February 23, 2017

What is Public Health?

In 1920, Charles Edward Amory Winslow built up a fitting meaning of Public Health: “The science and art of preventing disease and promoting health and efficiency through organized community effort.”
Public health is about taking the responsibility for improving the health of the public, our community’s health. Doctors treat individual patients for a specific disease or injury. Public health professionals monitor and diagnose the health concerns of entire communities and promote healthy practices and behaviors to assure that populations stay healthy. 
Public health is a field comprised of many professional disciplines such as medicine, dentistry, nursing, optometry, nutrition, social work, environmental sciences, health education, health services administration, and the behavioral sciences. 

The four major eras in the United States public health history are: 
  • Prior to 1850 – Epidemics: avoidance and acceptance
  • 1850 to 1949 – Sanitary reform through state and local infrastructure
  • 1950 to present – Gaps in medical care and the expanding agenda
  • 2001 to present - Terrorism - biological and chemical; intentional injury
The Ten Essential Public Health Services: 
  1. Monitoring health status to identify community health problems
  2. Diagnosing and investigating health problems and health hazards
  3. Informing, educating, and empowering people on health issues
  4. Mobilizing community partnerships to identify and solve health problems
  5. Developing policies and plans to support individual and community health efforts
  6. Enforcing laws and regulations which protect health and ensure safety
  7. Linking people to needed personal health services, and assure the provision of health care
  8. Assuring a competent public health and personal health care workforce
  9. Evaluating effectiveness, accessibility, and quality of personal and population-based health services
  10. Research for new insights and innovative solutions to health problems
Resources:
http://www.cdc.gov/od/oc/media/tengpha.htm

A Short History of Public Health

Although medicine and public health share a lot of the same concerns relating to human health, the two disciplines approach the problem differently. Public health primarily focuses on treating the population, but these concerns about the population are tempered by concerns about the individual, the emphasis is on prevention and health promotion for the entire community and the intervention is in the areas of the environment, human behavior and medical care. Medicine focuses on the treatment of the individual, the emphasis is on diagnosis and treatment of the patient and the predominant emphasis is on medical care.

The principle public health story is that of John Snow, a London physician. In 1854, he was concerned about outbreaks of cholera in London. He plotted the deaths resulting from an outbreak on a map of London and found that they were clustered in a specific area. He concluded that the disease was probably a result of drinking contaminated water from a pump on Broad Street. His approach was a classic “public health” approach. 
  • Sanitation/ prevention of water-borne diseases: The first big step in improving public health was an improvement in sanitation resulting in the availability of unpolluted water for the general population.
  • Diseases from the Biological Environment: Smallpox was being controlled through vaccination - the first disease controlled in this fashion.
  • Diseases from exposure to the Physical Environment/Occupational Health: occupational diseases were treated in many ways by limiting exposure through engineering controls, masks and by limiting the exposure through job rotation.
  • Diseases from exposure to the Physical Environment/Environmental Pollution: immediate, dramatic decrease in bronchitis, asthma and other respiratory diseases went back up to their previous levels.
  • Risk analysis and Individual Behavior: As infectious disease was controlled, human mortality was greatly improved. However, it was realized that we don’t live in a risk-free world.
  • As we head into the twenty-first century, public health systems are facing a range of new and continuing challenges including the re-emergence of once rare communicable diseases, new types of illness, injury, and disease, new social problems that affect health, and changing definitions of health. 
However, many pandemic diseases like AIDS, avian flu, etc. have emerged and there are new factors at play. So the battle is far from over.