Individual and organizational factors associated with public health workforce competencies to advance health equity.

Little is known about how to develop public health workforce capacity for health equity work. We explored associations of individual and organizational characteristics of local public health departments (LHDs) with competencies essential for advancing health equity. Data included responses of 29,751...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Paula M Kett, Shahida Shahrir, Betty Bekemeier, Kay Schaffer, Danielle J Zemmel, Davis G Patterson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
Series:PLOS Global Public Health
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0004068
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850073864929804288
author Paula M Kett
Shahida Shahrir
Betty Bekemeier
Kay Schaffer
Danielle J Zemmel
Davis G Patterson
author_facet Paula M Kett
Shahida Shahrir
Betty Bekemeier
Kay Schaffer
Danielle J Zemmel
Davis G Patterson
author_sort Paula M Kett
collection DOAJ
description Little is known about how to develop public health workforce capacity for health equity work. We explored associations of individual and organizational characteristics of local public health departments (LHDs) with competencies essential for advancing health equity. Data included responses of 29,751 staff from 742 LHDs in 48 states to the 2021 Public Health Workforce Interests and Needs Survey, plus LHD characteristics and county demographics. Logistic regression assessed associations between key factors and staff-reported "knowledge of" and "confidence in addressing" structural racism, health equity, social determinants of equity (SDoE), social determinants of health (SDOH), and environmental justice, as well as belief and involvement in addressing racism through one's work. Staff with a master's degree or higher compared to others had greater odds of reporting confidence in addressing structural racism (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 1.23) and health equity (AOR = 1.56), agreeing that addressing racism should be a part of their work (AOR = 2.45) and being involved in such efforts (AOR = 1.57). Staff identifying as Black, compared to white, had greater odds of reporting confidence in addressing all concepts: structural racism (AOR = 1.98), health equity (AOR = 1.34), SDoE (AOR = 1.53), SDOH (AOR = 1.21), and environmental justice (AOR = 1.72) and agreeing that addressing racism should be a part of their work (AOR = 2.11). Patterns were similar among staff identifying as Hispanic/Latino and other persons of color. Black (AOR = 0.68) and Hispanic/Latino (AOR = 0.83) staff had lower odds, however, of reporting engagement in activities to address racism. Finally, competencies positively associated with nearly all outcomes included cross-sector collaboration, ability to incorporate health equity into programming, and policy advocacy. LHD workforce development should include training that involves explicitly naming structural racism's effects and complementary skills, such as policy development and cross-sector partnership building. Further exploration is needed into how best to grow commitment among white staff and to support staff of color in health equity work.
format Article
id doaj-art-5804bbda897f450d8e52227cb9d913df
institution DOAJ
issn 2767-3375
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLOS Global Public Health
spelling doaj-art-5804bbda897f450d8e52227cb9d913df2025-08-20T02:46:43ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLOS Global Public Health2767-33752025-01-0151e000406810.1371/journal.pgph.0004068Individual and organizational factors associated with public health workforce competencies to advance health equity.Paula M KettShahida ShahrirBetty BekemeierKay SchafferDanielle J ZemmelDavis G PattersonLittle is known about how to develop public health workforce capacity for health equity work. We explored associations of individual and organizational characteristics of local public health departments (LHDs) with competencies essential for advancing health equity. Data included responses of 29,751 staff from 742 LHDs in 48 states to the 2021 Public Health Workforce Interests and Needs Survey, plus LHD characteristics and county demographics. Logistic regression assessed associations between key factors and staff-reported "knowledge of" and "confidence in addressing" structural racism, health equity, social determinants of equity (SDoE), social determinants of health (SDOH), and environmental justice, as well as belief and involvement in addressing racism through one's work. Staff with a master's degree or higher compared to others had greater odds of reporting confidence in addressing structural racism (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 1.23) and health equity (AOR = 1.56), agreeing that addressing racism should be a part of their work (AOR = 2.45) and being involved in such efforts (AOR = 1.57). Staff identifying as Black, compared to white, had greater odds of reporting confidence in addressing all concepts: structural racism (AOR = 1.98), health equity (AOR = 1.34), SDoE (AOR = 1.53), SDOH (AOR = 1.21), and environmental justice (AOR = 1.72) and agreeing that addressing racism should be a part of their work (AOR = 2.11). Patterns were similar among staff identifying as Hispanic/Latino and other persons of color. Black (AOR = 0.68) and Hispanic/Latino (AOR = 0.83) staff had lower odds, however, of reporting engagement in activities to address racism. Finally, competencies positively associated with nearly all outcomes included cross-sector collaboration, ability to incorporate health equity into programming, and policy advocacy. LHD workforce development should include training that involves explicitly naming structural racism's effects and complementary skills, such as policy development and cross-sector partnership building. Further exploration is needed into how best to grow commitment among white staff and to support staff of color in health equity work.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0004068
spellingShingle Paula M Kett
Shahida Shahrir
Betty Bekemeier
Kay Schaffer
Danielle J Zemmel
Davis G Patterson
Individual and organizational factors associated with public health workforce competencies to advance health equity.
PLOS Global Public Health
title Individual and organizational factors associated with public health workforce competencies to advance health equity.
title_full Individual and organizational factors associated with public health workforce competencies to advance health equity.
title_fullStr Individual and organizational factors associated with public health workforce competencies to advance health equity.
title_full_unstemmed Individual and organizational factors associated with public health workforce competencies to advance health equity.
title_short Individual and organizational factors associated with public health workforce competencies to advance health equity.
title_sort individual and organizational factors associated with public health workforce competencies to advance health equity
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0004068
work_keys_str_mv AT paulamkett individualandorganizationalfactorsassociatedwithpublichealthworkforcecompetenciestoadvancehealthequity
AT shahidashahrir individualandorganizationalfactorsassociatedwithpublichealthworkforcecompetenciestoadvancehealthequity
AT bettybekemeier individualandorganizationalfactorsassociatedwithpublichealthworkforcecompetenciestoadvancehealthequity
AT kayschaffer individualandorganizationalfactorsassociatedwithpublichealthworkforcecompetenciestoadvancehealthequity
AT daniellejzemmel individualandorganizationalfactorsassociatedwithpublichealthworkforcecompetenciestoadvancehealthequity
AT davisgpatterson individualandorganizationalfactorsassociatedwithpublichealthworkforcecompetenciestoadvancehealthequity