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Mel Knight, REHS Chairman, Americas Region, IFEH MALEHA – September 2012 Unleashing the power of “We” By definition, ‘We’ will always have greater knowledge and power than “I” Networking multiplies our opportunities to share ideas, experiences and solutions Data sharing enhances the quantity and quality of environmental health program information Networking Opportunities Professional Associations (MEHA, NEHA, APHA etc.) Focused confederations (MALEHA, NCLEHA, other state/regional groups) National workgroups and task forces (FDA, CDC, EPA etc.) Public/private collaboration (CFP) Value of a Data Repository Larger numbers are more significant than smaller numbers Useful for determining norms and trends Environmental health issues rarely reside in a single political/geographic jurisdiction Value to researchers, academicians and private sector Realizing Technological Gains Computerized inspection reporting GPS/GIS tools Web based information sharing and disclosure Paperless files with OCR Smartphone applications Virtual inspections and telemetry Challenges of Technology Information overload Hyper accessibility Quality control Exposes problems Significant financial investment Extensive training required Technology Utilization Allows for ‘pulling’ in addition to ‘pushing’ data Mobile access provides for efficiency and safety Automated searches for trends and norms Highlighting problems can accelerate finding solutions Return on investment (ROI) improving with technology price drops A modern workforce demands capacity and access to technology MALEHA leadership opportunity to: - Commission studies/research - Pool data - Allow/enable data mining - Collaborate with Universities/researchers Mel Knight, REHS [email protected]