This document summarizes a presentation about using the Canadian Index of Wellbeing (CIW) framework to measure community health and wellbeing. It discusses how the CIW measures what matters to Canadians across 8 domains and can be used at national, provincial and community levels. Examples are given of how communities are partnering with the CIW to conduct surveys, produce reports and use the data to inform policies and services to improve residents' wellbeing. The Association of Ontario Health Centres is working to expand adoption of the CIW framework among community health centers.
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Using CIW to Measure Community Health and Wellbeing
1. Heidi Schaeffer
Knowledge Management and Learning
AOHC
Canadian Index of Wellbeing
Applications for Community Health
Anna Piszczkiewicz
Knowledge Transfer and Communications
AOHC
Gary Machan
Canadian Research Advisory Group
Canadian Index of Wellbeing
communityhealthandwellbeing.org#ACAC2015
2. Objectives
1 The journey we are on - the Model of Health and Wellbeing
and the best possible health and wellbeing for everyone.
2Understand the Canadian Index of Wellbeing framework in
measuring what matters to Canadians.
3 Get Inspired by how community-governed primary health
centres are adapting and adopting the CIW for evidence,
engagement, partnership, advocacy and policy change.
3. To achieve the best possible health and wellbeing for everyone
things need to shift:
• From a fragmented non-system focused on sickness to an
integrating health and wellbeing system
• From downstream focus to upstream focus on a complete sense
of health and wellbeing
• From health disparities to health equity
4.
5.
6. 6
Using the CIW to measure what
matters
Living
Standards
Canadian
Index of
Wellbeing
Time Use
Community Vitality
Democratic
Engagement
Education
Leisure and
Culture
Environment
Healthy Populations
7. Gary Machan
Canadian Research Advisory Group
Canadian Index ofWellbeing
and
Bryan Smale, Ph.D.
Director, Canadian Index of Wellbeing
University of Waterloo
The Canadian Index of Wellbeing:
Applications for Community Health
Canadian Association of Community Health Centres, 2015 National Conference
“Community Health Centres:Agents of Care,Agents of Change”
Ottawa, Ontario – September 16-18, 2015
8. Wellbeing as a basic human right
“People are much more than the goods and
services they produce! Their health and
quality of life come from the conditions of
their daily living – the circumstances in
which they are born, grow, live, work, and
age.”
The Honourable Monique Bégin
Former CIW Advisory Board Co-Chair
Former Canadian Commissioner
WHO Commission on Social Determinants of Health
9. CIW Mission
The CIW's mission is to:
Conduct rigorous research
related to, and regularly and
publicly report on, the quality
of life of Canadians;
Encourage policy shapers
and government leaders to
make decisions based on
solid evidence; and
Empower Canadians to
advocate for change that
responds to their needs and
values.
Rooted in
Canadian Values
10. The presence of the highest possible quality of life in its full
breadth of expression, focused on but not necessarily exclusive to:
high levels of democratic participation
access to and participation in leisure and culture
good living standards
robust health
a sustainable environment
vital communities
an educated populace
balanced time use
11. Collaborative development
Public Consultations
Research
Teams
Sharing
Results
Domains and
indicators
selected, reports
released
1st composite index
released,
permanent home at
University of
Waterloo
Community
organisations,
special interest
groups, general
public
Policy makers,
government
agencies
Consultants,
academics,
researchers
2002 2010 20152000 2005 to 2009
17. CIW Community Wellbeing Survey
The survey asks residents of a community to
indicate how they are really doing with
respect to a variety of aspects linked directly to
each of the domains of the CIW, as well as to
indicate their wellbeing overall.
The data collected reflect the complex interplay
among domains and provide the opportunity to
track trends and to make comparisons among
communities using a common set of
measures.
Additional questions customised to address
community-based issues provide the opportunity
to understand local needs and create targeted,
effective solutions.
18. Leading to Action and Impact
Leaders working with the CIW to make evidence-based decisions:
City of Guelph mobilized the community to use the CIW, determining priority
areas for action
Kingston and Area Community Foundation focused efforts on improving
civic engagement and community vitality
Fort McMurray/Wood Buffalo convened community partners around
priority issues
Association of Ontario Health Centres is fundamentally shifting the
conversation from an illness system to a health and wellbeing system
OntarioTrillium Foundation is transforming the way its grantmaking
happens and is measured
19. Community-level survey reports focused on the wellbeing of
residents and based on the CIW conceptual framework.
Impact: Leads to civic engagement and improved services
and policies.
The CIW national
report adapted to the
provincial level.
