• <samp id="ossg8"></samp>
    <tbody id="ossg8"><nobr id="ossg8"></nobr></tbody>
    <menuitem id="ossg8"><strong id="ossg8"></strong></menuitem>
  • <samp id="ossg8"></samp>
    <menuitem id="ossg8"><strong id="ossg8"></strong></menuitem>
  • <menuitem id="ossg8"><ins id="ossg8"></ins></menuitem>

  • <tbody id="ossg8"><nobr id="ossg8"></nobr></tbody>
    <menuitem id="ossg8"></menuitem>
        Skip Navigation Links
        Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
         CDC Home Search Health Topics A-Z

        Preventing Chronic Disease: Public Health Research, Practice and Policy

        View Current Issue
        Issue Archive
        Archivo de n鷐eros en espa駉l








        Emerging Infectious Diseases Journal
        MMWR


         Home 

        Volume 5: No. 1, January 2008

        COMMUNITY CASE STUDY
        Expanding the Delivery of Clinical Preventive Services Through Community Collaboration: The SPARC Model

        In the current model, clinical preventive services are delivered mainly to community residents who are "patients" and visit a primary care physician.

        Figure 1. Current Model for Delivery of Preventive Services.

        Return to article

         

        In the SPARC model, there is community-wide access to routine clinical preventive services. In addition to measures delivered in the clinical setting, residents receive routine vaccinations, screenings, and screening referrals from multiple locations in the community. SPARC helps organize and coordinate these activities, gathers and distributes outcomes data, and develops new outreach programs in collaboration with local medical, public health, and social service agencies.

        Figure 2: SPARC Model for Delivery of Preventive Services

        Return to article

         


        Total Men Women
        Previously Vaccinated 66.6 61.5 70.5
        At Vote & Vax Clinic 7 8.5 6

        Figure 4. Receipt of Pneumococcal Vaccination Among Adults Age >65 at Fayette County, GA, Vote & Vax Clinics, November 2006

        Return to article

         




         



        The opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors’ affiliated institutions. Use of trade names is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by any of the groups named above.


         Home 

        Privacy Policy | Accessibility

        CDC Home | Search | Health Topics A-Z

        This page last reviewed October 25, 2011

        Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
        National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
         HHS logoUnited States Department of
        Health and Human Services



         
        国产精品久久久久久一级毛片