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Building Health Promotion into the National Agenda: Progress Report
We are making excellent progress in our Building Health Promotion into the
National Agenda effort. When we first announced this plan at our March, 2000
annual conference, this whole project was an amorphous dream. Less than five
months later, it is beginning to become a well developed plan that appears to
have a good chance of success.
Background
I will provide a brief background summary for those who are not yet aware of
this effort....
Despite the fact that modifiable lifestyle factors such as smoking, sedentary
lifestyle, poor nutrition, stress, etc. are responsible for over half of the
premature deaths in the United States, health promotion remains a minor player
in our nation's health care scheme, accounts for less than an estimated 1% of
our national health care spending, and has no political clout. To push health
promotion to the next level, we must develop some political clout and advance
health promotion within the federal agenda. After consulting with over 300
health organizations and individual health promotion leaders, we have decided to
advocate for increased funding for health promotion research, and increased
funding for dissemination of information on the best science and best practice.
If we succeed in securing this increased funding, this will be an important step
in advancing our field and give us the enthusiasm and confidence necessary to
tackle larger advocacy goals. For more details, see our web site
www.HealthPromotionConference.org and click on the "National Agenda"
button.
We Have Made Progress
We have made excellent progress in all aspects of our effort. Brief details
are below.
Collaborations: We are working with over two dozen professional
associations and advocacy groups who have offered to support this effort by
providing expert advice, access to key senators and representatives and
coordinating elements of the effort. We are just about to start a formal process
of securing written endorsements to include in our communications with Congress.
Infrastructure: By the time this is published, our executive committee
and steering committee should be in place, and our web site tools for contacting
Congress should be operational.
Political Support: We have begun meeting with Senators and
Representatives who chair important committees in the Senate and House of
Representatives to gauge their interest in our proposal. We have received
preliminary indications that a number of them may be interested in introducing
and co-sponsoring a bill to support our goals. We need to continue to nurture
these relationships and develop similar relationships with other members of
Congress.
Plan Refinement: We are working with a number of government agencies
within the Department of Health and Human Services to learn how much funding is
required to achieve our research and dissemination goals, and where and how this
money would be best spent. We plan to have our plan fully developed by November
or December, 2000.
Message Development: With the assistance of a number of advocacy
groups, we have created a basic template of the "marketing materials"
we need to develop to support this effort.
Strategy Development. Our basic strategy is outlined below.
1. President's Request to Congress. Working through members of
Congress in January and February, we will introduce our concept to the newly
elected president through his policy advisors, and perhaps directly, for
inclusion in the President' Budget Request to Congress. This request is usually
introduced in the early Spring (March or April).
2. Committee Introduction of a Bill. Working with two to six
committees in the House and the Senate, we will draft legislation (a bill) which
provides the funding we are seeking. Our position will be strengthened if our
concept is included in the President's Request to Congress, but this is not
necessary.
3. Favorable Vote in Committee. Only 10% of bills introduced in
committee are approved by the committee and sent to the full House and Senate
for a vote. To be successful at this stage, we need to have repeated
communication with each member of each of the committees that introduces a bill
on our behalf. This will require harnessing a large grassroots effort and our
February, 12-17, 2001 conference in Washington, DC, will play an important role
in this step. The committee vote will probably take place in the spring or
summer.
4. Favorable Vote in Congress. Once a bill is approved in committee, it
is voted on in both the House and Senate. Approximately half of the bills voted
on are approved. To be successful at this stage, we need to have communication
with as many of the 100 senators and 435 representatives as possible. This will
require harnessing a very large grassroots effort. It is difficult to predict
when this vote will take place.
5. Signature by the President. The signature of the President is
required for our bill to become law. The President is likely to approve a bill
that has strong support in Congress unless it has some strong opponents or other
problems. We do not anticipate this type of problem, but to be conservative, we
will need to show the President that there is strong support for our request
through letters and telephone calls to the White House from our grassroots
supporters.
Implementing this plan successfully will be a big challenge that will require a
significant grassroots effort. Fortunately, we have a number of things working
in our favor. Most importantly, our basic concept makes intuitive sense to all
the members of Congress we speak with and it has very few, if any, opponents.
Furthermore, our request will be very small relative to most of the requests
Congress will be considering. Finally, we are building a large, broad based
coalition that will probably be able to harness the grassroots support we need.
What Should You Do Now?
1. Work Through Your Professional Association.
If you are a member of a professional association, contact the executive
director and president and ask them to contact me (248-682-0707) to become
involved in this advocacy effort.
2. Contact Your Senators and Representative.
Contact the two senators representing your state and the representative
serving your congressional district. In most cases, it will be difficult to
reach your senator or representative directly on the first attempt, but the
staff member responsible for health issues should not be difficult to reach.
Your initial focus should be to find out where they stand on health promotion.
Most likely, they won't even know the term "health promotion." The
next step is to provide general education on the health and financial benefits
of health promotion and give them a sense of health promotion efforts in your
district. The third step is to advocate for increased funding for research and
dissemination of information. We will share our specific strategy through your
professional association as well as on our web page.
The easiest way to make contact with your senators and representative is through
telephone calls and letters, and you should do both. The most effective contact
is actually visiting the office of your senators and representatives. You should
do this as well. You should also attend "Town Meetings" hosted by your
representative in your district and publicly ask what he or she is doing to
advance health promotion. If you can budget the time, make multiple contacts.
You can make a difference with your contacts because most senators and
representatives hear from only 5% of their constituency, and those 5% are the
ones who shape policy.
To find out how to reach your senators and representatives, call the switchboard
of the US Congress at 202-224-3121. As this effort develops, our web page (www.HealthPromotionConference.org
and click on the "National Agenda" button) will provide a mechanism
for you to send emails directly to members of Congress and provide templates of
letters which state our request.
3. Visit our Web Site.
We will post progress reports and briefing materials on our web page as they
are developed. Go to www.HealthPromotionConference.org and click on the
"National Agenda" button.
4. Join us in Washington DC.
Attend the Art and Science of Health Promotion Conference at the Omni
Shoreham Hotel in Washington, DC, February 12-17, 2001 and join almost a
thousand other people in a trip to Capitol Hill to visit you senators and
representative. For conference details, call 248-682-0707 or visit the
conference web page at HealthPromotionConference.org.
5. Serve on a Subcommittee.
If you have well developed skills in grassroots advocacy coordination,
message development, issue refinement, or close political contacts in Congress,
and have time to devote to this effort, please call us at 248-682-0707 to get
involved
Michael P. O'Donnell, PhD, MBA, MPH
Editor in Chief, American Journal of Health Promotion
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