About Turning Point
Turning Point, started in 1997, was an initiative of The Robert
Wood Johnson Foundation and the W.K. Kellogg Foundation. Its mission
was to transform and strengthen the public health system in the
United States by making it more community-based and collaborative.
The initial idea for Turning Point came from the foundations'
concerns about the capacity of the public health system to respond
to emerging challenges in public health, specifically the system's
capacity to work with people from many sectors to improve the
health status of all people in a community.
Turning Point was based on the common sense idea that everyone
has a stake in public health.
Turning Point's underlying philosophy was that public health
agencies and their partners can be strengthened by linking to
other sectors (not just the private health care sector, but education,
criminal justice, faith communities, business, and others) because
the underlying causes of poor health and quality of life are tied
closely to social issues that are too complex to be approached
by disease models of intervention.
• Define and assess health, prioritize health
issues, and take collective action
• Promote education to decrease the risk
of infectious and chronic disease
• Strengthen environmental health services
for clean air and water and safe food
• Gain access to health care for everyone
• Improve health status for minority groups
Turning Point brought health-conscious people and organizations
to the table to collaborate on improving the public's health.
Local-level Turning Point partners collaborated to:
• Gather data to get a picture of the health
status, resources, values and priorities of community members
• Develop consensus about priority health
issues in their community
• Mobilize local resources to develop action
plans to address health priorities
• Develop consensus about priority health
issues using a broad definition of healthy communities
• Communicate local needs, priorities and
approaches to elected officials and state agencies to assist in
the development of effective health policy
State-level Turning Point partners collaborated to:
• Influence good public health policy
• Expand information technology so data
is available to local communities for addressing health concerns
• Stimulate state agencies and organizations
to develop comprehensive state health plans
• Modernize public health statutes
• Modernize public health statutes
• Create accountable systems to measure
performance
• Utilize information technology
• Invest in social marketing
• Develop leadership |