The Boundary Spanning Leadership Framework’s Impact on Public Health
July 13, 2026 | Alice Schenall, Tyrone Bethune, Alyssa Merski
Since 2018, ASTHO has customized the Boundary Spanning Leadership (BSL) framework for the public health workforce. BSL develops leaders’ ability to create direction, alignment, and commitment (DAC) across both vertical and horizontal relationships within health departments and with community partners. The framework aims to work across differences in geography, demographics, leadership level, department, or unit. It’s designed for settings where the goal is not only to lead people but to lead across these differences, bridging agencies, sectors, levels of authority, and communities.
In short, while many leadership models help individuals become more effective leaders, BSL equips public health professionals to mobilize collective leadership across systems, which is essential for addressing complex issues such as behavioral health and emergency response. Here are three examples of BSL’s impact and utility in public health, two of which are multi-state projects
Preventing and Responding to Overdose
Overdose Data to Action (OD2A) leaders are faced with boundaries that can inhibit overdose surveillance and prevention activities without proper navigation. For example, partnership with community organizations to reduce overdose may not be effective without first exploring differences between the state health agency and community organization goals and working to build trust. Throughout BSL trainings, OD2A leaders have demonstrated many ways they bridge these boundaries and apply DAC in their overdose surveillance and prevention work.
OD2A leaders may need to span boundaries…
- Between departments within the agencies in which they work.
- Between hierarchical levels within the organization.
- With external partners like community-based organizations.
- With diverse cultures, demographics, and populations with which they work like people who use drugs.
- Across rural/urban regions, states, or localities.
Collaborating across these boundaries ensures stronger team relationships, exchange of perspectives, expertise, and experience, and alignment of vision and strategy to improve program impact. For example, BSL can help OD2A leaders secure critical health agency buy-in while meaningfully engaging people with lived experience in the planning, implementation, and evaluation of prevention programs
“This program allowed me to focus on specific skills and teach me things I had never learned before. My work will be significantly better because of this. I cannot tell you how important it has been to be able to network with the others as well.”
Reducing Risk for Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementias
In 2025 and 2026, ASTHO and the Alzheimer’s Association hosted two BSL trainings for health departments and their partners throughout the Healthy Brain Initiative. These helped equip them with a dynamic approach to addressing Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias (ADRD) by aligning partners across public health, aging, and other sectors. Through DAC, participants engaged in dialogue that bridged boundaries to integrate brain health into chronic disease, injury prevention, and other public health initiatives. Applying BSL practices to brain health created synergies that addressed shared risk factors such as hypertension, obesity, and lack of physical activity. BSL enabled state and jurisdictional teams to adapt quickly to the latest science, engage nontraditional partners, and build the skills needed to navigate potential boundaries. These practices strengthened cross-sector collaboration and built sustainable systems of shared investment and learning, positioning brain health as a priority across the public health landscape.
ASTHO selected the BSL training because leaders who effectively collaborate across boundaries are better positioned to address complex public health challenges such as ADRD, which requires interagency and multisector action. Public health leaders need solutions, and there is evidence to support and measure the usefulness of BSL concepts. Participants successfully met the expectations and objectives of the workshop:
- Breakthrough Innovations: Drove creative solutions that integrated culturally responsive care and brain health promotion across settings.
- Cross-Functional Learning: Built shared understanding between public health, aging services, and community stakeholders to address complex problems (e.g., ageism, risk reduction, caregiver burnout, access to care).
- Partnership Development: Leveraged cross-sector collaborations to expand age-friendly environments and relationships.
The BSL training left a lasting impact on those who completed the workshop, with participants reporting increased knowledge of major boundary types and mechanisms needed to boost ADRD strategies. Participants shared their excitement to immediately implement BSL elements into their public health practice. As BSL gains momentum and attention across the field, we urge organizations to leverage the framework as a conduit to build the capacity needed to accelerate brain health strategies and beyond.
“My participation in this BSL training will have a lasting impact by strengthening both my individual capacity and our team’s ability to approach strategic planning, stakeholder engagement, and the development of sustainable. For my team, this will translate into stronger collaboration, clearer direction, and more cohesive implementation of our ADRD strategies.”
Building Bridges for Youth Behavioral Health in New Mexico
In April 2026, leaders from New Mexico’s Departments of Health and Education came together — not just to coordinate but to truly collaborate. Partnering with ASTHO, they convened an in-person BSL training designed to move beyond siloed work and toward a shared vision for adolescent behavioral health in schools across the state. A total of 18 participants joined the training, representing a cross-sector mix of state agencies and community-based organizations. While the group brought diverse perspectives, they shared a common purpose: improving outcomes for young people across the state. The BSL framework offered them a structured way to navigate differences, build trust, and define collective direction.
Throughout the workshop, participants deepened their understanding of the boundaries that often limit collaboration, whether structural, relational, or based on differences in processes and priorities. More importantly, they built the skills to identify and bridge those divides. For many, the experience shifted how they think about partnership — not as coordination across systems, but as intentional, interdependent, and relationship-driven leadership
The impact was immediate. Participants reported increased confidence in their ability to break down barriers and apply BSL strategies to advance adolescent behavioral health. Just as critical, they described forming authentic connections with colleagues across sectors, which laid the groundwork for more cohesive, aligned work ahead. Perhaps most telling: Every participant committed to using BSL strategies in the next 30 days to six months. This wasn’t a one-time training, it was the start of a new way of working. The group plans to continue meeting monthly to apply these tools, strengthening direction, alignment, and commitment in their shared efforts.
“Addressing boundaries is a great practical step in all of the projects we will have going forward.”
For public health professionals, the takeaway is clear. Complex challenges like youth behavioral health don’t sit neatly within one sector and they can’t be solved there either. Boundary spanning leadership offers a practical, human-centered approach to building the partnerships needed to create lasting change
Explore more of ASTHO’s work in Boundary Spanning Leadership


