Wisconsin Public Health Practice-Based Research Network
The Wisconsin Public Health Practice-Based Research Network is a group of health department leaders and researchers who have organized to support and advance public health systems and services research driven by the needs and interests of health departments in Wisconsin and beyond.

"Public health services and systems research is a field of study that examines the organization, financing, and delivery of public health services within communities, and the impact of these services on public health.” (Mays, et al., 2009)
Who Is Involved?
The Network was formed in December 2009 with two-year developmental funding from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The State of Wisconsin Department of Health Services serves as the lead agency and the Institute for Wisconsin’s Health manages day-to-day activities. Co-project directors are Susan Zahner, DrPH of the University of Wisconsin and Pat Guhleman, MS, Director of the Division of Public Health’s Office of Policy and Practice Alignment. Beverly Larson, MPH, of the Institute for Wisconsin’s Health, serves as the project manager.
Eleven local health departments are involved as practice partners and initial organizational partners include the Center for Urban Population Health in Milwaukee, the University of Wisconsin Institute for Clinical & Translational Research-Community Academic Partnership Program, the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute, the Wisconsin Association of Local Health Departments and Boards, and the Wisconsin Public Health Association. Membership is open to researchers and health departments in Wisconsin.

Participating Health Departments
Dodge County, Greenfield, Lincoln County, Madison & Dane County, Milwaukee, Oak Creek, Oneida County, Polk County, Rock County, West Allis, Wood County
National Connections
The RWJF-supported public health practice-based research program is national and includes eleven states along with a growing number of affiliates. Glen Mays, PhD, MPH, of the University of Kentucky College of Public Health, coordinates the national program. These national connections provide a learning community and a means of collaborating to improve the quality and scope of this growing field of research. Simply put, public health PBRNs expand the scientific knowledge needed for evidence-based decision making in public health.
How Does Wisconsin Benefit?
The Wisconsin Public Health Practice-Based Research Network can serve as a springboard for:
1. New research projects that will help to establish more and better evidence for public health practice and systems
2. New partnerships between researchers and practitioners in health departments, universities, and other settings that result in high quality research
3. Leveraging funding for initiatives that improve practice and systems.
What Has Been Accomplished So Far?
After one year of development, our Network has:
1. Begun to serve as a focal point for academic, research and practice organizations around Wisconsin that have a shared interest in performance management, quality improvement, accreditation, systems, financing, health care reform and many other topics
2. Incubated funded projects on:
• the impact of economic recession on health department funding
• a method for coding population health services by community nurses
• measurement of the quality of community health improvement plans and processes
3. Generated a draft inventory of public health systems and services research in Wisconsin and a list of research questions ripe for further exploration and action
Learn More
Click here for a fact sheet on the Network
Or
here for the latest newsletter.
Follow WPHPBRN activities, news and features by registering for our Research Network blog at Connect on this website.
