Project Type: Rural Health Policy
Vision: Resilient, thriving, and just communities throughout Western North Carolina with equal opportunity to access health and wellbeing.
Mission: The Western North Carolina Health Policy Research Consortium leverages research and evaluation resources, nurtures capacity and innovation, and finds creative solutions with community partners to inform policies that improve health outcomes for the people in WNC.
Values:
Collaboration – listening with humility, curiosity, and respect as we foster relationships and build partnerships to advance this work
Community-Driven – including and amplifying community voice and recognizing that community members are experts of their own lived experience
Justice – intentionally working towards ensuring power and systems that work for everyone
Open Communication and Transparency – sharing of data, findings, and challenges openly and honestly\
Project Type: Community Resilience and Emergency Preparedness
The mission of the Appalachian Medical Reserve Corps (APP MRC) is to recruit and train volunteers in order to better support rural public health operations and bolster community resilience and preparedness.
Learn more here.
Project Type: Community Resilience and Emergency Preparedness
Public Health AmeriCorps is a pipeline initiative designed to connect public health students and career-changing professionals with meaningful opportunities in public health service. This program integrates service, community engagement, practice, and research to address critical public health challenges while preparing participants for impactful careers in the field. Public Health AmeriCorps emphasizes experiential learning, fostering a commitment to community service and health equity. Members engage in projects that strengthen public health infrastructure, promote health education, and address pressing issues in the communities they serve. This initiative not only supports individual professional growth but also contributes to building a stronger, more resilient public health workforce.
The program is supported by five dedicated faculty members and a Graduate Student Program Manager, ensuring robust mentorship and guidance. It includes 30 AmeriCorps members, representing a diverse group of individuals such as:
Undergraduate students completing internship requirements for their bachelor's degrees
Recent graduates beginning their careers in public health
Professionals in the field seeking hands-on experience and exploring a career transition
Learn more here.
Project Type: Community Resilience and Emergency Preparedness
The Aging Well High Country Older Adult Mental Health Initiative, aims to significantly enhance the mental and behavioral health of older adults in Western North Carolina. This region faces profound challenges, including high poverty rates, geographic isolation, limited access to healthcare services, and cultural barriers that hinder older adults from seeking and receiving mental health support. This initiative represents a collaborative effort among key organizations, including the High Country Area Agency on Aging, Senior Centers in each county, Parent to Parent Family Support Network, Public Health AmeriCorps, and the Appalachian Medical Reserve Corps. Together, these partners will implement a sustainable population approach to mental health for older adults through mental health and psychological first aid interventions, ensuring that services are accessible, culturally sensitive, and tailored to the unique needs of this population.
Learn more here.
Project Type: Community Resilience and Emergency Preparedness
Innovative Approaches 2.0 has two primary focuses: Transition of care and emergency preparedness for Children and Youth with Special Healthcare Needs (CYSHCN) .
Transition of Care: Innovative Approaches 2.0 will emphasize the importance of sufficient preparation for CYSHCN to receive appropriate health care as they transition into adulthood. This will rely on macro communication with healthcare providers throughout NC, training on specific models (C-MIST for health care plans.
Emergency Preparedness: GIS mapping, distribution site, and CBPAR to assess the needs of CYSHCN.
Project Type: Community Resilience and Emergency Preparedness
Establish the "Appalachian Groundwater and Public Health" (AGPH) research cluster
Statistical analysis of well water usage, health, and changes in this relationship after extreme precipitation events
Geospatial analysis identifying most vulnerable communities
Establish partnerships with stakeholders
Hold semi-annual meetings with stakeholders
A comprehensive database of current well-testing programs
Project Type: Innovative Research and Policy Scholarship
Every population is unique. Each group has their own strengths, challenges, supports, and needs. R-PHI conducts research to understand the best practices, appropriate frameworks, and effective systems to use and part of their responsibility is to enter spaces throughout Western North Carolina with cultural humility. This allows R-PHI to make interventions suitable to the unique attributes of the population and wholistically address specific needs with consideration of the rural southern Appalachian culture.
Project Type: Innovative Research and Policy Scholarship
A-PHI is based on principles of competency in the field and integrity in their actions. The Preparedness Quality Improvement is a tool and perspective such as using After Action Reviews to allow the team to evaluate their systems, processes, programs, and initiatives. The Preparedness Quality Improvement encourages critical reflection based in objectivity.
Preparedness Quality Improvement uses the 15 capabilities established by the CDC to use as the standards for public health preparedness planning. It is a process of challenging the effectiveness of processes, programs and initiatives in place or being planned under A-PHI to encourage critical improvements and ensure the quality and effectiveness of the programs.
You can learn more about the 15 capabilities here.
Project Type: Innovative Research and Policy Scholarship
A-PHI aims to make healthcare accessible to all in Western North Carolina. Health communication is critical in these efforts.
Machine Modeling - Communication Mapping for Public Health Emergencies
Machine modeling focuses on communication mapping for public health emergencies. This research equips organizations with the the appropriate lines of communication to help those in the area when public health emergencies arise.
Health Literacy and Behaviors amongst Health Professionals
A-PHI stresses the importance of health care workers and others in this field are competent, ethical in their actions, and are able to effectively communicate to those they are serving . Literature reviews and case studies on rural health and emergencies are utilized in this endeavor and a systematic literature review was conducted and entitled Health Information Seeking and Sharing Behaviors of Health Professionals to Inform Future Expansion of Training on Effective Health Communication.
Project Type: Innovative Research and Policy Scholarship
A team at App State has assessed the accessibility of health care, particularly obstetric care, among individuals living in Western North Carolina. Obstetric/Maternal care deserts are defined as counties with no OB/GYN, certified nurse midwife providers, or hospital offering obstetric care. Research was conducted in which the team investigated the severity of the lack of access to maternal care in select counties. The research has begun to map out these deserts in Western North Carolina to present the needs, the impacts, and possible ways to address the deserts.
The Emergency Preparedness and Response certificate is offered at the undergraduate and graduate levels at App State with the intent to train learners in the specialized area of public health emergency preparedness and response. This certificate would position learners to be hirable in local health agencies as preparedness leaders. This certificate will also procure a pre-trained body of student professionals to assist the university and community in responding to public health emergencies and serve on committees focused on preparedness and response.
Gillings on the Ground (GoG) is a free, two-semester training program led by the Gillings School of Global Public Health at UNC Chapel Hill. Twenty two students are currently enrolled through App State in GoG to learn more about disaster response and emergency management.