
Reaching the Community...
CHI Outreach
Methods
Outreach is a
very complex, time consuming, and often, challenging endeavor.
The purpose of outreach is to ensure that every community
member is aware of the Children's Health Initiative and how
to access the application assistance services. It includes
hundreds of presentations, participation in important community
events, mass distribution of flyers, appointment reminder
calls by telephone, neighborhood canvassing and media messages.
Below are some of the key outreach methods used by CHI partners
since the inception of the Children's Health Initiative.
Establishing a CHI Phone Center
Informing the Community
Developing a County Wide School Outreach
Plan
Designing an Effective PR and Marketing
Plan
Establishing
a CHI Phone Center
A primary outreach strategy employed in the implementation
of CHI is the development of a dedicated toll free phone line
and phone center to respond to questions about CHI, provide
referrals to application assistance located throughout the
county, and effectively support marketing strategies. The
bilingual Certified Application Assistors (CAAs) located in
the CHI Phone Center have two primary functions. First, they
manage inbound informational calls, respond to requests for
application assistance (for Medi-Cal, Healthy Families, and
Healthy Kids applications), and distribute these requests
to the appropriate application assistance site. Second, they
provide application assistance for the patients of Valley
Health Center at Bascom on an appointment and walk-in basis.
The CHI phone center staff routinely asks callers to identify
where they have learned about CHI and then document it on
the referral form for purposes of understanding the most effective
means of reaching the community. Strikingly, 66% of all callers
in 2002 indicated that they had heard about CHI from others
who were informed about the initiative, making "word
of mouth" the most effective outreach strategy.
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Informing the Community
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While it is important to continuously educate site staff to
ensure appropriate utilization of CHI representatives, it is
also critical to inform community members on how they can access
a CAA at a location near them. A dedicated training and events
team was created to provide ongoing presentations and events
to reach community members and promote greater visibility of
the Children's Health Initiative.
CHI staff has made hundreds of presentations at churches,
schools, health collaboratives, community-based organizations,
county departments, and health providers. Staff has also participated
in informational events such as health fairs, PTA meetings,
Tet festivals (Vietnamese New Year), Cinco de Mayo festivals,
and Chinese Summer festivals, where they distribute language
appropriate CHI flyers. Many times an informational event
will result in a list of interested parents who want to sign
their kids up for health insurance. If this occurs, an application
event (or session) is scheduled within a short time frame
to capitalize on the families' enthusiasm to obtain insurance
coverage for their children. CHI staff will often call the
parents prior to the application event to set up an appointment
and/or make a reminder call about their appointment time.
The application event typically involves several CAAs who
set up confidential spaces at a local church, school, or community
center where they can work with the families. These events
usually occur in evenings and weekends when it is more convenient
for the parents.
Application events can also occur when community organizations
have identified a significant population of uninsured kids
within a particular geographic area. Sometimes radio spots,
local newspaper articles, and flyers are used to advertise
the date, time, and place of the event. These events can include
incentives to attend such as food, clowns, balloons, face
painting, and/or other CHI gifts (such as water bottles, lip
balm, bubble pens, and chip clips). Please see the Monthly
Events Calendar
for upcoming events.
Another outreach method commonly used to increase community
awareness of CHI or inform the community about a specific
event is door-to-door canvassing in local neighborhoods, passing
out flyers with the toll freeline and/or local event information.
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Developing a County Wide School Outreach
Plan
School Outreach has been the focus of the Children's Health
Initiative (CHI) of Santa Clara County since the fall of 2001,
providing access to appropriate CHI information and services
for every public school in the county. Partners involved in
the school outreach collaborative include Alum Rock Union
Elementary School District, Casa en Casa, Consumer's Union,
The Health Trust, Resources for Families and Communities,
Santa Clara Family Health Plan, Social Services Agency, Valley
CHI, and Westside CHI. The goal of the collaborative outreach
activities is to maximize resources, promote coordination,
utilize Best Practices, and to respond to individual school
and district requests for CHI information and services. It
was recognized that each school district in the county was
unique in population, resources, and need for services, thus
each district was given the opportunity to give input in creating
a tailored school outreach plan.
The interest of the school and district staff and the amount
of resources they are willing to invest in efforts to identify
and refer uninsured children directly affects the level of
success possible within each district. Once the district chose
specific schools identified by need and resources, the school
staff members were educated about CHI and a referral process
was established. School staff would identify potentially eligible
children through various tactics such as kids enrolled in
the Free and Reduced Lunch Program and/or children who had
significant numbers of sick days and/or absenteeism. Another
method used to identify potentially eligible kids was administering
surveys to parents through the schools that asked if they
currently had insurance for their children.
The referral process included school administration, teachers,
therapists, secretaries, attendance clerks, probation officers,
health clerks, and nurses. School staff joined the outreach
effort by incorporating CHI in their annual events: Teachers
handed out CHI flyers and information at parent-teacher conferences;
Migrant Programs, Healthy Start, and on-site preschools referred
and educated families they encountered, and administration
invited CHI staff to school events for informational purposes.
Certified Application Assistors (CAAs) work very hard to
raise the community awareness of CHI within the schools and
their surrounding neighborhoods. Some of the most effective
outreach methods used to increase this awareness included:
education by word of mouth; flyer distribution at local businesses
and community centers (such as Family Daycare Providers);
neighborhood canvassing; on-site application assistance; telephone
appointment reminders; school staff and parent presentations
(click here to view English;
Spanish;
and Vietnamese
PowerPoint Presentations); and attending information events
(such as Back to School Nights).
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Designing an Effective PR and Marketing
Plan
A PR and Marketing Committee was established by the CHI Policy
group to coordinate culturally relevant and consistent marketing
messages used to reach the diverse Santa Clara County population.
This coordinated strategy results in the consolidation and
maximization of valuable resources. Key members of this committee
include Santa Clara Family Health Plan, Santa Clara County
Health & Hospital System, Social Services Agency, The
Health Trust, Valley CHI, and CHI public relations and marketing
consultants. The CHI PR and Marketing Committee reports back
to the CHI Policy group on a regular basis.
Some of the strategies utilized in marketing the Children's
Health Initiative have included:
- Creating a CHI logo;
- Producing radio spots and PSAs (Public Service Announcement)
in English, Spanish, and Vietnamese;
- Developing print advertisements in English, Spanish, and
Vietnamese;
- Promoting Healthy Kids on Spanish and English television
stations;
- Developing tri-lingual ads on buses and bus shelters;
- Creating CHI flyers and other collateral in English, Spanish,
Vietnamese, Korean, and Chinese;
- Displaying tri-lingual CHI banners and posters at CAA
sites, events, schools, and CHI partner organizations;
- Designing a CHI website "CHIkids.org"; and
- Maintaining close collaboration with San Jose Mercury
News and local community newspapers on CHI milestones.
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