For Your Health
For Your Health

News from the University of North Dakota School of Medicine & Health Sciences

Building bridges for the benefit of North Dakotans

The Dakota Conference on Rural and Public Health brings public health and medical providers together

Where can you learn about: mind-body practices for healthcare providers, building a rural cancer program, Alzheimer’s disease as a public health crisis, health policy, and eliminating hepatitis in North Dakota—all while networking with various health professionals from across the state?

At the Dakota Conference on Rural and Public Health.

2024 marks the 39th year of the premiere statewide rural health conference, a unique partnership between the North Dakota Rural Health Association (NDRHA), North Dakota Public Health Association (NDPHA), the University of North Dakota (UND) College of Nursing and Health Professions, UND’s Center for Rural Health (CRH), and Altru Health System.

Kylie Nissen, program director for the Dakota Conference, has overseen the planning of the two-and-a-half-day conference since 2007. Nissen is also director of the State Office of Rural Health at the CRH within the School of Medicine & Health Sciences at UND.* The conference is facilitated by CRH.

“A large part of the Dakota Conference,” says Nissen, who is also the executive director of NDRHA, “is to allow professionals the opportunity to hear ideas that are working in North Dakota from people that are implementing the projects. They can network and discuss how to make it work in their community.”

Exchanging ideas

Mark Strand agrees.

A professor in the Department of Public Health in the North Dakota State University College of Health and Human Sciences, Strand serves on the North Dakota Health Council, is a member of NDPHA, and is a frequent attendee at the Dakota Conference. He touts the partnership that makes up the conference and finds value in all of the conference’s offerings.

“NDPHA has 198 members,” Strand says, “and the Dakota Conference is the one event of the year that brings a large number of them together—for their annual meeting and for the learning that occurs at the conference. It provides a chance to learn from the experiences of other public health colleagues across the state, and build support networks. After all, many of the public health professionals in North Dakota work in public health units with fewer than 10 people, so they need support.”

Strand also values the partnerships that come from the interdisciplinary connections the conference helps cultivate.

“In most of North Dakota, there are a small number of health professionals in the community, and they have to work together to address the health concerns of rural people,” he shares. “The local public health unit partners closely with the medical providers working in the clinics and hospitals, so it makes sense to share their experiences.”

Another important aspect of the annual gathering is to allow the NDRHA and NDPHA a chance to conduct official business while a majority of the members are gathered. The annual meetings are built into the conference schedule and occur concurrently.

A unique partnership

The idea for the Center for Rural Health and NDPHA to combine their annual conferences came to fruition in the mid-1990s. Keith Johnson, retired administrator for Custer Health (now Western Plains Public Health), remembers when the two groups decided to join forces.

“For years, both conferences danced around each other’s schedules and subjects,” Johnson says. “Both conferences suffered because, oftentimes, attending NDPHA meant that attendees couldn’t go to the rural health conference, or the nursing directors of public health units would want to attend the rural conference, and so didn’t attend the public health conference.”

Johnson remembers a pivotal moment where public health districts and Critical Access Hospitals began working in tandem. In 1996, when he was president of NDPHA, he attended the Turning Point Conference, alongside staff from the Center for Rural Health, and was introduced to the Future of Public Health Report. According to Johnson, the report “shook the ground” in both public health and healthcare circles.

“In Custer Health’s region,” he continues, “we teamed up with the hospitals to provide an overarching survey that actually measured the community. Workshops put together by CRH staff helped us define core concepts of public health delivery and get used to the idea of not providing direct services. The rise of Community Health Centers (CHCs) pulled us further together. CHCs have prevention as a large part of their primary care strategy, which is right in public health’s wheelhouse. Was it easy? No. Was it worthwhile? Yeah, definitely.”

All of these issues have since been topics at numerous Dakota Conferences.

Boots on the ground

The 2024 conference takes place on June 4-6, in Grand Forks, with a great variety of topics, research, and discussions. It consists of four keynotes, 20 sessions, four intensive workshops, a health policy panel with state legislators, a workforce panel, and a rural and public health awards luncheon. In 2023, the conference, which moves around the state, was held in Bismarck for the first time in over a decade and boasted the second highest participant total ever: 437.

Pete Antonson served on the Dakota Conference planning committee for nearly 15 years. He recently retired after 22 years as CEO of Northwood Deaconess Health Center. He remembers how challenging it can be to select the right presentations for the right time.

“It is always a challenge to find the right blend of topics,” Antonson remembers. “However, the emphasis of the Dakota Conference is different than other conferences we attend. With a dual emphasis on rural and public health, the topics tend to be more boots-on-the-ground in nature: practical and useful.”

Strand, a frequent presenter, believes working professionals and students derive benefit by attending sessions outside of their professional roles.

“All health systems are being held accountable for contributing to improving population health,” Strand says. “But many hospital and clinic staff spend their days busily tending to the individual patients under their care. They seldom have the time to consider the question of why certain health problems are increasing in their community. The public health sessions provide technical and theoretical tools to understand population health and contribute to improving population health. And the same goes in reverse, many of the public health workers attend rural health sessions geared toward hospitals and clinics. Such collaboration is essential in a low population state like North Dakota where we need critical mass for efficiency and effectiveness.”

Making the most of connections

The conference was cancelled in 2020 and held virtually in 2021. But people missed the in-person interaction, collaboration, and camaraderie, says Nissen.

“Networking is the most important part of a conference,” she continued. “Making connections and knowing who you can go to for support in the profession or with questions is so incredibly valuable. Especially in a rural state, there may not be anyone within 60 miles that has a similar job whom you can talk to, where in an urban location you may have someone one floor up whom you can pop in and talk with. But, through networking, relationships form and enable people to be able to grab the phone and give a call to someone who is or has likely been in a similar situation. It’s a way to not feel so isolated even with many miles keeping you physically apart.”

Antonson agreed. “As an independent facility, I have always valued the development of relationships. It helps by meeting people who are doing the same thing, sharing the same frustrations, and at times having solutions for issues that we face.”

“The value goes far beyond the conference,” Johnson concludes. “The conference is better for the entire health community in North Dakota because we teamed up. I know other states shake their head in amazement at the barriers we have crossed to work together.”

* Nissen resigned from her UND role in March 2024.

by Jena Pierce