Go to home page - Ministry of HealthWhats New - Ministry of HealthPublications - Ministry of HealthForums - Ministry of HealthLinks - Ministry of HealthContact - Ministry of HealthAbout - Ministry of HealthSearch - Ministry of HealthSkip Navigation
Print this  Email this

Intersectoral Community Action for Health (ICAH) Evaluation:

An Overview


Date of publication: March 2008
  • Summary
  • Publication availability
  • Publishing information
  • Related information

Summary


The Public Health Consultancy (Wellington School of Medicine)

In 2001 the Ministry of Health funded ICAH groups in four areas to develop different ways of bringing together community and health sector organisations to improve the health status of Māori, Pacific and Quintile 5 people living in those areas.

In the Northland DHB there were three sub-projects established (a community garden project and two school related projects). In Counties Manukau District Health Board (DHB) the Ministry and the DHB funded two co-ordinators who became involved in a number of projects. These included the Youth Inter-agency Project (YIP) and the Healthy Housing Project.

In Otaki (MidCentral DHB) the Kapiti Community Health Group Trust (KCHGT) was active in the establishment of the local PHO and increasing community knowledge of health services. A Community Health Worker position improved access to primary health care services for the people of Otaki, particularly Māori.

In Porirua (Capital and Coast DHB) there were two main projects. The Healthlinks project was responsible for increasing knowledge of health services and was active in a number of community developments. The Porirua Increasing Access initiative (PIA) involved a range of primary health care providers in Porirua. PIA focused on reducing financial, information and transport-related barriers to health care. General practitioner and nurse utilisation increased, but not always at the expected time or in all practices. Ambulatory Sensitive Hospitalisations remained steady reversing previous increases in rates.

The evaluators concluded that:
  • each of the ICAH initiatives showed evidence they were working to reduce inequalities
  • all the projects were intersectoral in terms of developing relationships with different parts of the health sector
  • in all the ICAHs, the role and wisdom of the community was vital
  • the capacity of the community to help as volunteers was often limited in areas of high need
  • the role of the Ministry of Health in the contracting process was generally seen positively
  • the future of the ICAHs, which were developed before the introduction of DHBs and Primary Health Organisations (PHOs), will rely on closer relationship between these groups.

The reports provide examples of ways that PHOs can work with the local DHBs and their community. It also highlights ways that high-need communities and health care providers can address health needs together.


Publication availability


This publication is available in Word and PDF format below:

Intersectoral Community Action for Health (ICAH) Evaluation: An Overview (Word, 1 MB)

Intersectoral Community Action for Health (ICAH) Evaluation: An Overview (PDF, 803 KB)


Read our copyright information

Go to information about downloading publications


Publishing information


Date of publication: March 2008

ISBN numbers: 978-0-478-31277-5 (online)

HP number : 4527

Citation: Ministry of Health. 2008. Intersectoral Community Action for Health (ICAH) Evaluation: An Overview. Wellington: Ministry of Health.


Related information



Intersectoral Initiatives for Improving the Health of Local Communities: A literature review

New Zealand Intersectoral Initiatives for Improving the Health of Local Communities, 2005: An updated literature review examining the ingredients for success





Website feedback
We welcome your feedback on this publication.
Back to top


Privacy | Copyright | Disclaimer | About Us | Access Keys | Feedback | Contact Us | Employment | newzealand.govt.nz