Smith Selina A, Abbott Regina, Sims Christy
Director, Institute of Public and Preventive Health, Professor and Curtis G. Hames, MD, Distinguished Chair, Department of Family Medicine Medical College of Georgia, and Vice President, Georgia Public Health Association.
President, Alpha Omega Center for Organizational Excellence, Executive Services Provider and Past President, Georgia Public Health Association.
J Ga Public Health Assoc. 2015 Summer;5(1):11-15.
The 86 annual meeting of the Georgia Public Health Association (GPHA) and joint conference with the Southern Health Association was held in Atlanta, Georgia, on April 13-14, 2015, with pre-conference (April 12) and post-conference (April 14) Executive Board meetings. As Georgia's leading forum for public health researchers, practitioners, and students, the annual meeting of the GPHA brings together participants from across the state to explore recent developments in the field and to exchange techniques, tools, and experiences. Historically, the GPHA conference has been held in Savannah (n=24); Jekyll Island (n=20); Atlanta (n=16); Augusta (n=4); and Gainesville (n=1). There was no annual meeting during the early years (1929-1936); during World War II (1941-1943 and 1945); and for four years during the 1980s. Between 2006 and 2010, GPHA held one-day annual meetings and business sessions with educational workshops. Several new initiatives were highlighted as part of this year's conference. These included a "move and groove" physical activity lounge, registration scholarships for students with a dedicated meet-and-greet reception, an expanded exhibit hall, presentation and approval of three resolutions (related to healthy foods at official activities and events; weapons at official activities and events; and memorials), and approval of the 2015 legislative policy positions and amended association bylaws. The theme for the conference was . Specifically, the program addressed ensuring access to care; protecting funding for core programs, services, and infrastructure; eliminating health disparities; and addressing key public health issues important to the state of Georgia. One hundred and nine (109) abstracts were submitted for peer review; 36 were accepted for poster and 40 for workshop presentations. Four plenary sessions with keynote speakers covered the intersection between advocacy and policy, Georgia's response to the Ebola crisis, palliative care, and essentials of advocacy in action for public health. Concurrent workshops focused on Board of Health training, public health accreditation, capacity building, collaboration, patient-centered outcomes, synthetic cannabinoid use, the HIV care continuum, use of data for informed decision making, environmental threats, organizational development, epidemiology, policy, and regulation. Thirty-two (32) awards were presented, including Lawmaker of the Year Award to Governor Nathan and First Lady Sandra Deal for their active and engaged role in promoting public health in Georgia; and the Sellers-McCroan Award to Commissioner Brenda Fitzgerald, Georgia Department of Public Health (DPH) State Health Officer, for her leadership of the Georgia Ebola Response Team and leadership of the newly formed department. The conference attracted 569 registrants primarily through pre-registration (n=561) with limited onsite registration (n=8). For this year's conference, there was a significant increase in attendance (36%) and exhibitors (33%) relative to 2014. Of registrants reporting GPHA section participation, representation included: academic (5%); administration (10%); boards of health (13%); career development (15%); emergency preparedness (2%); epidemiology (5%); health education and promotion (2%); information technology (2%); maternal and child health (3%); medical/dental (3%); nursing (10%); nutrition (<1%); and other/no record (15%). There was 100% participation in the conference from the state's 18 public health districts. The conference evaluation completed by a representative sample of registrants indicated areas of potential improvement as: starting sessions on time, using electronic and social media for the conference agenda/syllabus, and decreasing workshop sessions to 45 minutes. Most rated the conference as "good" or "excellent."
佐治亚州公共卫生协会(GPHA)第86届年会以及与南方卫生协会的联合会议于2015年4月13日至14日在佐治亚州亚特兰大举行,会前(4月12日)和会后(4月14日)召开了执行委员会会议。作为佐治亚州公共卫生研究人员、从业者和学生的主要论坛,GPHA年会汇聚了全州各地的参与者,以探讨该领域的最新发展,并交流技术、工具和经验。从历史上看,GPHA会议曾在萨凡纳(n = 24次)、杰基尔岛(n = 20次)、亚特兰大(n = 16次)、奥古斯塔(n = 4次)和盖恩斯维尔(n = 1次)举行。早年(1929 - 1936年)、第二次世界大战期间(1941 - 1943年和1945年)以及20世纪80年代有四年未召开年会。2006年至2010年期间,GPHA举办了为期一天的年会和业务会议以及教育工作坊。今年会议突出了几项新举措。这些举措包括一个“动起来”的体育活动休息区、为学生提供注册奖学金并设有专门的见面会招待会、扩大的展览厅、三项决议(与官方活动和赛事中的健康食品、官方活动和赛事中的武器以及纪念活动相关)的展示和批准,以及2015年立法政策立场和协会章程修正案的批准。会议主题是 。具体而言,议程涉及确保医疗服务可及性;保护核心项目、服务和基础设施的资金;消除健康差距;以及解决对佐治亚州重要的关键公共卫生问题。共提交了109篇摘要供同行评审;36篇被接受用于海报展示,40篇被接受用于工作坊展示。四场有主旨演讲者的全会涵盖了倡导与政策的交叉领域、佐治亚州对埃博拉危机的应对、姑息治疗以及公共卫生行动中的倡导要点。并行工作坊聚焦于卫生委员会培训、公共卫生认证、能力建设、协作、以患者为中心的结果、合成大麻素的使用、艾滋病毒护理连续体、利用数据进行明智决策、环境威胁、组织发展、流行病学、政策和监管。共颁发了32个奖项,包括授予内森州长和第一夫人桑德拉·迪尔的年度立法者奖,以表彰他们在佐治亚州促进公共卫生方面的积极参与;以及授予佐治亚州公共卫生部(DPH)州卫生官员布伦达·菲茨杰拉德专员的塞勒斯 - 麦克罗恩奖,以表彰她对佐治亚州埃博拉应对团队的领导以及对新成立部门的领导。会议主要通过预注册(n = 561人)吸引了569名注册者,现场注册人数有限(n = 8人)。与2014年相比,今年会议的参会人数(36%)和参展商(33%)有显著增加。在报告参与GPHA部门的注册者中,代表包括:学术(5%);行政管理(10%);卫生委员会(13%);职业发展(15%);应急准备(2%);流行病学(5%);健康教育与促进(2%);信息技术(2%);母婴健康(3%);医疗/牙科(3%);护理(10%);营养(<1%);以及其他/无记录(15%)。该州18个公共卫生区的人员100%参与了会议。由注册者的代表性样本完成的会议评估指出了潜在的改进领域,如按时开始会议、利用电子和社交媒体发布会议议程/教学大纲,以及将工作坊时长减至45分钟。大多数人将会议评为“良好”或“优秀”。