (the Center) was established in April 2001 to
improve individual and population health through health services research,
evaluation, professional education, and health promotion programming. The
Center was established through a pioneering partnership between the
University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health (UWSMPH) (then
called the University of Wisconsin Medical School), Aurora Health Care, Inc.
(AHC) and the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee (UWM).
The idea for a Center for Urban Population Health grew out of a meeting with
then Aurora Health Care, Inc. President, Ed Howe, Nancy L. Zimpher, former
Chancellor for the UW–Milwaukee Campus, and Phil Farrell, former Dean for
the University of Wisconsin Medical School.
At its heart, the Center is committed to population health and connections to
communities in Wisconsin’s urban areas. To make a difference in people’s lives,
scientific knowledge about population health must be interwoven with
community partnerships. Therefore, the Center has charted a course to engage
in meaningful collaborations with multiple stakeholders in order to advance
research and evaluation aimed at improving the public’s health.
With the ability to access a remarkable amount of community-based health
data, link multiple organizations and disciplines, and offer expertise that spans
the continuum from health services to community partnerships, the Center is a
collaboration that is working to transform public health capacity in Wisconsin.
The Center’s distinctive expertise and influence lie in its
objectivity among multiple stakeholders and organizations,
interdisciplinary nature,
ability to address broad population health concerns,
research and information technology infrastructure, and
community connectivity.
With the foundational infrastructure provided by its three institutional partners, the
Center continues to envision a significant role in facilitating inter-institutional
collaboration, expanding translational research initiatives through participation in
UW’s Institute for Clinical and Translational Research, attracting faculty for the new
UWM School of Public Health, preparing future public health professionals, and
developing new population health research methodologies and models in clinical and
community settings.
A full history can be found at
http://www.cuph.org/about/history/
6
P R O J E C T P R O F I L E S
Integrating the Community Voice The dissemination of results in community-
based participatory research is a crucial part
of the translational process, yet the quality
and frequency of dissemination practices
vary significantly. Even greater is the gap
between traditional academic researchers
and community members. Through an
academic-community partnership, lay
African American residents of Milwaukee
were recruited from the client base of a
large social services nonprofit organization,
the Social Development Commission (SDC),
to form a community advisory board (CAB)
for a statewide population-based survey, the
Survey of the Health of Wisconsin (SHOW).
SHOWCAB was formed to provide insight
into dissemination strategies, data
interpretation, and community health
improvement recommendations.
Improved Nutrition Access and Education In spring 2009, SHARE Wisconsin established
a Mobile Market (MM) program to begin to
address food deserts in Milwaukee. Mobile
Markets partnered with over 12 non-profit
community-based service organizations
(CBOs) to provide monthly, on-site access to
healthy, affordable food within target
communities. Evidence has shown that
community-based nutrition education that is
engaging, specific and culturally appropriate
can result in behavior changes such as
improved eating behaviors. Guided by this
evidence and a commitment to community
engagement, this project seeks to promote
healthy eating by adding nutrition education
to Mobile Market.
Supporting Community-Engaged Research The vision for the Milwaukee Community-
Engaged Research Network (MCERN) is to
build and sustain a voluntary collective of
community-engaged academic institutions
and community-based organizations,
working together to enhance individual skills
and institutional capacities that will
contribute to the relevance and
effectiveness of community-engaged health
research in the greater Milwaukee area.
MCERN’s overarching goal is to create non-
duplicative, synergistic relationships among
community and institutional members to
achieve mutually agreed upon goals, and
provide research capacity-building and
dissemination opportunities for academic
and community partners. This spring the
MCERN will launch a series of professional
development workshops for community
practitioners and academic partners.
Photo
The SHOW Community
Advisory Board touring
the Mobile Evaluation
Center (MEC)
2010 Annual Report 7
P R O J E C T P R O F I L E S
Tracking Community Impact Teen birth rates in the City of Milwaukee are
higher than those in both the state and the
nation. In order to address this issue, the United
Way of Greater Milwaukee dedicated a funding
stream to teen pregnancy prevention
programming – their Healthy Girls funding.
