2024 Global Health Equity Challenge
Big ‘E’ ℠ GDM – Geospatial Decision Making for Public Health
What is the name of your solution?
Big ‘E’ ℠ GDM – Geospatial Decision Making for Public Health
Provide a one-line summary of your solution.
S.C. Equity’s Big ‘E’ ℠ geospatial decision-making tool enables health leaders to chart their public health initiatives using equity-driven insights.
In what city, town, or region is your solution team headquartered?
Philadelphia, PA, USAIn what country is your solution team headquartered?
What type of organization is your solution team?
For-profit, including B-Corp or similar models
Film your elevator pitch.
What specific problem are you solving?
Over 30% of the world's data is generated by the healthcare industry. [1] Open Data initiatives have made health data extremely accessible, and mapping applications like CDC PLACES, the FCC's Connect2Health, and The National Environmental Public Health Tracking Network make it easy to understand and interact with U.S. health data in geospatial contexts.
The problem is that, while place-based health data is abundant and accessible, drawing practical and actionable insights from it is not. The gap between insight and action can be overwhelming when dealing with complex issues like public health. For health organizations that don’t have in-house analytic capabilities, this gap can be insurmountable.
Translating maps into action is not hard because geospatial analysis is hard or because action is easier said than done. Using maps to inform decisions is hard because making decisions about complex issues is incredibly difficult. [2] The factors that must be considered in a complex decision-making process can be many and varied. There could be a number of health-related maps relevant to a public health decision, and these would need to be considered alongside medical science, program capacity, equity assessments, community input, strategic factors, program data, cultural contexts, and more.
How do decision makers process all of these factors and consolidate them into equity-driven decisions? How would they weigh a map displaying health data against grant conditions? How is equity being measured? What likely happens in many public health decision processes is that maps are relegated to a referential role. This may be especially true in problems where a majority of the factors under consideration have no evident spatial dimensions.
But public health is inherently spatial, so any public health initiative in which place-based factors are not integral to understanding the problem is unlikely to produce solutions that are truly targeted or equitable.
We have the data to make place-based analysis the standard for health equity. The problem now is making it feasible for health organizations of all sizes everywhere to translate it into action.
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Figure 1 presents a specific but hypothetical problem that could be solved using S.C. Equity's Big 'E' GDM analysis.
Source: www.policymap.com.
What is your solution?
S.C. Equity’s Big ‘E’ ℠ Geospatial Decision-Making (GDM) tool makes place-based analysis accessible to health organizations of all sizes across the continental U.S.
The SCE Big 'E' multi-objective analysis enables health leaders to conduct in-depth equity assessments alongside strategic analyses, program assessments, community engagement, and more and combine them into a single decision-making process. The results of the decision process are then translated into maps that are able to pinpoint the neighborhoods experiencing the greatest inequity while also reflecting the decision maker’s priorities and project objectives.
When SCE maps are incorporated into dashboards, the result is a powerful, interactive tool that public health leaders can use to chart their health equity initiatives. Decision makers can use the tool to determine which gaps affect which communities and how severely, how communities with similar socioeconomic profiles may differ across measures, where program outputs overlap with measured gaps, or where there may be opportunities to increase the efficacy and impact of existing projects, for example.
The GDM tool is powered by GIS while the GDM process relies, in part, on techniques from the fields of operations and poverty research, in particular: multiple-criteria decision making (MCDM), multi-objective decision analysis (MODA), structured decision making (SDM), and multidimensional poverty research.
S.C. Equity’s Big ‘E’ equity assessment, however, is a completely new approach created by Founder SC Reed. It assesses over 100 equity-related indicators in effort to identify groups experiencing the deepest and broadest equity gaps across a wide range of topics relative to the neighborhoods they live in. As a convenience, S.C. Equity offers its Big ‘E’ index to clients, which can they can customize and incorporate into their public health projects. Clients can also build their own Big ‘E’ indices, which are custom-formulated via an exploratory process that is designed to capture decision makers' understandings of the problems and solutions as subject-matter experts.
Once an organization has their unique Big ‘E’ index map, whether fully custom-built or built on top of the SCE Big 'E' map, it can serve as a basis for all subsequent projects and decision processes. This ensures that every S.C. Equity collaboration has equity as its foundation.
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Figure 2 shows a prototype of S.C. Equity's Big E Index for Philadelphia, PA, as of April 2024 and presents an S.C. Equity solution from the problem outlined in Figure 1.
Source (Figures 2.1 and 2.2): www.scequity.com.
Source (Figure 2.3): www.policymap.com.
Who does your solution serve, and in what ways will the solution impact their lives?
Medically underserved communities. Low-access neighborhoods. At-risk populations.
