NH75OT000009
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
Fulton County BOH National Initiative to Address COVID-19 Health Disparities Among Populations at High-Risk & Underserved, Including Racial & Ethnic Minority Populations and Rural Communities - Project Abstract
The Fulton County Board of Health (FCBOH) will address COVID-19 related health disparities and advance health equity in underserved and disproportionately affected populations. The goal is to expand mitigation and prevention resources and services to reduce COVID-19 related disparities, build, leverage, and expand infrastructure support for COVID-19 prevention and control, and mobilize partners and collaborators to advance health equity and address social determinants of health.
With the partnership of Community Organization Relief Effort (CORE), CHRIS 180, the Latino Community Fund, and the Center for Black Women's Wellness, FCBOH plans to deliver services to Black or African American, Hispanic, Latino, or Latinx people living in Fulton County, GA. Activities include deploying community health workers to underserved communities and neighborhoods to expand testing through home testing and self-administered home test kits, enhancing contact tracing and case investigation efforts, providing resource coordination and quarantine/isolation support, and offering in-home and community-based vaccinations.
FCBOH and CORE plan to conduct up to 7,000 case investigations, perform up to 17,000 rapid antigen tests at the household, conduct up to 17,000 PCR tests, distribute up to 85,000 home-test kits, and provide resource coordination services to up to 3,400 individuals.
Block captains will be hired through partner community-based organizations and reflect the communities they will serve. Community health workers and block captains will intervene in minority and underserved neighborhoods and communities to connect and build rapport with residents, mitigate distrust issues surrounding the medical community, dispel misinformation, provide education, information, linkages to services, provide person-to-person assurance of vaccine efficacy and availability, help citizens navigate the healthcare system, provide surveillance of attitudes and uptake, empower individuals to recognize signs and symptoms of physical health needs, provide information and linkages related to COVID-19 testing, contact tracing, mitigation measures, and vaccination.
With the partnership of Georgia State University (GSU), the program will improve outcomes for disproportionately affected populations through epidemiology, surveillance, and data analysis and build community capacity to improve outcomes through continuous data collection and program evaluation. GSU will assess heterogeneous risk and compile a geospatial assessment of risk and use it for targeting interventions to ameliorate vaccine hesitancy and increase vaccine uptake, testing, and contact tracing. GSU will establish and maintain a data system for retention of information on home testing, contact tracing, mobile and mass vaccination, visitations by providers and community health workers, and contacts with key persons. Finally, GSU will implement health literacy and health education programs so citizens can effectively interpret information and act on health issues. GSU will develop a health literacy training curriculum to increase the use of evidence-based practices to address COVID-19 health literacy on AskMe3 and How to Talk to Your Doctor Handbook (for residents) and Teach Back (for providers) and train Fulton County staff using a train-the-trainer model.
The intended outcomes for the proposed program include:
1) Reduced COVID-19-related health disparities
2) Improved and increased testing and contact tracing among populations at higher risk and that are underserved (Black or African American, Hispanic, Latino, or Latinx individuals)
3) Improved capacity and services to prevent and control COVID-19 infection (or transmission) among populations at
The Fulton County Board of Health (FCBOH) will address COVID-19 related health disparities and advance health equity in underserved and disproportionately affected populations. The goal is to expand mitigation and prevention resources and services to reduce COVID-19 related disparities, build, leverage, and expand infrastructure support for COVID-19 prevention and control, and mobilize partners and collaborators to advance health equity and address social determinants of health.
With the partnership of Community Organization Relief Effort (CORE), CHRIS 180, the Latino Community Fund, and the Center for Black Women's Wellness, FCBOH plans to deliver services to Black or African American, Hispanic, Latino, or Latinx people living in Fulton County, GA. Activities include deploying community health workers to underserved communities and neighborhoods to expand testing through home testing and self-administered home test kits, enhancing contact tracing and case investigation efforts, providing resource coordination and quarantine/isolation support, and offering in-home and community-based vaccinations.
FCBOH and CORE plan to conduct up to 7,000 case investigations, perform up to 17,000 rapid antigen tests at the household, conduct up to 17,000 PCR tests, distribute up to 85,000 home-test kits, and provide resource coordination services to up to 3,400 individuals.
Block captains will be hired through partner community-based organizations and reflect the communities they will serve. Community health workers and block captains will intervene in minority and underserved neighborhoods and communities to connect and build rapport with residents, mitigate distrust issues surrounding the medical community, dispel misinformation, provide education, information, linkages to services, provide person-to-person assurance of vaccine efficacy and availability, help citizens navigate the healthcare system, provide surveillance of attitudes and uptake, empower individuals to recognize signs and symptoms of physical health needs, provide information and linkages related to COVID-19 testing, contact tracing, mitigation measures, and vaccination.
With the partnership of Georgia State University (GSU), the program will improve outcomes for disproportionately affected populations through epidemiology, surveillance, and data analysis and build community capacity to improve outcomes through continuous data collection and program evaluation. GSU will assess heterogeneous risk and compile a geospatial assessment of risk and use it for targeting interventions to ameliorate vaccine hesitancy and increase vaccine uptake, testing, and contact tracing. GSU will establish and maintain a data system for retention of information on home testing, contact tracing, mobile and mass vaccination, visitations by providers and community health workers, and contacts with key persons. Finally, GSU will implement health literacy and health education programs so citizens can effectively interpret information and act on health issues. GSU will develop a health literacy training curriculum to increase the use of evidence-based practices to address COVID-19 health literacy on AskMe3 and How to Talk to Your Doctor Handbook (for residents) and Teach Back (for providers) and train Fulton County staff using a train-the-trainer model.
The intended outcomes for the proposed program include:
1) Reduced COVID-19-related health disparities
2) Improved and increased testing and contact tracing among populations at higher risk and that are underserved (Black or African American, Hispanic, Latino, or Latinx individuals)
3) Improved capacity and services to prevent and control COVID-19 infection (or transmission) among populations at
Awardee
Funding Goals
NOT APPLICABLE
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding Agency
Place of Performance
Fulton,
Georgia
United States
Geographic Scope
County-Wide
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the End Date has been extended from 05/31/23 to 07/31/23 and the total obligations have decreased from $5,307,785 to $5,296,641.
Fulton County Board Of Health was awarded
COVID-19 Health Equity Initiative Underserved Populations in Fulton County
Project Grant NH75OT000009
worth $5,296,641
from Center for State, Tribal, Local, and Territorial Support in June 2021 with work to be completed primarily in Georgia United States.
The grant
has a duration of 2 years 1 months and
was awarded through assistance program 93.354 Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity National Initiative to Address COVID-19 Health Disparities Among Populations at High-Risk and Underserved, Including Racial and Ethnic Minority Populations and Rural Communities.
Status
(Complete)
Last Modified 12/16/24
Period of Performance
6/1/21
Start Date
7/31/23
End Date
Funding Split
$5.3M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$5.3M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Transaction History
Modifications to NH75OT000009
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
NH75OT000009
SAI Number
NH75OT000009-1439846738
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
County Government
Awarding Office
75CDC1 CDC OFFICE OF FINANCIAL RESOURCES
Funding Office
75CQ00 CDC OFFICE FOR STATE, TRIBAL, LOCAL, AND TERRITORIAL SUPPORT
Awardee UEI
LCTKJNKK48B3
Awardee CAGE
7WZK4
Performance District
GA-90
Senators
Jon Ossoff
Raphael Warnock
Raphael Warnock
Modified: 12/16/24