Literature DB >> 28880837

Public Health 3.0: A Call to Action for Public Health to Meet the Challenges of the 21st Century.

Karen B DeSalvo1, Y Claire Wang2, Andrea Harris3, John Auerbach4, Denise Koo5, Patrick O'Carroll6.   

Abstract

Public health is what we do together as a society to ensure the conditions in which everyone can be healthy. Although many sectors play key roles, governmental public health is an essential component. Recent stressors on public health are driving many local governments to pioneer a new Public Health 3.0 model in which leaders serve as Chief Health Strategists, partnering across multiple sectors and leveraging data and resources to address social, environmental, and economic conditions that affect health and health equity. In 2016, the US Department of Health and Human Services launched the Public Health 3.0 initiative and hosted listening sessions across the country. Local leaders and community members shared successes and provided insight on actions that would ensure a more supportive policy and resource environment to spread and scale this model. This article summarizes the key findings from those listening sessions and recommendations to achieve Public Health 3.0.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28880837      PMCID: PMC5590510          DOI: 10.5888/pcd14.170017

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Prev Chronic Dis        ISSN: 1545-1151            Impact factor:   2.830


Editor’s Note: This article is a joint publication initiative between Preventing Chronic Disease and NAM Perspectives.

Introduction

The United States has made enormous progress during the past century in improving the health and longevity of its population through public health interventions and high-quality clinical care. In 2015, life expectancy at birth was 78.8 years, 10 years longer than in the 1950s (1). Smoking prevalence rates among adults and teenagers are less than half what they were 50 years ago (2). The proportion of people without health insurance is at a historic low of 8.8% (3). Health reform efforts have also improved health care quality and slowed the growth rate of health care costs. However, this success falls short of ensuring that everyone in America can achieve an optimal and equitable level of health. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recently reported that the historical gain in longevity in the United States has plateaued for 3 years in a row (4). Racial and ethnic disparities persist across many health outcomes and conditions, including life expectancy, infant mortality, and exposure to environmental pollutants (5). The gap in life expectancy between people with the highest and lowest incomes is narrow in some communities but wide in others (6). By mapping life expectancies in several cities across the United States, researchers illustrated that this metric can differ by as much as 20 years in neighborhoods just a few miles apart (7). These data suggest that investing in safe and healthy communities matters, especially for the most disadvantaged populations (8). However, many of these challenges require community-based interventions beyond health care. Indeed, today a person’s zip code may be a stronger determinant of health than is his or her genetic code (7,9). To solve the fundamental challenges of population health, we must address the full range of factors that influence a person’s overall health and well-being. Education, safe environments, housing, transportation, economic development, access to healthy foods — these are the major social determinants of health, comprising the conditions in which people are born, live, work, and age (10). Fortunately, many pioneering communities across the country are already working to improve health by influencing these determinants in a positive way. From Nashville, Tennessee, to Manchester, New Hampshire, to Harris County, Texas, and the Shoalwater Bay Indian Tribe in Washington, community leaders have built coalitions to improve educational attainment, promote economic opportunity, ensure community safety, and build environments that promote mental health and community engagement.

Key Influence of the Social Determinants of Health

Driven by payment policy changes, our health care system is transforming from one focused on episodic, nonintegrated care toward one that is value-based and would benefit from collaboration with allied community efforts. CDC developed a framework to conceptualize such integration across 3 areas of prevention— traditional clinical preventive interventions, interventions that extend care outside of the care setting, and population or community-wide interventions (11) (Figure 1). Although work in all of these areas is necessary to improve health, the work of Public Health 3.0 is focused on the second and third areas.
Figure 1

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Three Buckets of Prevention.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Three Buckets of Prevention. To improve the health of all people in America, we must also address factors outside of health care. Doing so means we must build on past successes and work across sectors to get closer to the essential definition of public health: Public health is what we do as a society to ensure the conditions in which everyone can be healthy (12).