In 2008, realizing the need for comprehensive
program evaluation, the United Way contracted
with the Center for Urban Population Health to
develop and conduct an evaluation across all of
their supported teen pregnancy programming.
These programs were using a variety of curricula,
evidence-based and not, as well as targeting a
variety of audiences.
Milwaukee Health Department Commissioner
Bevan Baker, co-chair of a United Way of Greater
Milwaukee advisory committee, worked with
Center scientists in 2008 to set a goal for
reducing the city's teen birthrate, which, in 2006,
hovered at 52 births per 1,000 teens ages 15 to
17. The goal is 30 births per 1,000 teens in that
age group by 2015.
Building a Data Infrastructure As part of the CDC-funded Public Health
Impact Initiative through the University of
Wisconsin-Milwaukee School of Public
Health, the Center for Urban Population
Health is developing a Community Data
Infrastructure for Healthy Births.
The primary purpose of the Community
Data Infrastructure for Healthy Births
(CDIHB) is to develop broad public access to
a data repository containing information on
multiple social determinants of birth
outcomes. This information will inform and
advance practice related to healthy birth
outcomes. The project will engage
community residents, organizational
leaders and academic researchers in
planning and developing community-driven
approaches to promote and track healthy
births.
Measuring the Health of Milwaukee The Center for Urban Population Health and
the City of Milwaukee Health Department
have created the Milwaukee Health Report.
Now in its third year, this report continues to
summarize the current health of the city, as
well as the distribution of key factors that
may have implications for future health.
The goal of this report is to provide policy
makers and community organizations with
meaningful information that can be used in
addressing Milwaukee’s health issues.
The Milwaukee Health Report provides
information regarding health disparities
among the SES groups within the city, and
offers comparisons of health outcomes and
health determinants between the City of
Milwaukee, the State of Wisconsin and the
United States.
Photo: Milwaukee Health Department Commissioner Bevan Baker presents Center Director Ron Cisler with
a Public Health Impact award.
P R O J E C T P R O F I L E S
Tracking Health Care Coverage The Center currently assists the Milwaukee Health Care Partnership (MHCP) with the maintenance and continuous improvement of a community health care score card. The Center assists in tracking performance data so that the MHCP can measure its collective impact and progress as it continues to work to improve health care coverage, access and care coordination for un- and underinsured individuals in Milwaukee County. In addition, the Center is on call to respond to additional data collection and analysis assignments upon request.
The Center recently provided data from the MHCP’s measures to the Lindsay Heights Neighborhood Health Alliance to strengthen a joint proposal to initiate a community- based diabetes control and prevention pathway program.
Improving Cancer Screening Colorectal cancer is the third most common cancer in Wisconsin among men and women combined, and is the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths in men and women. Disparities in colorectal cancer incidence and mortality between African Americans and whites in Wisconsin are large and have worsened dramatically over the period 1995-2004/5.
In partnership with the Westside Healthcare Association, Dr. Noelle LoConte of UWSMPH, the American Cancer Society and the Milwaukee Regional Cancer Care Network, a screening initiative has successfully completed a phase 1 pilot and is launching full implementation. The project seeks to increase colorectal cancer screening rates among low-income African Americans and incorporate patient navigation and follow-up. Services are delivered at two locations: Lisbon Avenue Health Center and Hillside Family Health Center.
Partnerships to Reduce Homicide The Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission (MHRC) is a multi-level, multi-disciplinary, and multi-agency homicide review process aimed at reducing the occurrence of homicides in Milwaukee. This nationally recognized model creates an environment for many disciplines and agencies to share information and work collectively on violence prevention strategies. Based upon the public health approach to violence reduction, the MHRC has three goals:
To gain a better understanding of homicide through strategic problem analysis;
To develop innovative, effective responses; and
To focus limited enforcement and intervention activities on identifiable risks.
The Center has acted as academic partner since its inception and the MHRC continues to advance its goals and bridges systematic analysis with the various organizations who can effectively act on the information to reduce and prevent homicides in Milwaukee.
8
Photo
Leadership team for the
Milwaukee Westside
Colorectal Cancer Screening
Collaborative (from right to
left): Dr. Madeline Tully,
Westside Healthcare
Association, Dr. Noelle
LoConte, UWSMPH, and Dr.
