Breaking down data sharing barriers in Minnesota

The Minnesota Electronic Health Record Consortium is a partnership between Minnesota health systems and public health agencies to study the epidemiology of diseases affecting Minnesotans, including health equity indicators related to COVID-19, substance use disorders, and other chronic conditions such as cardiovascular disease and hypertension. The Consortium utilizes this comprehensive data to inform health policy and enact changes that meet the needs of the community.
Related examples

See the latest resources from the Coalition and partners

Integrating public health and Medicaid managed care through population health management in California

California's Population Health Management program offers a well-developed model for integrating Medicaid managed care with state and local public health entities to support community-based prevention efforts, and align with broader population health goals.

Read more

Fountain House’s model for supporting those living with serious mental illness

Serious mental illness (SMI) has moved to the top of the agenda for healthcare leaders, policymakers, and public health officials alike. SMI affects approximately 1 in 20 adults in the U.S. annually, and there is renewed urgency and interest in identifying and scaling solutions that work to help address the needs of people with SMI. For over 75 years, Fountain House has been a leader in treating those with serious mental illness. The organization pioneered the clubhouse model of psychosocial rehabilitation long before it became policy consensus, building the evidence base, developing a global network, and is now positioned as one of the most credible and scalable answers to meeting the complex health and social needs for those with SMI. Through its community-based approach – centered on membership, connection, and meaningful participation – it has established a globally recognized model for recovery and continues to advance frameworks that guide more effective, person-centered systems of care. At a time when leaders are searching for approaches that both transform lives and control costs, Fountain House offers a model. For example, the Fountain House Measures That Matter framework reflects a shift away from traditional clinical and utilization metrics toward outcomes that people with lived experience identify as most meaningful to recovery. These include quality of life, social connection, trust, and progress toward personal goals – domains that better capture the realities of living with and managing SMI. By elevating these priorities, the framework supports a move toward value-based, whole-person care that emphasizes long-term well-being over service volume. It offers a practical roadmap for health systems and payers to align measurement and accountability with what truly drives recovery, while remaining grounded in dignity, agency, and lived experience. According to Fountain House's Beyond Treatment report, clubhouse participation can save more than $11,000 per person, which translates to a national savings of nearly $700 million annually across the known 60,000 members served. The potential is even greater at scale: if clubhouses were appropriately resourced and expanded to serve just 5% of the 15.4 million adults in the U.S. living with SMI, the net societal savings would exceed $8.5 billion. These figures account not only for healthcare savings, but also for potential lost wages and productivity, disability benefits, repeated emergency room visits, and criminal justice impacts.

Read more

Health First Indiana supports local health departments to tackle Indiana’s poor health rankings

Created in 2023, Health First Indiana (HFI) aims to tackle Indiana’s poor health rankings by ensuring access to core public health services at the local level. With the state’s investment, HFI provides local health departments with funding and resources, utilizes partnerships between hospitals and local health departments, and uses county health data to implement evidence-based programs focused on prevention. HFI has identified core public health services, which local health departments and the Indiana Hospital Association have pledged to support. This private-public partnership empowers local health departments to determine where investments are made, with many success stories to date.

Read more