The Evolution of Public Health

This expanded mission of public health was underscored in the 1988 Institute of Medicine (IOM, now the National Academy of Medicine) report, The Future of Public Health (12). It is even more salient today. Pioneering communities across the country are demonstrating how this can be achieved, particularly when led by local public health departments (13). The 2002 IOM report, The Future of the Public’s Health in the 21st Century (14), called for strengthening governmental public health capabilities and requiring accountability from and among all sectors of the public health system. However, public health has been significantly underfunded. Relative to health care spending, the United States has made paltry investments in upstream, nonmedical determinants of health, such as social services, education, transportation, environmental protection, and housing programs. This lack of investment has had detrimental effects on population health (15). In addition, the 2008 recession precipitated a large and sustained reduction in state and local spending on public health activities (16). In 2012, nearly two-thirds of the US population lived in jurisdictions in which their local health department reported budget-related cuts to at least one critical program area (17). Unfortunately, the need to strengthen the public health system, and the peril for failing to do so, is often only revealed in the context of disasters and crises. For example, in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, it became apparent that restoring health care services alone was insufficient in restoring New Orleans’s health care system. The water crisis in Flint, Michigan, reminded us of the costly consequences of not placing health and environmental impacts at the center when making decisions that affect the public’s health. For a community to address fundamental drivers of health while establishing readiness and resilience to crises requires a strong public health infrastructure, effective leadership, useable data, and adequate funding.

Public Health 3.0: A Renewed Approach to Public Health

Public Health 3.0 builds on the extraordinary successes of our past (Figure 2). Public Health 1.0 refers to the period from the late 19th century through much of the 20th century when modern public health became an essential governmental function with specialized federal, state, local, and tribal public health agencies. During this period, public health systematized sanitation, improved food and water safety, expanded our understanding of diseases, developed powerful prevention and treatment tools such as vaccines and antibiotics, and expanded capability in epidemiology and laboratory science. This scientific and organizational progress meant that comprehensive public health protection — from effective primary prevention through science-based medical treatment and tertiary prevention — was possible for the general population.
Figure 2

Evolution of public health practices. Abbreviation: IOM, Institute of Medicine.

Evolution of public health practices. Abbreviation: IOM, Institute of Medicine. Public Health 2.0 emerged in the second half of the 20th century and was heavily shaped by the 1988 IOM report The Future of Public Health (12). In that seminal report, the IOM posited that public health authorities were encumbered by the demands of providing safety-net clinical care and were unprepared to address the rising burden of chronic diseases and new threats such as the HIV/AIDS epidemic. The report’s authors declared, “This nation has lost sight of its public health goals and has allowed the system of public health activities to fall into disarray.” With this call to action, the IOM defined a common set of core functions, and public health practitioners developed and implemented target capacities and performance standards for governmental public health agencies at every level. During the 2.0 era, governmental public health agencies became increasingly professionalized. Public Health 3.0 refers to a new era of enhanced and broadened public health practice that goes beyond traditional public department functions and programs. Cross-sectoral collaboration is inherent to the Public Health 3.0 vision, and the Chief Health Strategist role requires high-achieving health organizations with the skills and capabilities to drive such collective action. Pioneering US communities are already testing this approach to public health, with support from several national efforts.

Learning From the Field

At the core of Public Health 3.0 is the notion that local communities will lead the charge in taking public health to the next level and ensuring its continued success. Over the spring and summer of 2016, we visited communities across the United States to assess the accuracy of the 5 key components of the Public Health 3.0 framework and to hear firsthand what policy and other changes would support and sustain communities’ Public Health 3.0 work. We selected 5 geographically and demographically diverse communities and convened listening sessions with approximately 100 participants each. Each meeting showcased successful multisectoral collaboration designed to address the social determinants of health. The communities visited were Allegheny County, Pennsylvania; Santa Rosa, California; Kansas City, Missouri; Nashville, Tennessee; and Spokane, Washington. They were selected as representative of the broader Public Health 3.0 movement because of their national reputation for multisectoral collaboration, evidence of a strong local public health leader, innovative use of data and metrics, and funding. They also had experience in public health department accreditation. Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, is a prototype for the model including their work to form a structured partnership supporting health and blending and braiding funding across several governmental jurisdictions (18). In these listening sessions, local leaders shared their knowledge, strategies, and ideas for successfully implementing Public Health 3.0–style initiatives. Meeting participants represented an array of expertise beyond public health and health care. Although participants noted unique challenges and successes in each region, many common themes emerged across the meetings.

