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State of the USA Health Indicators: Letter Report (2009)

Chapter: Appendix A: Agenda

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Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Agenda." Institute of Medicine. 2009. State of the USA Health Indicators: Letter Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12534.
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Page 69
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Agenda." Institute of Medicine. 2009. State of the USA Health Indicators: Letter Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12534.
×
Page 70

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Appendix A Agenda Committee on State of the USA Indicators July 21–22, 2008 Lecture Room National Academies Building 2101 Constitution Avenue, N.W. Washington, DC 9:00–9:15 Welcome and Overview GEORGE ISHAM Committee Chair 9:15–10:00 Overview of State of the USA and Presentation of Committee Charge CHRISTOPHER HOENIG President and Chief Executive Officer The State of the USA with JOEL GURIN, SUSA and NICOLE LURIE, RAND Corp. 10:00–10:45 Discussion 10:45–11:15 Presentation: Indicators and Their Attributes ROBERT GROVES Survey Research Center 11:15–11:45 Discussion 11:45–1:00 LUNCH 1:00–1:30 Presentation: Existing Indicators and their Measurement CHERYL WOLD Wold & Associates Consulting 69

70 STATE OF THE USA HEALTH INDICATORS 1:30–2:00 Discussion 2:00–2:30 A Look at Healthy People 2020 CARTER BLAKEY Office of Public Health and Science, HHS 2:30–3:00 Discussion 3:00–3:30 Community Indicators and Health Index RICHARD J. KLEIN National Center for Health Statistics 3:30 Adjourn

Next: Appendix B: Some Current Health Indicator Reports »
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Researchers, policymakers, sociologists and doctors have long asked how to best measure the health of a nation, yet the challenge persists. The nonprofit State of the USA, Inc. (SUSA) is taking on this challenge, demonstrating how to measure the health of the United States. The organization is developing a new website intended to provide reliable and objective facts about the U.S. in a number of key areas, including health, and to provide an interactive tool with which individuals can track the progress made in each of these areas.

In 2008, SUSA asked the Institute of Medicine's Committee on the State of the USA Health Indicators to provide guidance on 20 key indicators to be used on the organization's website that would be valuable in assessing health. Each indicator was required to demonstrate:

  • a clear importance to health or health care,
  • the availability of reliable, high quality data to measure change in the indicators over time,
  • the potential to be measured with federally collected data, and
  • the capability to be broken down by geography, populations subgroups including race and ethnicity, and socioeconomic status.

Taken together, the selected indicators reflect the overall health of the nation and the efficiency and efficacy of U.S. health systems. The complete list of 20 can be found in the report brief and book.

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