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2007
Connecticut
Association of Public Health Nurses (CAPHN)
Annual Meeting
President’s Message – CAPHN In Action
Please allow me to express my gratitude for the honor and privilege of
serving for the past year as the Connecticut Association of Public Health Nurses
(CAPHN) President. I take the challenge of serving in this capacity very
seriously and pledge to continue the work of the Association during the second
half of my term. As President,
I am most fortunate to be supported by talented board members. These individuals
are dedicated to CAPHN as well as public health nursing in general. Together, we
are working hard to strengthen the association and advance the profession. I
hope you will agree that we have made significant progress in a few short years!
As we move forward, it seems important to first look back at our origins. At
various times over the past decades, public health nurses in
Connecticut
got together to share best practices and to network. Challenges that public health nurses
faced, including the restructuring of roles and activities, were also discussed.
During these meetings, it became increasingly apparent that a statewide
association for public health nurses would help address current trends and
provide a unified voice for the profession. In the late 1990s’s, a small group
of nurses from local and state public health agencies as well as academia met to
discuss how best to proceed.
Officially established in 2002, the organizational mission of CAPHN is to
strengthen the leadership role of the public health nurse in
Connecticut
. In order to fulfill this mission,
strategic planning sessions have been held to generate activities in keeping
with our guiding principles. At the most recent strategic planning session in
December 2006, the Board identified the following goals:
1) strengthen the Association; 2) build professional capacity; 3) support
activities that improve the competency of the public health workforce; 4) foster
partnerships at the local, state and regional levels; and 5) advocate for
important and necessary public health issues.
Over the past few months, the Board has developed action items in each of
these areas.
The CAPHN by-laws and mission statement are reviewed on a regular basis and
updated as needed. The fiduciary
status of the Association is becoming stable.
A comprehensive financial report was generated this past year to
determine the current income and expenses of the Association and to make
projections for the future. We are now discussing how best to seek funding
opportunities to support programmatic and community partnership efforts.
Membership has grown to include nurses from across the state. The CAPHN Brochure was updated and
additional marketing materials were developed.
New members have been recruited as a result of these and other
promotional activities. In addition to the CAPHN specific documents, the
Association created a display board about the Intervention Wheel, a
population-based model introduced in 1998 by the Minnesota Department of Health,
Public Health Nursing Section. Articles describing the model have also been
disseminated to interested groups.
CAPHN had an exhibit table at the 2006 Annual Flu Update, the 2006
Connecticut Public Health Association Annual Meeting, a Parish Nurse conference
and the first and second Annual Influenza Roundtables. It is important to note
that CAPHN initiated the first Influenza Roundtable that highlighted the issues
and best practices of the 2005 influenza vaccine delivery process. Due to the success of the first event,
the Roundtable was held again this year in April 2007.
We are strengthening relationships and forming new linkages with other
professional associations, advocacy groups, schools of nursing and public
health, and local and state health departments/districts. The current CAPHN Board is comprised of
members from all these sectors. CAPHN
has taken an active role in assuring the involvement of public health nurses in
a number of collaborations in the state. Members
of the Board currently serve on the Connecticut Influenza and Pneumococcal
Coalition, the Connecticut Partnership for Workforce Development, the
Connecticut Public Health Association, the Coalition for a Safe and Healthy
Connecticut, the Quarantine and Isolation Planning Committee, the Connecticut
Public Health Preparedness Advisory Committee and the Connecticut Health Care
Workforce Coalition. CAPHN also
participated in the first “Distinguish Public Health Nurses Forum” sponsored
by the Local Health Administration of the CT Department of Public Health (
DPH
). This past year, the
Association also wrote letters of support for grant applications and provided
feedback on an epidemiological investigation form developed by the CT
DPH
.
The CAPHN Education Committee has been extremely active this year. They coordinated quarterly networking
meetings and educational forums as well as the 2006 and 2007 Annual Meetings.
The October 2006 quarterly meeting session featuring a speaker who discussed her
three-month volunteer trip to Africa with the CDC Stop Polio Program was
especially well received.
To learn more about public health nursing services in Connecticut, CAPHN
adapted a survey developed by the Massachusetts Association of Public Health
Nurses to articulate workforce responsibilities and issues. This data is being
analyzed and will be used to inform policy makers, administrators, and local and
state agency staff about public health nursing services.
Strategic priorities of the CAPHN Board for the upcoming year include: 1)
designing additional recruitment strategies to attract new members and keep them
engaged in the association;
2) continuing to improve public health nursing practice through education
and professional development activities; 3) exploring academic initiatives that
support students and new professionals; 4) improving organizational
effectiveness and financial stability; and 5) expanding our impact through
partnerships at the local, state and regional level.
This is a very exciting and challenging time for public health nurses in our
state and beyond. The needs are
great and the resources are scarce. As
the nursing shortage continues to grow nationally and in Connecticut, it is
essential that we strengthen our public health nursing leadership structures for
effective collaboration and problem solving.
Each of us can play a key role by becoming active in CAPHN so we can
continue to provide relevant services, devise innovative approaches, and impact
public health policy. Our success, our future – and the quality and health of
our communities – depends on continuing the progress that has been made by our
professional colleagues.
Respectfully submitted,
Lynn S. Abrahamson
,
MPH
, RN / May 3, 2007
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