Recommendations to Achieve Public Health 3.0

Based on insights gathered from the public health community at these listening sessions, from conversations with leaders, and from a review of prior reports that lay out a framework for strengthening public health, we propose 5 broad recommendations that define the conditions needed to support health departments and the broader public health system as it transforms into the Public Health 3.0 model. A more detailed list of specific actions can be found in the Appendix and in the full report (18). 1. Public health leaders should embrace the role of Chief Health Strategist for their communities — working with all relevant partners so that they can drive initiatives including those that explicitly address “upstream” social determinants of health. Specialized Public Health 3.0 training should be available for the public health workforce and public health students. Although the local health officer often may serve in the role of Chief Health Strategist, there are circumstances in which such leadership comes from those in other sectors. Regardless, the public health workforce must acquire and strengthen its knowledge base, skills, and tools to meet the evolving challenges to population health, to be skilled at building strategic partnerships to bring about collective impact, to harness the power of new types of data, and to think and act in a systems perspective. This will require a strong pipeline into the public health workforce, as well as access to ongoing training and midcareer professional development resources. 2. Public health departments should engage with community stakeholders — from both the public and private sectors — to form vibrant, structured, cross-sector partnerships designed to develop and guide Public Health 3.0–style initiatives and to foster shared funding, services, governance, and collective action. Communities should create innovative and sustained organizational structures that include agencies or organizations across multiple sectors and with a shared vision, which allows blending and braiding of funding sources, capturing savings for reinvestment over time, and a long-term roadmap for creating health, equity, and resilience in communities. 3. Public Health Accreditation Board (PHAB) criteria and processes for department accreditation should be enhanced and supported to best foster Public Health 3.0 principles, as we strive to ensure that every person in the United States is served by nationally accredited health departments. As of August 2016, approximately 80% of the US population lived in the jurisdiction of one of the 324 local, state, and tribal health departments that has been accredited or is in the process of becoming accredited by the PHAB (19). The vision of ensuring that every community is protected by an accredited local or a state health department (or both) requires major investment and political will to enhance existing infrastructure. Although research found accreditation supports health departments in quality improvement and enhancing capacity (20), the health impact and return on investment of accreditation should be evaluated on an ongoing basis. 4. Timely, reliable, granular-level (ie, subcounty), and actionable data should be made accessible to communities throughout the country, and clear metrics to document success in public health practice should be developed to guide, focus, and assess the impact of prevention initiatives, including those targeting the social determinants of health and enhancing equity. The public and private sectors should work together to enable more real-time and geographically granular data to be shared, linked, and synthesized to inform action while protecting data security and individual privacy. This includes developing a core set of metrics that encompass health care and public health, particularly the social determinants of health, environmental outcomes, and health disparities. 5. Funding for public health should be enhanced and substantially modified, and innovative funding models should be explored to expand financial support for Public Health 3.0–style leadership and prevention initiatives. Blending and braiding of funds from multiple sources should be encouraged and allowed, including the recapturing and reinvesting of generated revenue. Funding should be identified to support core infrastructure as well as community-level work to address the social determinants of health. To secure sufficient and flexible funding in a constrained and increasingly tightening funding environment, local public health needs a concrete definition of the minimum capabilities, the costs of delivering these services, and a structured review of funding streams to prioritize mandatory services and infrastructure building.

Early Action on the Recommendations

Upon the release of the report, several public and private organizations committed to advancing its recommendations. It was embraced by the American Public Health Association as the blueprint for the future of public health (21); others committed to developing training for Chief Health Strategists (22) or to building bridges between public health and the clinical care system, including payers (23). The US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) implemented 3 priority recommendations, including extending reporting on accreditation status to federal public health entities, establishing a social determinants of health workgroup to support alignment of HHS policies, and launching a conversation about state-based opportunities to leverage health and human services resources to improve the public’s health (23). Additionally, CDC’s Health Impact in 5 Years (HI-5) initiative (24) provides nonclinical, community-wide toolkits to address social determinants of health that have demonstrated not only health improvement but also cost-effectiveness within 5 years. Community-level uptake and action through these resources could accelerate the impact of Public Health 3.0 collaborations.

Key Barriers

For many communities, transforming to a Public Health 3.0 model will prove challenging. Although funding has stabilized, local health departments continue to face resource challenges from local financing streams, and proposals to reduce federal public health spending are likely to have a major impact at the local level (25). Despite promising advances such as the Big Cities Project, the absence of nonproprietary tools for data, analytics, metrics, and other uses leaves actionable information out of reach for most localities (25). Additionally, the daily challenges of meeting statutory public health responsibilities and a lack of experience and skill prevents most local health leaders from acting as Chief Health Strategists to bring people together across sectors. Finally, the basic foundational structure of local governmental public health may itself be a barrier to efficient and cost-effective coordination at the local level.