Alison Kos, Westside
Healthcare Association
Building Infrastructure to Track Healthy Births PeriData.Net®, a comprehensive web-based
perinatal database, was created by a
partnership among the Wisconsin Association
for Perinatal Care (WAPC), the Center for
Urban Population Health, and Wisconsin birth
hospitals. PeriData.Net® serves as a platform
for hospitals’ internal administrative reporting
and quality management functions and for
secure electronic submission of selected fields
to Vital Records and other external data
registries. Birth hospitals own their own data
in PeriData.Net®.
This year brought the first major upgrade in
software since its inception. IN 2011, hospitals
will be able to access aggregate reporting.
This will allow member hospitals to compare
quality measures against all other members
or specify comparisons by hospitals with
similarity in areas of size, region or NICU level.
Milwaukee Latino Health Coalition The Milwaukee Latino Health Coalition’s mission is to increase the health and well being of Latino communities by organizing power for social change. The Milwaukee Latino Health Coalition (MLHC) is a group of people who are passionate about Latino health. Its members include health care professionals, social service professionals, community advocates, health promoters, academic and community members.
Entering their fourth year and with over 100 members, the MLHC identified a need to have a web presence where they could keep members up to date with subcommittee meetings, resources and a community calendar. The Center provided the content guidance and technical expertise in developing their website. Check out the site at http://www.mlhc.org/
2010 Annual Report 9
P R O J E C T P R O F I L E
Photo:
Screenshot of the Milwaukee
Latino Health Coalition’s
website.
Learn more about the MLHC
at http://www.mlhc.org/
Keeping Coalition Members Connected
Milwaukee County Breastfeeding Coalition The Milwaukee County Breastfeeding Coalition, with funding from the Wisconsin Partnership Program, had developed a project to improve the health and nutrition of infants by increasing breastfeeding rates, including initiation, duration and exclusivity, in Milwaukee county and to change social norms regarding the importance of breastfeeding. One of their strategies includes building the capacity and infrastructure of the Milwaukee County Breastfeeding Coalition through the development of a website that disseminates resources, information, and education for the community.
The Center’s Information Technology Core is currently working with the Coalition to develop their website. In partnership with Coalition members and their Community Advisory Committee, the Center is guiding the content development and providing the website development expertise.
10
P E R F O R M A N C E S C O R E C A R D
This scorecard provides an overview
of key performance indicators of the
Center’s work in 2010 as it relates to
the general areas of research,
education and service.
Of particular note this year is that the
Center has supported 89+ university,
health care and community
investigators. This year the Center
reached an all time high in supporting
135+ research and education
projects. Center faculty and staff have
also served on over 70 community-
based committees, coalitions and
workgroups, helping to addressing
our community's health disparities
and population health concerns.
In 2010, Center faculty and staff
contributed to the submission of 34
extramural grants totaling $11
million. To date, 17 grants were
awarded with the full award to all
partners totaling over $8 million.
The Center has experienced a
tremendous amount of growth since
its inception. This graph demonstrates
growth as it relates to total projects,
staff positions and funding over 3-
and 4- year rolling periods. For
example, the Center has experienced
core and extramural funding growth
from an average of $600,000 to it’s
current average of $2.7 million.
H U M A N C A PA C I T Y
2010 Annual Report 11
Leadership
Ron A. Cisler, Ph.D. Director, Center for Urban Population Health; Associate Professor of Health Sciences, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee; Affiliate Associate Profes-sor, School of Public Health, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee; Associate Professor of Population Health Sciences, University of Wisconsin School of Medi-cine and Public Health Dennis Baumgardner, M.D. Associate Director for Health Services Initiatives, Center for Urban Population Health; Director of Campus Research, Aurora UW Medical Group; Professor of Family Medicine, UW School of Medi-cine and Public Health Loren Galvão, M.D., M.P.H. Associate Director of Community Part-nerships, Center for Urban Population Health; Senior Scientist, College of Nurs-ing’s Center for Cultural Diversity and Global Health, University of Wisconsin— Milwaukee; Honorary Fellow, UW School of Medicine and Public Health
2010 Faculty & Staff
Jacqueline Apkarian
Lee Banfi, M.B.A., C.P.A., F.H.F.M.A.
