Chosen Theme: Metrics for Community Health Program Success

Welcome! Today we dive into how to define, track, and celebrate the numbers that prove community health programs work. From outcomes to equity, we explore practical, human-centered metrics that guide smarter decisions and amplify local impact. Subscribe and share your own metrics wins so others can learn from your experience.

What Success Looks Like: Building a Shared Metrics Framework

01
Map how your activities lead to outputs and outcomes, then translate each step into specific metrics. When everyone sees the causal chain, disagreements fade and measurement becomes purposeful, transparent, and motivating for teams and community allies.
02
Define metrics that are specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, and time-bound. Tie each one to the program’s mission, so weekly dashboards don’t drift into vanity numbers that look impressive but fail to move health outcomes meaningfully.
03
Invite residents, frontline workers, and local leaders to choose what to measure. In one neighborhood, adding a walkability score came from residents, which reframed priorities and pulled resources toward safer crosswalks and better lighting.

Outcome Metrics That Matter: Health, Access, and Quality of Life

Track disease incidence and control rates, like reduced uncontrolled hypertension or improved HbA1c levels. Pair clinical outcomes with preventive measures, including vaccination completion and screening uptake, to capture near-term wins and long-term community health resilience.

Outcome Metrics That Matter: Health, Access, and Quality of Life

Measure appointment wait times, distance to services, and percentage of residents served. Continuity metrics, like follow-up within seven days after hospital discharge, often predict fewer emergencies and better patient trust across the community.

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Leading and Lagging Indicators: Seeing Early Signals of Impact

Monitor early behaviors like screening intent, first-visit completion, or medication pickups. These signals predict eventual health outcomes and let teams adjust outreach or education quickly, instead of waiting months for long-term clinical numbers to shift.

Leading and Lagging Indicators: Seeing Early Signals of Impact

Lagging indicators like hospitalization rates and mortality remain essential. Contextualize them with seasonality and policy changes, and avoid overreacting to short-term noise that can mask true trends and misguide resource allocation decisions.
Combine EHR data, claims, surveys, program logs, environmental sensors, and community partner reports. Write a simple data dictionary so newcomers know exactly how each metric is defined, calculated, refreshed, and governed across partnerships.
Set refresh frequencies that match decision needs: weekly for operations, monthly for outcomes, quarterly for strategy. Check sample sizes and confidence intervals to avoid declaring victory or failure on unstable numbers that can mislead planning.
Host data walks with residents to confirm patterns and spot blind spots. One neighborhood flagged missing mobile clinic visits in the data, prompting a fix that improved accuracy and restored trust in the dashboard’s weekly updates.

Turning Metrics into Action: Dashboards, Feedback Loops, and Learning

Build dashboards people actually use

Prioritize clarity over complexity. Limit to a handful of mission-critical KPIs, with trends, thresholds, and simple explanations. Add space for notes so teams capture context and next steps directly alongside each metric every review cycle.
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