Final Project 
Final Project: Epidemiological Profile Outline:  Report
Objective: Epidemiological Profile Outline: Report. 
For this assignment, you will create a Epidemiological Profile Outline: Report
The purpose of the document is to provide a set of guidelines to help profile writers produce integrated epidemiologic profiles and advise them concerning how to interpret epidemiologic data in ways that are consistent and useful in meeting the planning needs of both prevention and care programs. 
You are encouraged to choose a specific disease and use it as basis for this project.
The paper will be 8 pages long. More information and due date will provide in the assignments link. 
ASSIGNMENT GUIDELINES (2 points /10%):
Students will create an Epidemiological Profile Outline: Report for the Disease of your choosing.  The purpose of the document is to provide guidance to help writers create integrated epidemiologic profiles and advice on how to interpret the data in ways that are consistent and useful in meeting the planning needs of both prevention and care programs for specific diseases. Integrating prevention and care data should help to streamline the work of health department staff, Disease planning groups, and planning councils by reducing duplicated effort and by promoting consistency and comparability of data and terms in prevention as well as in care planning
You need to read the article (in the additional weekly reading resources localize in the Syllabus and also in the Lectures link) assigned for this week and develop a 8-10-page paper reflecting your understanding and ability to apply the readings to your Health Care Setting. Each paper must be typewritten with 12-point font and double-spaced with standard margins. Follow APA format when referring to the selected articles and include a reference page.
  
EACH PAPER SHOULD INCLUDE THE   FOLLOWING:
1. Introduction (5 points / 25%) Offer an abstract that provide a brief outlook of the protocol and explaining in your own words what is meant by Epidemiological Profile Outline: Report.
2. Your Epidemiological Profile Outline: Report.  (10 points 50%)
The following outline contains the basic content areas to include in an epidemiological profile:
a. Cover Page
Acknowledgements

List      members of your epidemiological workgroup, advisory council,      evidence-based program workgroup, and any other key stakeholders.

b. Table of Contents
c. Executive Summary

Provide      a brief overview of what the epidemiological profile is, why it is      important, and how it can be used.
Provide      a brief list of key findings from the profile.

d. Introduction

Describe      your community. Consider including demographic information such as      population size, age distribution, gender, and any socioeconomic      background information that may be available (educational attainment,      employment, etc.).
Include      important historical, cultural, and contextual information that might be      relevant to the data included in the profile.
Consider      describing your Strategic Prevention Framework      State Incentive Grant (SPF SIG) project. Describe      SAMHSA’s Strategic Prevention Framework (SPF) and how developing an      epidemiological profile is a component of SPF Step 1: Assess Needs.
Describe      your epidemiological workgroup. This can include the number of members,      agencies, organizations they represent; how often they meet; where they      meet; and any other information an interested person may want to know.

e. Data Selection Processes

Describe      how you collected or gathered the data included in the profile.
Discuss      how your workgroup decided which data sources to include in the profile      and which data sources to leave out.
Provide      a list of data sources, describing each source. Examples include a youth      tobacco survey, emergency room data from the local hospital,      alcohol-related motor vehicle crash data from local law enforcement, and      community perceptions collected during a focus group. For each data      source, include:

A       brief description of the data source
The       department, agency, or organization that provided the data
How       frequently the data are collected and the years that data are available       for
Any       limitations of the data, which might include a small survey response or       inadequate arrest reports

Provide      a list of indicators, such as “Past 30-day Alcohol Use Among Adults” or      “Number of Lung Cancer Deaths.”

f. Data Dimensions
Describe the criteria you need to prioritize substance misuse problems. These might include:

Size      or magnitude
Trends      over time
Relative      comparisons (for example, one community to another, one age group to      another)
Seriousness/severity
Economic      cost

g. Body of Report (Findings)
This may include narrative, tables, graphs, charts, and maps. It is also helpful to incorporate a combination of formats. For example, use narrative to summarize findings in a table. Make sure that tables and graphs are clearly labeled.

Alcohol

Consumption/use       indicators
Consequence       indicators
Risk       and protective factors

Tobacco

Consumption/use       indicators
Consequence       indicators
Risk       and protective factors

Drugs

Consumption/use       indicators
Consequence       indicators
Risk       and protective factors

h. Limitations and Data Gaps

Discuss      indicators for which you do not have data and consider including      strategies or plans for addressing those data gaps.
Discuss      limitations of the data you do have. For example, maybe you have data that      you cannot sort by gender or by age group.

e. Conclusion
j. Appendices, which might include:

Names      of State Epidemiological Outcomes Workgroup members
Data      collection instruments used
Large,      detailed tables
Glossary      of terms
Mortality      or hospitalization data: ICD-9/ICD-10 codes (if the tribe uses these data      sources)

ASSIGNMENT DUE DATE:
The assignment is to be electronically posted no later than noon on Saturday, February 22, 2020.