These are just a few phrases used to describe groups experiencing gaps in healthcare access and health outcomes. We generally understand them to mean: individuals who experience barriers to comprehensive healthcare due to socioeconomic and identity-based marginalization—but do we know who they mean, specifically?
Do we know which road will take an individual to the nearest hospital in the event of a medical emergency? Do we know how many community members require translation services? Can we point out these communities on a map? Can our maps point them out to us?
If our answer to these questions is "no," then we are probably dealing with the concept of health inequity and not with actual health inequities.
When we talk about health inequity, we are, in theory, referring to real communities of real people who have specific healthcare needs that are being unmet due to specific gaps in healthcare access. Two communities considered to have comparable levels of health inequity could have entirely different experiences of healthcare (in)access.
Thus, if we generalize the problems, we can't target solutions. S.C. Equity's Big 'E' ℠ equity assessment is able to build detailed neighborhood equity atlases. When customized and incorporated into public health initiatives, Big ‘E’ GDM enables health leaders to identify and target specific resource gaps that may be creating barriers to comprehensive healthcare for residents in the neighborhoods they serve. Hopefully, this will lead to better health outcomes for impacted populations.
How are you and your team well-positioned to deliver this solution?
Founder SC Reed grew up in Southwest Philadelphia. Her high school senior project, a data-driven analysis, was on the penetrating effects of race and low income on academic achievement in contexts of improved educational opportunity. She graduated from Stanford University with a Bachelor of Arts in African and African American Studies after nine years of discontinuous and reduced enrollment. After college, Reed worked on lead poisoning with the City of Philadelphia and, later, on coal pollution in the nonprofit sector.
S.C. Equity was carved out of Reed’s own experiences traversing inequities in education, opportunity, and comprehensive healthcare access as well as her commitment to reducing the same for others. In other words: Reed has been both a problem-solver and a target of equity initiatives, and she is sensitive to the implications of being in each of these roles.
One way this sensitivity has manifested in the GDM tool is through its scope of analysis. S.C. Equity project maps display data at the neighborhood level (i.e., the Census block group and tract levels) and are limited in the number of places (i.e., cities, counties, states) that may be included in a single project. This choice was made to ensure that the tool would appeal especially to organizations working in closer proximity to their intended beneficiaries.
Reed also makes a point to differentiate between “communities,” “neighborhoods,” and “populations” in her analyses. In doing so, her projects can better accommodate the unique relationships that these groups may have to space and place, to each other, to the issues under consideration, and to the interventions proposed as solutions to their purported problems, including to the problem-solvers themselves.
Which dimension of the Challenge does your solution most closely address?
Increase capacity and resilience of health systems, including workforce, supply chains, and other infrastructure.Which of the UN Sustainable Development Goals does your solution address?
What is your solution’s stage of development?
PrototypeWhy are you applying to Solve?
Reed is applying to Solve in order to initiate the journey of growing S.C. Equity to its global potential.
The primary innovation around Big ‘E’ ℠ GDM is a technique. Therefore, S.C. Equity isn’t tied to any one place, and given the necessary tools and the availability of relevant data, Big ‘E’ GDM could be incorporated into any equity-driven project anywhere in the world.
As the sole member of S.C. Equity, Reed has been limited in her ability to scale S.C. Equity to even its full starting potential. This has been discouraging at times, but with Solve's support, Reed can turn this limitation into an opportunity. Because S.C. Equity is still in the very early stages of its launch, change is easy, new ideas are exciting, and new ways of doing things are just ways of doing things. S.C. Equity is ripe for the valuable learning and capacity-building opportunities that Solve offers.
Within her current vision for S.C. Equity's short- and medium-term growth, Reed is particularly interested in: mentorship; collaborating with bold innovators eager to create a more equitable world; guidance on growing the S.C. Equity team; technical partnerships; and partnerships with experts in local and regional human geography and sociology (e.g., Appalachia, The Black Belt, U.S. Southwest), policy research institutions, and climate equity experts.
In which of the following areas do you most need partners or support?
Who is the Team Lead for your solution?
SC Reed
Which of the following categories best describes your solution?
A new application of an existing technology
Please select the technologies currently used in your solution:
If your solution has a website or an app, provide the links here:
(1) scequity.com; (2) linkedin.com/company/scequity/
In which countries do you currently operate?
How many people work on your solution team?
1 full-time staff member
How long have you been working on your solution?
Founder SC Reed has been working on this solution since April 2021 (3 years).
Do you primarily provide products or services directly to individuals, to other organizations, or to the government?
Organizations (B2B)Solution Team
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SC Reed Founder & CEO, S.C. Equity
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Our Organization
S.C. Equity