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It's a New Day in Public Health.

The Florida Department of Health works to protect, promote, and improve the health of all people in Florida through integrated state, county, and community efforts.

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Health Improvement Priorities

Contact Us

  •  941-624-7200
  •  

    Mailing Location

    1100 Loveland Boulevard 

    Port Charlotte, FL 33980

Every five years, Charlotte County community partners facilitate a Community Health and Needs Assessment (CHNA) to identify health disparities and barriers. In 2020, the CHNA identified the following top 5 health priority areas in Charlotte County: Child Abuse, Neglect, and Well-Being; Behavioral, Social, and Emotional Health and Trauma; Healthcare; Environment; Aging. From this assessment and the resulting data, Charlotte County created a Community Health Improvement Plan (CHIP) to address and reduce these health disparities throughout the community. The CHIP is used by health and other government, educational, and human service agencies, in collaboration with community partners, to set priorities, coordinate action plans, and target resources. Charlotte County’s 2021 CHIP utilizes community-wide efforts to address three priority health areas: Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs), Mental Wellbeing and Substance Abuse, and Household Stability. Charlotte County community group, Healthy Charlotte, acknowledges that collaborative initiatives to address the social determinants of health (SDOHs), like the CHIP, are the most effective way of reducing health disparities and striving towards health equity.

Priority 1 Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs): ACEs are the traumatic events of childhood abuse and household dysfunction that a person experiences before 18 years old. ACEs vary in scope and impact, however, their effect on the human body during its most important stages of development is consistent and now clear. Unaddressed trauma and toxic stress lead to developmental delays for children, disability, chronic illness, early death, and astronomical economic loss to communities. Therefore, the importance of a community-wide effort to challenge one of the most under recognized public health crises of our lifetime cannot be overstated. Charlotte County works to reduce ACEs through education, outreach, practicing of trauma informed care, mentorship programs, and many other efforts.

Priority 2 Mental Wellbeing & Substance Abuse: Behavioral health affects physical and overall health and includes mental health, substance abuse, and suicide risk. Behavioral health issues are symptoms of real, physical conditions occurring in the brain and can be addressed through mental health programs, suicide prevention, and substance abuse interventions. Behavioral health plays a vital role in our well-being. With access to resources like mental health providers, residents can address their emotional, psychological, and social well-being. Improving mental health and decreasing substance use has positive effects for both the individual and the community. In Charlotte County, residents continuously face the challenges of limited providers, lack of transportation, and lack of other resources to address their mental health and substance concerns. The community is working to reduce these disparities to improve mental wellbeing and substance abuse across the county.

Priority 3 Household Stability: The household should represent a place of safety, stability, and shelter and not a place of stress, strain, or insecurity. When residents struggle to afford a place to live, that financial strain makes it harder to make other healthy choices, like eating a healthy diet or seeing a doctor when you're sick. Moreover, disruptive events, like suddenly losing your home or domestic issues, can become the trigger for a snowball of negative impacts on health, such as losing a job or health insurance, dropping out of school, or triggering mental health challenges. Housing and household stability is an enormous issues that has been exacerbated by COVID-19 and Hurricane Ian. The county is continuously working to reduce the health barriers and disparities that perpetuate and unstable household.