
@article{ref1,
title="Toward Standardized, Comparable Public Health Systems Data: A Taxonomic Description of Essential Public Health Work",
journal="Health services research",
year="2009",
author="Merrill, Jacqueline and Keeling, Jonathan and Gebbie, Kristine",
volume="44",
number="5p2",
pages="1818-1841",
abstract="<p><b>Objective. </b> To identify taxonomy of task, knowledge, and resources for documenting the work performed in local health departments (LHDs).</p> <p><b>Data Sources. </b> Secondary data were collected from documents describing public health (PH) practice produced by organizations representing the PH community.</p> <p><b>Study Design. </b> A multistep consensus‐based method was used that included literature review, data extraction, expert opinion, focus group review, and pilot testing.</p> <p><b>Data Extraction Methods. </b> Terms and concepts were manually extracted from documents, consolidated, and evaluated for scope and sufficiency by researchers. An expert panel determined suitability of terms and a hierarchy for classifying them. This work was validated by practitioners and results pilot tested in two LHDs.</p> <p><b>Principal Findings. </b> The finalized taxonomy was applied to compare a national sample of 11 LHDs. Data were obtained from 1,064 of 1,267 (84 percent) of employees. Frequencies of tasks, knowledge, and resources constitute a profile of PH work. About 70 percent of the correlations between LHD pairs on tasks and knowledge were high (>0.7), suggesting between‐department commonalities. On resources only 16 percent of correlations between LHD pairs were high, suggesting a source of performance variability.</p> <p><b>Conclusions. </b> A taxonomy of PH work serves as a tool for comparative research and a framework for further development.</p><p />",
language="",
issn="0017-9124",
doi="10.1111/j.1475-6773.2009.01015.x",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-6773.2009.01015.x"
}