| Literature DB >> 28759558 |
Michael Fraser1, Brian C Castrucci.
Abstract
Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28759558 PMCID: PMC5548506 DOI: 10.1097/PHH.0000000000000634
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Public Health Manag Pract ISSN: 1078-4659
Public Health 2030 Scenariosa
| Scenario 1: One step forward, half a step back |
| Amidst continued fiscal constraints, public health agencies and health care slowly advance their capabilities. Many use automation and advanced analytics to improve services and community and population health. However, climate change challenges continue to grow, and there is little progress in improving the social determinants of health. Great variations in technological capabilities, funding, and approaches to prevention—along with a continuous rise in health care costs—significantly limit public health gains. |
| Scenario 2: Overwhelmed, under-resourced |
| Funding cuts and a hostile political context undermine the role of public health agencies, which subsequently fail to attract talented young people. Public health crises grow worse and more frequent, largely due to climate change. Private sector initiatives produce significant innovations for health and wellness, but these primarily benefit the middle-class and affluent groups. Technological, economic, educational, and health disparities grow, and the institutions of public health have little capacity for doing anything about them. |
| Scenario 3: Sea change for health equity |
| National and local economies gradually grow, and changes in values and demographics lead to “common sense” policies and support for health equity. Public health agencies develop into health development agencies that use advanced analytics, gamification, and diverse partnerships to identify problems and opportunities and catalyze and incentivize action to improve community health. While some disparities persist, in 2030, the vast majority of US residents have attained greater opportunity for good health through quality improvements in housing, economic opportunity, education, and other social determinants of health. |
| Scenario 4: Community-Drive Health and Equity |
| Public health agencies, partners, and local health improvement initiatives coalesce via technology and social media into a national web of community health-enhancing networks. These networks help communities exchange their innovations and best practices and leverage the expertise of public health agencies and others. The nation also strives to come to terms with its racial and socioeconomic histories and supports real changes and legislation to create a more equitable society. This value shift to equity is accelerated by the proliferation of new community economic models that help households sustain themselves and improve health and well-being. Public health sheds many functions and facilitates these movements to improved health. |
aAdapted with permission from Institute for Alternative Futures.8
Macrotrends and Forces of Change Impacting Public Health in the Futurea
| Brownson and Krueter | Erwin and Brownson |
|---|---|
| Aging population | The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act |
| Changing patterns in the US racial/ethnic composition | Public Health Agency Accreditation |
| Changes in health care delivery systems | Climate change |
| Explosion of information technologies | Health in all policies |
| Changing needs in the public health work force | Social media and informatics |
| Growth in health-related partnerships | Demographic transitions |
| Antigovernment sentiment and polarization | Globalized travel |
aAdapted with permission from Brownson and Krueter3 and Erwin and Brownson.4
FIGURE 1Example: Strategic Move 2, Programs to Populationsa
aFrom Hawai'i Department of Health.24 Used with permission.
FIGURE 2The Health Impact Pyramida
aFrom Frieden.5
FIGURE 3Five Strategic Moves