Events

Community Conversation – Community Health in the Coulee Region: How are local groups sharing what they know?

When:
June 25, 2018 @ 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm
2018-06-25T13:00:00-05:00
2018-06-25T15:00:00-05:00
Where:
Viterbo University - Fine Arts Center
Cost:
Free

This event is free and open to the public, but pre-registration is preferred. Click here to register.

Every day across Wisconsin, groups in the public, private, and academic sectors work to improve the health of their communities in areas such as aging, obesity prevention, and substance use. But no matter what area they work in, these groups all share a common thread: they build a vital base of local knowledge and expertise through their work with their clients, partners, and others.

Join us for the second annual program in the “local learning” series from the Evidence-Based Health Policy Project at the UW-Madison Population Health Institute (the first took place in the Fox Valley in 2017), where you will hear more about the work of several organizations working to improve health in La Crosse, and find out how they address the following questions:

How is your organization learning from others?
How is your organization teaching others?
What are ways do this most effectively? 

The program will be co-hosted by State Senator Jennifer Shilling and State Representatives Jill Billings, Steve Doyle, and Nancy VanderMeer
with a panel featuring perspectives from:

Great Rivers United Way – Lindsey Purl, Great Rivers Hub Director

La Crosse County Heroin and Illicit Drug Task Force – Al Bliss, Task Force Coordinator

La Crosse Medical Health Science Consortium – Catherine Kolkmeier, Executive Director

Wisconsin Academy for Rural Medicine – Dr. Rick Erdman, Gundersen Health System, Tomah Clinic

This event is organized by the Evidence-Based Health Policy Project, at the UW-Madison Population Health Institute and advances the project’s mission of connecting expertise and knowledge –whether generated in the community, on campus, or elsewhere — into the health-policy making process in the state Legislature. This is the second in an ongoing series of programs held in different regions of the state that aim to connect the campus, community, and lawmakers in discussions on how to improve health.