Quick Guide

Overview

Advanced Search

Competencies

Equity Development Levels

Resource Types

LHJ Spotlights

Addendums

Additional Databases and Glossaries

Data Collection and Usage text with hands underneath
Definition: Collect data to reflect the experience of communities impacted by inequities and make it accessible to the community for shared use in policy and program planning.

Why It Matters: Data helps us understand health inequities, and we need to be intentional in the data we are collecting, as well as, who we share it with and how we use it. Collecting data directly from communities impacted by inequities, ensures that those communities are counted, seen, and heard. This might mean collecting multiple types of data (quantitative and qualitative) in innovative ways. Sharing the information with those communities allows for accountability and empowers communities to become advocates for themselves.
 
Type Title Description
Examples County Health Rankings & Roadmaps This website can serve as a resource or example of the type of data that can be collected for all counties. It doesn’t, however, address the barriers of collecting certain demographic data in smaller counties.
Webinars Achieving Equity with Results- Based Accountability Under the framework of Results-Based Accountability (RBA), this 1.5-hour webinar covers multiple topics geared toward equity in a community starting with data. Topics span from using disaggregated data to understand racial inequities to basic information on racism, racial equity, and racial bias. The webinar ends with examples, success stories, and resources from local health departments and beyond.
Guides COVID-19 Health Equity Playbook for Communities, Strategies and Practices for an Equitable Reopening and Recovery (Page 53) The Data Section of this report provides examples of dashboards from local health departments and lists state data tools to further explore.
Guides Gathering Data and Information from the City of Long Beach Office of Equity Toolkit (Page 14-15) This toolkit provides guiding questions and examples of how to apply an equity lens to multiple strategies, including gathering data and information (of interest for this competency). The guiding questions span different levels in the spectrum of early, established, and strong.
Articles Retest 4263 This is a short description.
Type Title Description
Examples Oakland Equity Indicators - Measuring Change Toward Greater Equity in Oakland This Oakland Equity Indicators Report is an example of the type of analyses that can be developed after going through the data collection process. The city of Oakland showcases a quantitative framework for city staff and community members to understand the impacts of race, measure inequities, and track changes in disparities over time.
Trainings Data for Rural Health Equity, Vol. I: Understanding Population Health Concepts The first of a three-part series, this 1.5-hour module reviews how to use data and make a connection between social determinants of health and health disparities in a community. (Rural Resource)
Trainings Data for Rural Health Equity, Vol. II: Communicating Effectively The second of a three-part series, this 1.5-hour module dives into how to communicate data to your community. (Rural Resource)
Trainings Data for Rural Health Equity, Volume III: Visualizing Data Stories The last of a three-part series, this 1.5-hour module covers data visualization strategies to help deliver health information to your audience and tell a more captivating story. (Rural Resource)
Guides How Can We Mobilize Data? This website provides ideas, actions, and resources on how to utilize data to understand and investigate inequities and evaluate public health interventions. The various materials span the spectrum of our early, established, and strong categories.
Articles A Rising Tide: Increasing Rural Local Health Department Capacity to Address the Social Determinants of Health - Data and Evaluation (Page 13 & 21) The National Association of County and City Health Officials (NACCHO) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) describe five essential themes within rural local health departments to combat social determinants of health in their communities: Partnerships, Leadership, Community Engagement, Data & Evaluation, and Strategic Planning. (Rural Resource)
Type Title Description
Guides Applying social determinants of health indicator data for advancing health equity This technical guide walks local health departments and their community partners through collecting, analyzing, and using data indicators for local community health assessments, program/policy development, and health equity advocacy.
Guides Principles for Using Public Health Data to Drive Equity (Page 23) This guide aims to incorporate data equity principles to each stage of the data life cycle, bringing an equity lens to each stage. These principles emerge from an environmental scan by the CDC Foundation that is further described in the document. The various stages of the data life cycle relate to different levels of the early, established, and strong spectrum.
Guides Do No Harm - Applying Equity Awareness in Data Visualization This guide with its respective checklists and toolkits focuses on the ways data analysts, researchers, and communicators fail to integrate equity in their work, how to correct common mistakes, and how to be more intentional in using a Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) approach.