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Board meetings and strategic plans from Mark Brann's organization
This Language and Disability Access Plan (LDAP) for the Virginia Department of Health (VDH) outlines policies and procedures to ensure comprehensive and effective access to VDH services, activities, and programs for individuals with disabilities and/or Limited English Proficiency (LEP). The plan aims to foster effective, timely, and respectful communication through language access services and digital accessibility, ensuring equitable access to public health information and services for all Virginians, irrespective of race, color, national origin, religion, sex, sexual orientation, disability, or age. Key pillars include assessing community needs, providing language and disability assistance services, translating vital documents, ensuring effective communication with individuals with disabilities, and offering staff training on cultural competency and accessible communication.
The Virginia Department of Health's Language and Disability Access Plan (LDAP) serves as a roadmap to protect the health and promote the well-being of all Virginia residents, specifically ensuring appropriate access to services for individuals with Limited English Proficiency (LEP) and disabilities across all VDH programs and local health departments. The plan is structured around ten key elements, which include assessing community needs and internal capacity, optimizing service delivery, providing comprehensive oral and written language assistance, implementing effective communication strategies for disabled individuals, notifying the public of free language support, and training staff. Additionally, it focuses on assessing service access and quality, ensuring digital information accessibility, and engaging stakeholders through consultation to continuously improve service delivery.
The Virginia Department of Health's Language and Disability Access Plan (LDAP) outlines a strategic framework to ensure full and effective access to all VDH services, programs, and activities for individuals with Limited English Proficiency and disabilities. The plan is structured around ten core elements: assessing needs and capacity, delivering services, providing spoken language support, facilitating written translations, implementing effective communication strategies for people with disabilities, notifying the public of free language assistance, comprehensive staff training, evaluating access and quality, ensuring digital information accessibility, and engaging in stakeholder consultations. This initiative aims to protect public health and enhance the well-being of all Virginians by removing communication barriers and fostering equitable access to essential health services.
The Virginia Department of Health's Language and Disability Accessibility Plan (LDAP) is designed to ensure practical access to its services, programs, and activities for individuals with limited English proficiency (LEP) and persons with disabilities. The plan outlines the department's strategic approach to protect and promote the health and well-being of all Virginians by focusing on ten key elements: comprehensive assessment of needs and capabilities, effective service provision, robust spoken language assistance, accurate written translation, inclusive communication strategies for disabled individuals, clear notification of free language assistance, ongoing staff training, continuous evaluation of service access and quality, accessible digital information, and proactive stakeholder consultation. This plan is committed to biennial review and updates to ensure compliance and responsiveness to community needs.
This Language and Disability Access Plan details the Virginia Department of Health's commitment to ensuring equitable and effective access to all its programs, services, and activities for individuals with Limited English Proficiency (LEP) and disabilities. It outlines methods and procedures to comply with civil rights laws and state regulations, focusing on ten key elements: assessing needs and capacities, service delivery, oral and written language assistance, effective communication for individuals with disabilities, service outreach, staff training, quality and access assurance, digital information accessibility, and professional consultation.
Extracted from official board minutes, strategic plans, and video transcripts.
Decision makers at Virginia Department of Health
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