The CLS du Grand Annecy, co-worn with the Regional Health Agency (ARS), aims to improve the health of the inhabitants by acting on social and territorial health inequalities, by strengthening the prevention and coordination of local actors. To do this, a local health diagnosis (DLS) was initiated in April 2025.
Entrusted to the Regional Health Observatory (ORS), this work is based on the cross-analysis of quantitative and qualitative data, funded by ARS and the Grand Annecy, and enriched thanks to the support of the Grand Annecy for in-depth analyzes on three sub-land, certain age groups and two sensitive themes: the mental health of young people and addictions.
A shared inventory to shed light on the priorities of tomorrow
This diagnosis constitutes the base of the CLS approach. It makes it possible to draw up a precise inventory of health conditions in the territory, taking into account both social determinants, access to care, prevention offer, but also local demographic specificities.
The seminar of June 27 will thus allow a restitution of these results, declined by sub-land and by age groups, around essential themes: socio-demographic context, general state of health of the population, mental health, addictions, environmental health, but also provides care and recourse to professionals.
A collective dynamic to build local solutions
Beyond this restitution, the objective of the seminar is clear: to engage a collective dynamic between the various actors for the co-construction of the action plan which will be formalized between July and September 2025. This collaborative exercise, led by five facilitators, will be based on the five strategic axes identified by the CLS: access to law and the reduction of social and territorial inequalities, prevention and promotion of health, health mental, environmental health and finally, the strengthening of professional networks and the coordination of actors.
The event brought together around 100 participants from local authorities, health and social institutions, associations, private structures, elected officials and professionals in the field. All were invited to actively participate in this afternoon of reflection and co-construction. It will not only be a question of strengthening the already existing links between the partners, but also of feeding the first action sheets which will then be examined by the CLS steering committee. This seminar thus marks an important turning point in the Grand Annecy public health approach. It is part of a shared desire to better meet the needs of the population in terms of health, based on a fine reading of the territory, an active mobilization of stakeholders and a strong commitment to equal access to health for all.
By initiating this collective dynamic, the Grand Annecy affirms its ambition to build a coherent territorial health policy, anchored in local reality and carried by the collective intelligence of its actors.
“From the start, this CLS was thought not as a simple contractual document, but as a real lever for territorial action, capable of bringing together very diverse actors around a common objective: to concretely reduce the social and territorial health inequalities, on a territory however recognized for its quality of life. The Grand Annecy was able to carry a strong ambition, structured around a rigorous diagnosis, carried out both in a quantitative way by the ORS, but also by integrating the words of the actors and the inhabitants, in particular on the mental health issues. This double approach is precious, because it reminds us that behind the figures, there are experiences, care paths, human realities to take into account. ” Reynald Lemahieu, departmental director of Haute-Savoie at ARS Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes
“This local health contract, which we co-provide with the Regional Health Agency, is based on a solid method: in-depth diagnosis, shared priorities, and a wide mobilization of players in the field. The Grand Annecy provides operational management, with the desire to make health a real lever for territorial cohesion. This seminar marks the entry into the co -construction phase of the action plan, on concrete issues such as the mental health of young people, access to rights or coordination of professionals. This is an essential step to build, at the local level, a collective response to health inequalities. »» Frédérique Lardet, president of the agglomeration of Grand Annecy