Karen Blanchard
Farrin Bridgewater, B.A.
Han-Yang Chen, M.S.
Paul Depratt
Jennifer Evertsen, M.S.
Paul Florsheim, Ph.D.
David Frazer, M.P.H.
Gina Green-Harris, M.B.A.
Amy Harley, Ph.D.
Stephanie Houston, M.B.A.
Paul Hunter, M.D.
Amanda Joyce, B.S.
Jennifer Kroll, B.A.
Courtenay Kessler, M.S.
Melissa Lemke, M.A.
Andrew Marek, B.B.A.
Naoyo Mori, Ph.D.
Nia Norris, M.A., B.A.
Cacy Odom-Williams, M.B.A.
Ruth Perez, B.A., C.C.R.C.
Katherine Pronschinske, B.S., M.T.
Kathryn Reese, M.P.H.
Jessica Rice, M.P.H.
Nicole Robinson, M.P.H., M.S.W.
JoAnne Sabir, M.S.W.
Trina Salm Ward, M.S.W., C.C.R.C.
Dale Steber, M.S.
Geoffrey Swain, M.D., M.P.H.
Anne Marie Talsky, B.A.
Simeona Trayanov, M.S.
Virginia Zerpa-Uriona, M.P.H.
Executive Committee
Deborah Blanks, C.C.A.P. (Chair),
Social Development Commission
Patricia Arredondo, Ed.D.,
UW–Milwaukee
Luis (Tony) Báez, Ph.D.,
The Council for the Spanish Speaking, Inc.
Bevan Baker, F.A.C.H.E.,
City of Milwaukee Health Department
Marc Drezner, M.D.,
UW School of Medicine & Public Health
Chukuka Enwemeka, Ph.D., F.A.C.S.M.
UW-Milwaukee
Patrick Falvey, Ph.D.,
Aurora Health Care
Cindy Haq, M.D.,
UW School of Medicine & Public Health
Randall Lambrecht, Ph.D.,
Aurora Health Care
Sally Lundeen, Ph.D., R.N.,
UW–Milwaukee
Patrick Remington, M.D.,
UW School of Medicine & Public Health
Jeffrey Stearns, M.D., (ex officio)
Aurora UW Medical Group
Bruce Van Cleave, M.D.,
Aurora Health Care
Investigators Faculty and Staff Education Faculty and Staff Disciplines
1020 N. 12th Street, Suite 4180
Milwaukee WI 53233
414.219.5100
www.cuph.org
AFRICAN AMERICAN CHAMBER OF COMMERCE CENTER ON AGING COMMUNITY: LEADERSHIP COUNCIL COALI-
TION OF WISCONSIN AGING GROUPS FIGHT ASTHMA MILWAUKEE ALLIES GREATER MILWAUKEE TRIAD GROW-
ING POWER HEALTH CARE TASK FORCE ON PRE- AND INTER-CONCEPTION CARE HEALTHY BIRTH OUTCOMES:
ELIMINATING RACIAL AND ETHNIC DISPARITIES STATEWIDE ADVISORY WORKGROUPS HISPANIC YOUTH COL-
LABORATIVE LGBT YOUTH HEALTH COALITON MILWAUKEE AGING CONSORTIUM MILWAUKEE ALLIANCE FOR SEXUAL HEALTH MILWAUKEE COMMUNITY HEALTH ASSESS-
MENT MILWAUKEE COUNTY DEPARTMENT ON AGING: WELLNESS COUNCIL MILWAUKEE COUNTY NUTRITION AND PHYSICAL ACTIVITY COALITON MILWAUKEE FATHER-
HOOD INITIATIVE MILWAUKEE FETAL INFANT MORTALITY REVIEW MILWAUKEE HEALTH CARE PARTNERSHIP INC MILWAUKEE HOMICIDE REVIEW COMISSION MILWAU-
KEE LATINO HEALTH COALITION MILWAUKEE REGIONAL CANCER CARE NETWORK MILWAUKEE RIVER BASIN PARTNERSHIP PARTNERSHIP TO ELIMINATE DISPARITIES IN
INFANT MORTALITY ACTION LEARNING COLLABORATIVE - FOCUS ON FATHERS/MALES RACINE INFANT MORTALITY HEALTH CENTER SOUTHSIDE ORGANIZING COMMIT-
TEE STATEWIDE ADVISORY COMMITTEE TO IMPROVE HEALTHY BIRTH OUTCOMES TASK FORCE ON FAMILY VIOLENCE TEEN PREGNANCY PREVENTION NETWORK UNITED
