Description of the video:
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Hello, I am Shandy Dearth, and I'm the Director of the Center for Public
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Health Practice here at the Fairbanks School of Public Health in Indianapolis.
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And today
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I'm going to talk about our partnerships for an academic health department.
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According to the Public Health Foundation an Academic Health Department is a
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formal affiliation of a health department and an academic institution.
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So we're all familiar with the idea of a teaching hospital.
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So here in Indianapolis, we basically have a teaching local
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health department, and we have that in conjunction
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with the Marion County Public Health Department.
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Before we had the formal agreement in place, we've actually worked
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with the health department for a number of years.
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One big example we have to share is our work during the pandemic.
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During the Covid 19 response,
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our team worked hand in hand with the local health department
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on their case investigation and contact tracing program.
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We were a good fit for this work, partly because we have such a diverse
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student body.
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We were able to understand the community's needs, and often
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were able to help with translation and interpretation out in the community.
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And it's not basketball or it's not Indiana without basketball.
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And so in 2021, we actually led the contact tracing program with the NCAA
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men's basketball tournament when Indianapolis hosted the series.
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The work that we did during
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Covid actually led to a new partnership with the health department
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with their newer K-through-12 School Liaison program.
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Within that work, the Fairbanks School of Public Health offers
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logistical support to plan and enact immunization
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clinics at our local K through 12 schools inside Marion County.
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Again, it's a great fit for our students because they’re able
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to go into the field and see public health practice at work.
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Our students also help us with Stop the Bleed educational classes for staff
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and naloxone administration courses for staff.
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And we see our students as critical assets in the community.
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They're often working hand in hand with us when we are working with our partners.
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Here's one of my favorite collages of photos
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from the last year here at the Fairbanks School of Public Health.
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On the upper left, you see a variety of students,
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staff, and faculty who joined us in one of the community
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cleanup events that we did with the Marion County Public Health Department.
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On the right, we've got a group of volunteers
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who are practice patients for the health department's community reception center.
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That's where the health department gets to practice
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how they would respond to a radiation event in the Indianapolis area.
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And the lower middle photo,
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you see several of our students who had the opportunity
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to meet the Indianapolis mayor during one of their recent immunization
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clinics over the summer, as we helped kids prepare to get back to school.
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And then the bottom right, we've had students volunteer on average,
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about once a semester to go over to the health department and help pack
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naloxone kits to give out to the community.
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One of our students and one of our public health emergency preparedness
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courses was so excited to learn more about emergency preparedness.
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She actually reached out to us to see if there's any kind of shadowing
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opportunity available in the city.
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And fortunately, with our partnership with the health department,
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we were able to connect her to one of the hazardous materials
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on scene site coordinators and responders.
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She was able to spend a day with that person out in the field.
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She had such a great experience.
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She actually reached out to us and were able to offer this short
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summary of her experience, so other students can see how easy it is
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to shadow with others
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over at the Marion County Public Health Department.
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And a more long-term success story we have to share is the work
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that we've been doing with the health department
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as they work on their public health infrastructure grant
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or the Fig grant, commonly called, in the public health world.
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And so this is a great photo because of the four people shown here.
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One is a current faculty member and three of them
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are actually graduates of the Fairbanks School of Public Health.
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And so it's great to be able to go into the community
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and work with other colleagues who have gone through the public health
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program here at Fairbanks.
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And most recently, we were able to offer a public health showcase.
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In that, we brought together staff from both Fairbanks
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School of Public Health and the Marion County Public Health Department.
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And we were able to have co-presentations
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where someone from the health department and someone from Fairbanks gave
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presentations on the work that they have done together.
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We did this partly to share some of the success stories that we've seen,
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but also to encourage others to consider new partnerships.
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It's been such a success, and we're excited to see what
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2026 will bring as we move forward with our academic health department.