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Building Health Promotion in the National Agenda In the past five years, I have had the privilege of traveling to all the continents of the world (except Antarctica), to talk about health promotion. I normally provide a report on the state of the art and science of our field, usually focusing on program prevalence and research results. By now, I am no longer surprised that I often learn more about health promotion in the US when I am overseas, because the questions I am asked force me to look at health promotion in the United States from a new perspective. During the last year, the most common question I have heard is "With so much research supporting the health and financial impact of health promotion, why isn't health promotion part of the medical and business mainstream?" I still don't know the answer to that question, but I have concluded that now is the time to build health promotion into the national agenda. What does this mean? We have to decide, but for starters it means making health promotion procedures reimbursable, much like surgical or pharmaceutical treatments. It means increasing the HEDIS requirements of HMO's to include a wide range of health promotion treatments. It means securing a few billion dollars from the tobacco settlement for health promotion programming and research. It means making health promotion an issue in the upcoming presidential election. Maybe we need a new National Institute of Health, the National Institute of Health Promotion. It probably means building a stronger sense of collaboration among the various health promotion organizations, and perhaps even merging some of them. What else does it mean? You have to tell me. We probably need to get together in some forum to first brain storm, then shape ideas into a strategic plan. Please tell me what changes we need to make to build health promotion into the national agenda. Do we need changes in government policy related to health promotion, the scientific infrastructure supporting health promotion, HEDIS requirements for health maintenance organizations, or government regulations on business? What other changes are necessary in what other areas? Am I being unrealistic in thinking we can finally build health promotion into the national agenda? I don't think so. Consider the following:
We now know that health promotion is not easy and its not cheap; we needed professionally trained people to run programs. Behavior changes last only as long as programs are in place, and we get what we pay for. We can actually reverse heart disease with an intensive and expensive Dean Ornish program, or we can help someone lose and regain 5 pounds with a cheap one-shot program. What is the next step in building health promotion into the national agenda? Think about it; send me your ideas. I will think about it myself and review your ideas. Together we can come up with a plan. Respond by letter to 1660 Cass Lake Rd, Suite 104, Keego Harbor, MI 48320, or through our web page (www.HealthPromotionJournal.com). Michael P. O'Donnell, PhD, MBA, MPH |
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