Dick Thompson, executive director and chief executive officer of the Quality Health Network (QHN) based in Grand Junction, often tells stories that offer examples of the social determinants that affect well-being.
Thompson's stories show the importance of efforts to develop a community information exchange to help people get the services they need.
His Grand Junction-based QHN plans to launch a pilot program for its Community Resource Network (CRN). The CRN is one of five semifinalists in the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Social Determinants of Health Innovation Challenge.
The CRN has received $5,000 and advances to the second phase of a competition in which the winner will receive $50,000.
According to Thompson, the CRN will build on the information QHN shares through its health information exchange.
Goals of the exchange include ensuring better continuity of care and having information readily available for the patients whether that's at a hospital, doctor's office or other location.
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Meticulon, a project of Autism Calgary Association in partnership with the federal government and the Sinneave Family Foundation, operates as a social enterprise that renders high-tech services provided by people with autism, leveraging their natural abilities at requiring attention to detail, repetition, and sequencing.