WAY’S TEEN PREGNANCY OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE URBAN FOOD AND FITNESS STEERING COMMITTEE URBAN FOOD AND FITNESS: RESEARCH AND EVALUATION COM-
MITTEE WISCONSIN BREAST CANCER COALITION WISCONSIN CANCER COUNCIL WISCONSIN COALITION AGAINST DOMESTIC VIOLENCE WISCONSIN FETAL ALCOHOL
SPECTRUM DISORDERS PREVENTION AND INTERVENTION PROJECT ADVISORY COMMITTEE WISCONSIN HEALTH WATCH WISCONSIN NETWORK FOR HEALTH RESEARCH
WISCONSIN PUBLIC HEALTH ASSOCIATION WISCONSIN RESEARCH AND EDUCATION NETWORK WORKING CONSORTIUM ON THE INCLUSION AND CARE OF THE UNDER
REPRESENTED IN CLINICAL RESEARCH AIDS RESOURCE CENTER OF WISCONSIN ALL SAINTS HEALTHCARE ST LUKES HEALTH PAVILION ALMA CENTER ALZHEIMER'S ASSO-
CIATION AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY - MIDWEST DIVISION AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION AMERY REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER ARMS
AROUND ARMANI NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION ASHA FAMILY SERVICES ASPIRUS WAUSAU HOSPITAL ASSET BUILDERS OF AMERICA, INC AURORA BAYCARE MEDICAL
CENTER AURORA CENTER FOR SENIOR HEALTH AND LONGEVITY AURORA CONSOLIDATED LABORATORIES AURORA FAMILY CARE CLINIC AURORA HEALTH CARE INC
AURORA LAKELAND MEDICAL CENTER AURORA MEDICAL CENTER KENOSHA AURORA MEDICAL CENTER MANITOWOC COUNTY AURORA MEDICAL CENTER OSHKOSH
AURORA MEDICAL CENTER WASHINGTON COUNTY AURORA MEMORIAL HOSPITAL OF BURLINGTON AURORA MIDWIFERY CLINIC AURORA MILWAUKEE HEART INSTI-
TUTE AURORA SCHOOL BASED NURSES AURORA SHEBOYGAN MEMORIAL MEDICAL CENTER AURORA SINAI MEDICAL CENTER AURORA SINAI SEXUAL ASSAULT TREAT-
MENT CENTER AURORA ST LUKES COMPREHENSIVE CARDIOVASCULAR CARE LLP AURORA ST LUKES EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT AURORA ST LUKES FAMILY PRACTICE
CENTER AURORA ST LUKES TRANSPLANT RESEARCH LAB AURORA UW MEDICAL GROUP BALDWIN AREA MEDICAL CENTER BAY AREA MEDICAL CENTER BAYVIEW
NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION BEAVER DAM COMMUNITY HOSPITAL BELLIN MEMORIAL HOSPITAL BELOIT MEMORIAL HOSPITAL BENEDICT CENTER BERLIN MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL BLACK HEALTH COALITION BLACK RIVER MEMORIAL BOSCUBEL AREA HEALTH CARE BOSTON UNIVERSITY BRIGHTER FUTURES BROWN UNIVERSITY BURNETT
MEDICAL CENTER CATHOLIC CHARITIES CENTER FOR ADDICTION AND BEHAVIORAL HEALTH RESEARCH CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF DIVERSITY IN HEALTHCARE CENTER
FOR TOBACCO RESEARCH AND INTERVENTION CITY OF MILWAUKEE CITY OF MILWAUKEE HEALTH DEPARTMENT CITY OF RACINE HEALTH DEPARTMENT COLUMBIA
