Elevating Local Voices: Insights from MNCM’s Regional Community Conversations

September 25, 2025

Liz Cinqueonce, MBA

President & CEO, MN Community Measurement


“It feels like we’re doing everything we can, but sometimes the barriers are difficult to overcome on our own.”

That was one of the candid reflections shared during MN Community Measurement’s (MNCM) first Regional Community Conversation , held on September 10 at the Medi-Sota Clinic Managers Networking meeting. It captured the spirit of the day: local health leaders working hard to improve outcomes, while recognizing that real progress requires collective effort, shared resources, and fresh strategies.


The Regional Community Conversation series is designed to bring those voices together—taking a closer look at health care outcomes at the local level, identifying barriers that stand in the way, and sharing promising solutions aimed at improving health across the region.

Looking at the Data

MNCM presented regional data for communities served by Medi-Sota members across several key clinical measures. In many areas—such as colorectal cancer screening, asthma control, diabetes care, vascular care, depression remission, and adolescent mental health screening—results were significantly lower than statewide averages. These numbers sparked discussion about what’s being tried locally and where support is most needed.

Key Themes that Emerged

1 | Community-Led Solutions Are Taking Shape

From clinician expert panels to expanded use of electronic health record (EHR) systems, communities are innovating. Mailing at-home screening kits, hosting marketing events, and engaging licensed school nurses in care coordination are just some of the strategies being tested. While school-based clinics were seen as a promising avenue, complex billing rules remain a barrier to scaling them

2 | Persistent Barriers Continue to Challenge Progress

Several common themes surfaced: outreach is difficult and sometimes unwelcome, compliance remains a struggle, and resources for smoking cessation are scarce. Transportation barriers prevent many from accessing care, while limited internet access undermines the promise of video visits. Vaccine hesitancy—particularly around flu shots—was also called out as a growing concern, requiring more creative communications.

3 | The Value of Collaboration and Shared Learning

Participants highlighted the importance of collaboration across clinics, public health, schools, and community organizations. They emphasized that MNCM’s role in bringing transparent, meaningful data to the table creates the foundation for these shared conversations and helps guide collective action.

 What emerged most clearly was this:

Communities are committed to improving health outcomes, but they cannot do it alone. Meaningful progress depends on working together, learning from one another, and aligning data with action.

MNCM is committed to evolving its work based on what we hear in these dialogues—empowering communities with data that matters and delivering services that help us reach our shared goals.

Interested in hosting a Regional Community Conversation in your area?

We invite you to reach out to us at support@mncm.org . Your voice matters, and your input will help shape the future of health care improvement across Minnesota.


MNCM extends our sincere thanks to Medi-Sota for welcoming us to host our first Regional Community Conversation during the Clinic Managers Network meeting. We truly appreciate the opportunity to engage with clinic leaders from across the region and begin meaningful conversations about the importance of collaboration in improving health outcomes. To learn more about Medi-Sota and their work, please visit their website.


Posted in Blog

Recent Posts

By Jessica Donovan April 29, 2026
MN Community Measurement (MNCM) has released two new reports highlighting the state’s health care performance: Health Care in Minnesota: Summary Report on Quality, Disparities, and Cost and Health Care in Minnesota: Health Care Quality Leaders . Together, these reports provide a comprehensive analysis of 2024 data, examining trends in health care quality, disparities, and costs, while also recognizing medical group quality leaders and those demonstrating meaningful improvement. These reports, based on data submitted to MNCM in 2025 and reflecting care delivered in 2024, work in tandem with MNCM’s Performance Hub —an interactive platform providing statewide analyses of health care quality and cost measures. Collectively, these tools equip community partners, including medical groups, payers, policymakers, public health agencies, researchers, and community-based organizations, with actionable insights to drive improvements in care and advance health equity across Minnesota. Report highlights include: Health Care Quality Significant gaps remain in asthma control, with thousands of patients needing improved care to meet statewide benchmarks. Colorectal cancer screening rates for the newly eligible 45-49 age group continues to improve. While the 2024 rate for all age groups has significantly increased compared to 2023, it remains significantly lower than 2021. Childhood immunization continues to show a decrease in statewide rate from year to year. This measure has not shown improvement in rates following the COVID-19 pandemic. There were modest improvements in breast cancer screening, cervical cancer screening, controlling high blood pressure, diabetes eye exams, and immunizations for adolescents. Health Care Disparities Black, Indigenous, Multi-Race, and Hispanic/Latinx patients experienced the most disparities across multiple measures, particularly in Colorectal Cancer Screening. Patients speaking Somali and Spanish, as well as those from Laos, Mexico, and Somalia, had lower rates of preventive care and chronic disease management compared to statewide averages. Cost and Utilization The total cost of care increased by 7.3% in 2024, primarily driven by an 8.9% rise in pharmacy costs and an 8.3% rise in professional fees. All categories of medical services saw increased use, except for inpatient admissions. Women aged 36-64 had the highest number of claims, while men aged 18-35 had the lowest number of claims. Quality Leaders In 2024, 31 medical groups were recognized as quality leaders across the measures reported by medical groups. In 2024, 58 medical groups were recognized as quality leaders across the measures reported by payers. 
By Elizabeth Cinqueonce March 5, 2026
Aligning for Impact: Minnesota's Health Data Evolution A 2026 Leadership Series from the MNCM Board Chair & President
By Jessica Donovan January 21, 2026
CONNECTED THROUGH DATA: Uncovering Disparities in Cervical Cancer
By Jess Donovan, MPH, BSN October 21, 2025
This October marks the 40th anniversary of Breast Cancer Awareness Month. According to the American Cancer Society, about 1 in 8 women will be diagnosed with invasive breast cancer in their lifetime. Fortunately, however, early detection through screening and advances in treatment have decreased mortality by 44% since 1989. Screening can catch cancer early, when it is… The post Empowered by Data: Uncovering Screening Disparities and Reducing Breast Cancer Risk appeared first on MN Community Measurement.
By Jess Donovan, MPH, BSN September 30, 2025
September is Sexual Health Awareness Month. As we close out September, we’re highlighting two of the measures we report on – Cervical Cancer Screening and Chlamydia Screening in Women.   Cervical cancer, once one of the most common cancers affecting women in the United States, has significantly decreased since the 1970s. The reason for the decline… The post Empowered by Data: Spotlight on Screening for Sexual Health appeared first on MN Community Measurement.

Recent Comments

Archives

Categories