Conclusion

The era of Public Health 3.0 is an exciting time of innovation and transformation. With the Public Health 3.0 framework, we envision a strong local public health infrastructure in all communities and its leaders serving as Chief Health Strategists that partner with stakeholders across a multitude of sectors on the ground to address the social determinants of health. With equity and social determinants of health as guiding principles, every person and every organization can take shared accountability to ensure the conditions in which everyone can be healthy regardless of race, ethnicity, gender identity, sexual orientation, geography, or income level. If successful, such transformation can form the foundation from which we build an equitable health-promoting system — in which stable, safe, and thriving community is a norm rather than an aberration. The Public Health 3.0 initiative seeks to inspire transformative success stories such as those already witnessed in many pioneering communities across the country. The challenge now is to institutionalize this expanded approach to community-based public health practice and replicate these triumphs across all communities, for the health of all people.
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Journal:  J Public Health Manag Pract       Date:  2017 Jan/Feb

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Journal:  MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep       Date:  2016-08-12       Impact factor: 17.586

5.  Mortality in the United States, 2015.

Authors:  Jiaquan Xu; Sherry L Murphy; Kenneth D Kochanek; Elizabeth Arias
Journal:  NCHS Data Brief       Date:  2016-12

6.  Mortality in the United States, 2014.

Authors:  Sherry L Murphy; Kenneth D Kochanek; Jiaquan Xu; Elizabeth Arias
Journal:  NCHS Data Brief       Date:  2015-12

7.  The 3 Buckets of Prevention.

Authors:  John Auerbach
Journal:  J Public Health Manag Pract       Date:  2016 May-Jun

8.  The Association Between Income and Life Expectancy in the United States, 2001-2014.

Authors:  Raj Chetty; Michael Stepner; Sarah Abraham; Shelby Lin; Benjamin Scuderi; Nicholas Turner; Augustin Bergeron; David Cutler
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2016-04-26       Impact factor: 56.272

9.  An Environmental Scan of Recent Initiatives Incorporating Social Determinants in Public Health.

Authors:  Denise Koo; Patrick W O'Carroll; Andrea Harris; Karen B DeSalvo
Journal:  Prev Chronic Dis       Date:  2016-06-30       Impact factor: 2.830

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  81 in total

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Authors:  Harry J Heiman; L Lerissa Smith; Ebony Respress; Carey Roth Bayer
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2.  Public Health WINS Is a Call to Arms as Well as a Roadmap for All Who Care About a Thriving, Healthy Nation.

Authors:  Karen B DeSalvo; Jeffrey Levi
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2019-05       Impact factor: 9.308

3.  The State of the US Governmental Public Health Workforce, 2014-2017.

Authors:  Katie Sellers; Jonathon P Leider; Elizabeth Gould; Brian C Castrucci; Angela Beck; Kyle Bogaert; Fátima Coronado; Gulzar Shah; Valerie Yeager; Leslie M Beitsch; Paul C Erwin
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2019-03-21       Impact factor: 9.308

4.  Timely, Granular, and Actionable: Informatics in the Public Health 3.0 Era.

Authors:  Y Claire Wang; Karen DeSalvo
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2018-05-17       Impact factor: 9.308

Review 5.  Preferred modalities for delivering continuing education to the public health workforce: a scoping review.

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Journal:  Health Promot Chronic Dis Prev Can       Date:  2020-04       Impact factor: 3.240

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Authors:  Mariana Chilton; Sonya Jones
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2020-04       Impact factor: 9.308

7.  The Role of US Mayors and Health Commissioners in Combatting Health Disparities.

Authors:  Narintohn Luangrath; Leana S Wen
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2018-05       Impact factor: 9.308

8.  Provoking Us to Thoughtfully, but Urgently, Move Public Health Ahead.

Authors:  Karen B DeSalvo
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2018-05       Impact factor: 9.308

9.  Local Health Departments' Role in Nonprofit Hospitals' Community Health Needs Assessment.

Authors:  Gulzar H Shah
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2018-05       Impact factor: 9.308

10.  Identifying Needs for Advancing the Profession and Workforce in Environmental Health.

Authors:  Justin A Gerding; Bryan W Brooks; Elizabeth Landeen; Sandra Whitehead; Kaitlyn R Kelly; Amy Allen; David Banaszynski; Michael Dorshorst; Lane Drager; Tannie Eshenaur; Jeff Freund; Adam Inman; Sandra Long; Jessica Maloney; Tammy McKeever; Tyler Pigman; Nancy Rising; Sarah Scanlan; Jennifer Scott; Colin Shukie; Gary Stewart; Darren Tamekazu; Valerie Wade; Carolyn White; John Sarisky
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2020-01-16       Impact factor: 9.308

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