To measure the cost of collaborative partnership for the healthy alberta communities project
The Healthy Alberta Communities (HAC) is a community-based chronic disease prevention project that draws on a wide spectrum of community-initiated interventions undertaken as a cluster in four Alberta communities since 2005. HAC-funded collaborative projects are undertaken with local stakeholders. C...
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ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-AEU.10048-16052012-03-21T22:50:08ZOhinmaa, Arto (Public Health Sciences)Raine, Kim (Centre for Health Promotion Studies)Woo, Jane Leung-Ching2010-10-01T22:30:04Z2010-10-01T22:30:04Z2010-10-01T22:30:04Zhttp://hdl.handle.net/10048/1605The Healthy Alberta Communities (HAC) is a community-based chronic disease prevention project that draws on a wide spectrum of community-initiated interventions undertaken as a cluster in four Alberta communities since 2005. HAC-funded collaborative projects are undertaken with local stakeholders. Community stakeholders who buy in contributed their own resources in kind in the collaborative process. These in kind resources are considered HAC's indirect cost from a societal perspective since stakeholders forgo the benefit of using these resources for themselves, a forgone best alternative. This study proposes a methodology to identify, catalogue and count these in kind resources, called indirect cost, which will be used in HAC economic evaluation. Methodological challenges of identifying, cataloguing and counting both direct anad indirect costs for a cluster of diverse interventions, and the manner with which these challenges were addressed, are explained. Both direct and indirect cost data that span up to the first 24 months in two HAC communities were analyzed. Some results included are: (1)in kind resources are counted in number of in kind person-hours; (2) a combined total of 11,483 in kind person-hours from community stakeholders were catalogued and counted over an eight-month period; (3) in a monetary context, a suggested typical operating expenditure to generate one in kind person-hour using a HAC model (one head office, two community offices) was $15.58. This is the first study to directly measure resources donated in kind in public health.498965 bytesapplication/pdfenWoo, J (2009). http://pubs.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/rp-ps/inDetail.jsp?jcode=apnm&lang=eng&vol=34&is=2integrated health promotioncommunity interventionchronic disease preventioncost of community collaborationcollaborative inputs costscommunity partnership costscost of donated resourceseconomic evaluationmeasure cost of donated resourcescost of in kind contributionmeasure community collaborationmeasure stakeholder contributionsTo measure the cost of collaborative partnership for the healthy alberta communities projectThesisMaster of ScienceMaster'sSchool of Public HealthUniversity of Alberta2010-11EpidemiologyMcLeod, Logan (Public Health Sciences)Veugelers, Paul (Public Health Sciences) |
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integrated health promotion community intervention chronic disease prevention cost of community collaboration collaborative inputs costs community partnership costs cost of donated resources economic evaluation measure cost of donated resources cost of in kind contribution measure community collaboration measure stakeholder contributions |
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integrated health promotion community intervention chronic disease prevention cost of community collaboration collaborative inputs costs community partnership costs cost of donated resources economic evaluation measure cost of donated resources cost of in kind contribution measure community collaboration measure stakeholder contributions Woo, Jane Leung-Ching To measure the cost of collaborative partnership for the healthy alberta communities project |
description |
The Healthy Alberta Communities (HAC) is a community-based chronic disease prevention project that draws on a wide spectrum of community-initiated interventions undertaken as a cluster in four Alberta communities since 2005. HAC-funded collaborative projects are undertaken with local stakeholders. Community stakeholders who buy in contributed their own resources in kind in the collaborative process. These in kind resources are considered HAC's indirect cost from a societal perspective since stakeholders forgo the benefit of using these resources for themselves, a forgone best alternative. This study proposes a methodology to identify, catalogue and count these in kind resources, called indirect cost, which will be used in HAC economic evaluation. Methodological challenges of identifying, cataloguing and counting both direct anad indirect costs for a cluster of diverse interventions, and the manner with which these challenges were addressed, are explained. Both direct and indirect cost data that span up to the first 24 months in two HAC communities were analyzed. Some results included are: (1)in kind resources are counted in number of in kind person-hours; (2) a combined total of 11,483 in kind person-hours from community stakeholders were catalogued and counted over an eight-month period; (3) in a monetary context, a suggested typical operating expenditure to generate one in kind person-hour using a HAC model (one head office, two community offices) was $15.58. This is the first study to directly measure resources donated in kind in public health. === Epidemiology |
author2 |
Ohinmaa, Arto (Public Health Sciences) |
author_facet |
Ohinmaa, Arto (Public Health Sciences) Woo, Jane Leung-Ching |
author |
Woo, Jane Leung-Ching |
author_sort |
Woo, Jane Leung-Ching |
title |
To measure the cost of collaborative partnership for the healthy alberta communities project |
title_short |
To measure the cost of collaborative partnership for the healthy alberta communities project |
title_full |
To measure the cost of collaborative partnership for the healthy alberta communities project |
title_fullStr |
To measure the cost of collaborative partnership for the healthy alberta communities project |
title_full_unstemmed |
To measure the cost of collaborative partnership for the healthy alberta communities project |
title_sort |
to measure the cost of collaborative partnership for the healthy alberta communities project |
publishDate |
2010 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10048/1605 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT woojaneleungching tomeasurethecostofcollaborativepartnershipforthehealthyalbertacommunitiesproject |
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1716390673646616576 |