Impact: Informs
progressive and
relevant policy
development on
wellbeing in our
distinct constituencies.
National
Community
Provincial
CIW Data Repository
Archive of CIW data.
Impact: Enables ongoing monitoring of trends,
research, and sharing of best practices.
Rigorous and
academically
grounded national
report.
Impact: Companion to
national discourse on
GDP. Educates and
empowers Canadians
to advocate for
change.
Building knowledge and understanding of
Wellbeing from National to the Community
21. 21
Ontario Trillium Foundation
has funded AOHC to explore:
Using the CIW as a vehicle
• to guide development, delivery and improvement of health
promotion and community development initiatives,
• for public communications and local partnership
development;
• and to promote province-wide dialogue about how the CIW
can kick start a shift to upstream interventions in communities
22. 22
In order to evaluate the
impact of our investments,
OTF will use the CIW as both
a measurement framework
and a baseline.
—Andrea Cohen Barrack
CEO, Ontario Trillium Foundation
Ontario Trillium Foundation
redesigns investment strategy
23. 23
Advancing the CIW as a tool
with health authorities
Within the next 3 years, 2 of
5 LHIN sub-geographic
areas will adapt the CIW as
a tool to reframe thinking
about health and wellbeing
and engaging the
community.
North Simcoe Muskoka
LHIN is taking a focus on the
belonging indicator of the
CIW.
25. 25
Bridging the Gap: Our Format
1Educate people about the CIW
2Provide statistics for each domain coupled with live interviews
3Showcase the good work that is happening
4Conclude with key policy asks
28. 28
We will fail or flourish according to the extent to which
we hold true to our commitment to civic engagement.
- Jack McCarthy, Executive Director, Somerset West CHC
29. 29
In Vaughan: Using the CIW as a
civic engagement tool
Using the Ottawa report
“Bridging the Gap” as a
template, Vaughan CHC is
producing its own Vaughan
Community Wellbeing Report,
based on CIW indicators,
scheduled for release in fall
2015.
30. 30
Building effective community
collaboratives
The Woodstock CHC has applied
the CIW to initiate a multi-
partner community wide process
that is addressing how to
improve community vitality and
people’s “sense of belonging”
Public Health is a key partner
34. 34
We had this window of opportunity to do more intake, take more
clients into the centre. And I think [the Be Well survey] offers a good
way to see the needs of our residents from a community perspective
and not just from a physical perspective.”
- Yves Barbeau, Executive Director of Kapuskasing CHC
35. 35
“Be Well” Survey Purposes
1. Understand and start to collect data on the wellbeing needs of our clients
and communities
2 Develop standardized core questions for wellbeing data comparability over
time across member centres & where possible with CIW’s provincial data
sources.
3 Maintain comparability, validity, and reliability of the core and extended
wellbeing questions.
4 Inform decisions around local, regional and provincial healthy public policy
and advocacy work.
36. “Be Well” Survey Questions
Core survey = 16 wellbeing
questions. All CIW domains with
focus on Community Vitality plus
socio-demographic questions.
Extended survey = 27 wellbeing
questions with more from CIW
framework & food security.
Paper surveys available in
English; French; Spanish; Chinese
(Simplified); Urdu; Ojibway and
Arabic.
36
37. Use of Wellbeing Measures
Identify areas or domains
where wellbeing is lower, so
that health organizations can
change or adapt services
offered to better meet
client/community needs.
37
Assist in measuring
improvements in health
and wellbeing outcomes
attributed to programs and
initiatives.
38. Use of Wellbeing Measures
38
Enhance the ability of health organizations to engage clients in
a discussion about their personal health and wellbeing needs.
Provide input into strategic planning and inform the
development of collective impact initiatives and partnerships
which aim to address gaps and the broader health and
wellbeing goals of the community.
40. 40
According to the Public Health Agency of Canada (2015) in
“What makes Canadians healthy or unhealthy?”, the people
with adequate social relationships are at a 50% lower risk of
death than those with poor or insufficient relationships.
41. 41
“Be Well” Survey:
Provincial Report
• A provincial baseline report will be produced by this November
with surveys collected April-July, 2015.
• A second report will be produced in March 2017 with surveys
collected September – December 2016.
• Centre support available with planning for use, sampling design,
interpretation and decision support.
• Centre support available to address gaps in results and support
with planning and evaluation.
42. 42
Building a network of
CIW adopters
• AOHC is supporting the work
of a growing CIW Adopters
Network
• Approximately 30
Community Health Centres
are now working with the
CIW framework in different
ways