CENTER LLC COLUMBIA ST. MARY'S HOSPITAL COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY COLUMBUS COMMUNITY HOSPITAL COMMUNITY CARE FOR THE ELDERLY COMMUNITY MEMO-
RIAL HOSPITAL COMPREHENSIVE CANCER CENTER COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH EDUCATION, INC. COUNSELING CENTER OF MILWAUKEE CUMBERLAND MEMORIAL HOSPI-
TAL DOOR COUNTY MEMORIAL HOSPITAL ELMBROOK MEMORIAL HOSPITAL FAITH PARTNERSHIP NETWORK, INC. FORT MEMORIAL HOSPITAL FRANCISCAN SKEMP
HEALTHCARE FRANCISCAN SKEMP HEALTHCARE ARCADIA FRANCISCAN SKEMP HELATHCARE SPARTA FROEDTERT HOSPITAL GASTROENTEROLOGY CONSULTANTS LTD
GERALD IGNACE INDIAN HEALTH CENTER GILDA'S CLUB SOUTHEASTERN WISCONSIN GRANT REGIONAL HEALTH CENTER GREATER GALILEE MISSIONARY BAPTIST
CHURCH GREATER MILWAUKEE COMMITTEE GUNDERSEN LUTHERAN MEDICAL CENTER INC HARAMBEE OMBUDSMAN PROJECT, INC. HARVARD UNIVERSITY HAYWARD
AREA MEMORIAL HOSPITAL HEALTH ADVOCACY FOR THE SPANISH SPEAKING RESIDENTS HILLSIDE FAMILY RESOURCE CENTER HMONG AMERICAN FRIENSHIP ASSOCIA-
TION HOLY FAMILY MEMORIAL MEDICAL CENTER HOPE HOUSE HOUSE OF PEACE HUMANE WORLDS CENTER FOR MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH IMPACT 211 INCARNA-
TION LUTHERAN CHURCH INSTITUTE FOR SURVEY AND POLICY RESEARCH INSTITUTE FOR URBAN HEALTH PARTNERSHIPS KEENAN HEALTH CENTER LAKEVIEW MEDICAL
CENTER LANGLADE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL LATINA RESOURCE CENTER LEGAL ACTION WISCONSIN, INC. LISBON AVENUE NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION LINDSAY HEIGHTS
NEGHBORHOOD HEALTH ALLIANCE LUTHER HOSPITAL LUTHER MIDELFORT NORTHLAND LUTHERAN SOCIAL SERVICES M&S CLINICAL SERVICES MADISON BIRTH CENTER
MANAGED HEALTH SERVICES MARCH OF DIMES MARQUETTE UNIVERSITY MARSHFIELD CLINIC RESEARCH FOUNDATION MCW - CENTER FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF
UNDERSERVED CHILDREN MEDICAL COLLEGE OF WISCONSIN MEMORIAL HEALTH CENTER MEMORIAL HOSPITAL INC MEMORIAL HOSPITAL OF LAFAYETTE COUNTY ME-
MORIAL MEDICAL CENTER MERCY HEALTH SYSTEM MERCY MEDICAL CENTER MERITER HOSPITAL MILE BLUFF MEDICAL CENTER MILWAUKEE BIRTHING PROJECT MIL-
WAUKEE CENTER FOR INDEPENDENCE MILWAUKEE CHRISTIAN CENTER MILWAUKEE COMMISSION ON DOMESTIC VIOLENCE AND SEXUAL ASSAULT MILWAUKEE
COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND FAMILY SERVICES MILWAUKEE COUNTY DEPARTMENT ON AGING MILWAUKEE DEPARTMENT OF NEIGHBORHOOD SERVICES
MILWAUKEE HEALTH SERVICES (EARLY INTERVENTION PROGRAM) MILWAUKEE HOUSING AUTHORITY MILWAUKEE POLICE DEPARTMENT MILWAUKEE PUBLIC SCHOOLS
MILWAUKEE SERVICE INTERGRATION OFFICE MILWAUKEE WELL WOMEN'S PROGRAM MONROE CLINIC AND HOSPITAL MOTHERS AGAINST GUN VIOLENCE NEW CON-
CEPT SELF DEVELOPMENT CENTER NEW LONDON FAMILY MEDICAL CENTER OCONOMOWOC MEMORIAL HOSPITAL ONEIDA TRIBAL NATION, BROWN COUNTY OSCEOLA
