On this page: About the National Data | Methodology | History
About the National Data
Data
Baseline: 28.5 percent of local public health agencies incorporated Core Competencies for Public Health Professionals into developing training plans by 2016
Target: 33.1 percent
Methodology
Questions used to obtain the national baseline data
From the 2016 National Profile of Local Health Departments (LHD):
Numerator:
Does your LHD use core competencies for public health workers developed by the Council on Linkages (http://www.phf.org/link/corecompetencies.htm) in any of the following ways? (Select all that apply)- Writing position descriptions
- Conducting staff performance evaluations
- Assessing staff training needs
- Developing staff training plans
- Other use (Please specify)
- Have not used
Methodology notes
The Core Competencies for Public Health Professionals (Core Competencies) are a consensus set of skills for the broad practice of public health, as defined by the 10 Essential Public Health Services. Developed by the Council on Linkages Between Academia and Public Health Practice (Council on Linkages), the Core Competencies reflect foundational skills desirable for professionals engaging in the practice, education, and research of public health. These competencies are organized into eight domains, reflecting skill areas within public health, and three tiers, representing career stages for public health professionals.
History
1. Effect size h=0.1 was chosen to correspond with 10% improvement from a baseline of 50%.