Editorial Policy
Healthy Northeast Ohio is an online resource through which community members and policy makers can learn about community health and well-being. It provides balanced information on topics including local health, promising best practices, news, and community events.
These editorial guidelines describe the site’s governing body, how content is selected and managed, and major features of the site.
The program staff at Cuyahoga County Board of Health with program management partners (as applicable) sets website policies and makes decisions about the content of the website.
No advertising is permitted on this website and none of its content represents a political endorsement by the staff at Cuyahoga County Board of Health nor or any of its sponsors.
The Conduent Healthy Communities Institute (HCI) indicator system provides easy access to information on community health and well-being in in eight topic areas. The primary aims of the indicator system are to inform and facilitate positive change in our community by supporting priority-setting, decision-making, and coordination. Core indicator data found on this site are collected and reported by state and federal sources. The Conduent Healthy Communities Institute, which provides the core site content, updates indicators soon after they are updated by their respective data sources. The frequency and timing of the updates varies with the source.
-
Validated methodology for data collection and analysis
-
Publicly available through known and respected sources
-
Regular, scheduled publication of findings
-
Focus on data values for small geographic areas, such as counties and zip codes that are available for all county-level locations in the state or in the U.S
Each indicator page includes a definition of the indicator, a summary of the data value, and a link to the data source. The value for each indicator is shown along with comparisons that provide context for the information. The comparisons show how each value compares to those in other geographic areas (the distinct green-yellow-red gauge), how the value compares to a prior period (green or red up and down arrows), and how we compare to a national or state average (blue/white or green-red gradation gauge). In addition, the website provides comparisons to Healthy People 2030 objectives, when available.
The purpose of the Promising Practices database is to inform professionals and community members about documented approaches to improving community health and quality of life. The ultimate goal is to support the systematic adoption, implementation, and evaluation of successful programs, practices, and policy changes. This database contains more than 2,000 promising practices, programs, and interventions and is a national resource created and maintained by the Healthy Communities Institute. The sources include health departments, federal agencies, universities, and community organizations (not individuals without an organizational affiliation). HCI ranks the practices as either “evidence-based,” “effective,” or “good ideas.” Read more about the ranking methodology.
Local communities have the opportunity to submit their own promising practices. The interventions suggested for inclusion must be community-focused and related to local community health and well-being and must meet the HCI standards noted above (evidence-based, effective, or a good idea). Read more about guidelines for submitting a promising practice.
Healthy Communities Institute provides a list of national funding opportunities to help you identify funding sources to improve the health and well-being of your community. Funding opportunities are organized topically and include both government and foundation funding opportunities. Funding opportunities are added to the list on a regular basis and automatically removed when they expire.
News, Feature Articles and Other Homepage Content
Content on the homepage includes feature articles; important health news in our area, the state, and the nation; and featured content designed to deepen understanding of community health issues and activities. The stories posted on the homepage are maintained by the site administrator at the Cuyahoga County Board of Health.