MEDICAL CENTER PLANNED PARENTHOOD OF WISCONSIN POPULATION HEALTH INSTITUTE PRAIRIE DU CHIEN MEMORIAL HOSPITAL PRENATAL CARE COORDINATION
PROGRAM PREVENT BLINDNESS WISCONSIN PRIVATE INDUSTRY COUNCIL PROJECT SAFE NEIGHBORHOODS PROJECT UJIMA, CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL OF WISCONSIN
REEDSBURG AREA MEDICAL CENTER RESEARCH TRIANGLE INSTITUTE RICHLAND HOSPITAL RIVERSIDE MEDICAL CENTER RIVERVIEW HOSPITAL ASSOCIATION RUNNING
REBELS RUSK COUNTY MEMORIAL HOSPITAL SACRED HEART HOSPITAL SAINT ADALBER'S CHURCH SAINT MICHAELS HOSPITAL SAUK PRAIRIE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL SET
MINISTRIES SHAWANO MEDICAL CENTER SIXTEENTH STREET COMMUNITY CLINIC SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT COMMISSION SOJOURNER TRUTH HOUSE SOUTHERN ILLINOIS
UNIVERSITY SOUTHWEST HEALTH CENTER SPOONER HEALTH SYSTEM ST AGNES HOSPITAL ST CLARE HOSPITAL ST CLARE HOSPITAL AND HEALTH SERVICES ST ELIZABETH
HOSPITAL ST FRANCIS HOSPITAL ST JOSEPHS COMMUNITY HEALTH SERVICES INC ST JOSEPHS HOSPITAL ST JOSEPHS HOSPITAL MINISTRY HEALTH CARE ST JOSEPHS RE-
GIONAL MEDICAL CENTER ST MARYS HOSPITAL ST MARYS HOSPITAL MEDICAL CENTER ST MARYS HOSPITAL OZAUKEE CAMPUS ST VINCENT HOSPITAL STATE OF WISCON-
SIN VITAL RECORDS DEPARTMENT SUSAN G. KOMEN BREAST CANCER FOUNDATION TOMAH MEMORIAL HOSPITAL TRANSITION TO ADULT SERVICES UNITED HOSPITAL
SYSTEM INC UNITED MIGRANT OPPORTUNITY SERVICES (UMOS) UNIVERISTY OF WISCONSIN MADISON UNIVERSITY 0F WISCONSIN MILWAUKEE UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI
UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS UNIVERSITY OF
WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - MILWAUKEE SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - MILWAUKEE COLLEGE OF HEALTH SCIENCES UNIVER-
SITY OF WISCONSIN SCHOOL OF MEDICINE AND PUBLIC HEALTH UW - COLLABORATIVE CENTER FOR HEALTH EQUITY UPLAND HILLS HEALTH INC URBAN UNDERGROUND
UWM CENTER FOR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT VERNON MEMORIAL HOSPITAL VETERANS ADMINISTRATION HEALTHY AGING CLINICS VISITING NURSES ASSOCIATION
WALNUT WAY CONSERVATINO CORP. WAUKESHA MEMORIAL HOSPITAL WAUPUN MEMORIAL HOSPITAL WEST ALLIS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL WESTSIDE HEALTHCARE
ASSOCIATION WESTFIELDS HOSPITAL WHEATON FRANCISCAN SERVICES WISCONSIN ALZHEIMERS INSTITUTE WISCONSIN ASSOCIATION OF PERINATAL CARE WISCONSIN
BUREAU OF HEALTH INFORMATION WISCONSIN COMMUNITY SERVICES WISCONSIN DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH SERVICES WISCONSIN PARTNERSHIP PROGRAM
WOMEN’S HEALTH CENTER AT AURORA SINAI MEDICAL CENTER ZILBER FAMILY FOUNDATION
PA R T N E R S
Recommended