GovLoop

Proximity-to-Care: Mapping to Maintain Health and Well-being

Geographic information system (GIS) is back – and we’re not just talking about maps this time. We’re talking about a tool that creates a new vision of health improvements – a data-driven way to visualize and understand the large volumes of data and the allocation of resources needed for healthy communities.

So yes, maybe we’re still talking about maps, but only because now more than ever it’s important to leverage the power of place.

In Thursday’s online training, “Building Healthy Communities,” experts shared best practices from health and human professionals who are utilizing GIS technology to bring their data to life, open up the process, and discover real insights into what’s going on in the geographies they serve.

Speakers included:

Here are the who, what, where, why and how, to help you learn how GIS can help your community determine priority target-intervention areas, and make where you work, live and play a healthier location:

Who: Health and human services professionals

Though health and human services are at the center of this movement, they can’t do this alone. “They need to collaborate with a variety of programs and departments in government and all of these supports can be connected via a location platform,” stated Baltazar prior to diving into the full advantages of GIS.

What: GIS

Baltazar describes GIS “like any other system you’re accustomed to, the only difference is the inclusion of geographic data.” Here are some benefits of GIS and how it matters to all organizations, including health and human services:

Where: The full suite of ArcGIS

Shoultz discussed how to enable the full suite of ArcGIS capabilities (pictured below). The three assets includes:

Why & How: the different problems that ArcGIS platform solves, and the different ways to map your data 

Solution: Shoultz discusses the benefits of Esri Map for Office, which can map information directly out of excel, share it out, and overlay it to get a better idea of what patterns exist in data – tabular data transformed into spatial data.

As Baltazar put it, “Becoming a healthy community is all about leveraging technology, including GIS to its full advantage.” To learn more about the modern platform, and see a full demonstration, be sure to view the on-demand training here.

A second recap will feature the case studies from this online training – be sure to look for it on the trainings page next week.

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