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EDITORIAL |
Daniel J. Friedman is with the Bureau of Health Statistics, Research and Evaluation, Massachusetts Department of Public Health, Boston. Barbara Starfield is with the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Md.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Daniel J. Friedman, PhD, Bureau of Health Statistics, Research and Evaluation, Massachusetts Department of Public Health, 250 Washington St, Boston, MA 02108-4619 (e-mail: dan.friedman{at}state.ma.us).
| INTRODUCTION |
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Szreter traces contemporary discussions of models of population health to their intellectual origins through the last 2 centuries, and stresses the persistence of core questions about the relationship between material prosperity and population health.1 Evans and Stoddart reconsider their seminal 1990 article "Producing Health, Consuming Health Care," 2 in light of factors that they identified as underemphasized in their initial model. These factors include individuals genetic endowments and the role of development over the life cycle; the complexity of the interactions among factors, such as the expression of genetic endowment and its relationship to the physical and social environments; and the dependence of the incomehealth relationship on the social and cultural environments.3 Kindig and Stoddart propose a definition of population health as the "health outcomes of a group of individuals, including the distribution of such outcomes within the group." 4 They emphasize that, in the past, the concept of population health became confused with its determinants, and they urge a clear distinction of one from the other, with the inclusion of both in population health models. Kickbusch places models of population health within the context of World Health Organization health promotion policies of the last 2 decades.5 She discusses how those policies have evolved from emphasizing individual risk factors to addressing the determinants of population health, while simultaneously promoting community participation in improving population health. Glouberman and Millar review the conceptualizations of health determinants in Canada since the 1974 publication of the Lalonde report,6 and the impacts of those conceptualizations on both health policy and health information systems.7 Coburn and colleagues critically review the assumptions underlying conceptualizations by the influential Canadian Institute for Advanced Research of the determinants of population health, and introduce alternative perspectives to current population health paradigms.8
| WHAT ARE MODELS OF POPULATION HEALTH? |
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Models of population health differ not only in their implicit or explicit definitions of population health, but in other key ways as well. They
Underlying the differences among models are differences in their definitions of population health.2,3,1824 Careful attention to these differences can help in the elucidation of assumptions about the nature of population health and the factors that should be addressed in population health research, programs, and policies.
Contemporary conceptual discussions of population health have been generated within academia, within public health practice, and among policymakers, and in Canada, the United Kingdom, other European countries, and the United States. These discussions have been accompanied by a wealth of research on the relationship of various factors to health, sometimes at the population level and sometimes at the individual level. These include social factors (inequalities, support, cohesion, structure, stress), natural environment, socioeconomic factors (material resources at the individual level, income inequality at the contextual level), biology and early childhood development, and the built environment (e.g., transportation). Less studied, although highly relevant, is the political context in which health and intersectoral policies affect the relative salience of each of these categories of influence.25,26
Despite the liveliness of recent discussions and research into factors that affect population health, we believe that these discussions have been more highly valued in public health policy and practice outside, rather than within, the United States. The relative lack of attention to models of population health in US public health and epidemiological research is reflected in the emphasis given to relative risk (which can be viewed as relating more to individual health and clinical practice) rather than to attributable risk (which can be viewed as relating more to population health).2731
| POPULATION HEALTH MODELS AND PUBLIC HEALTH PROGRAMS |
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Population health models illustrate the need for intersectoral activities in developing and implementing programs to improve the populations health, and make obvious the inherent limits of public health programs undertaken without explicit attention to contextual influences (such as public policies, culture, and the natural environment) and community influences (such as material resources, collective lifestyles and health practices, social interactions, the built environment, health services, and biological characteristics). Models of population health can also enrich public health practice by providing evaluative frameworks for program design and implementation.
| POPULATION HEALTH MODELS AND PUBLIC HEALTH SURVEILLANCE |
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Widespread use of models of population health could reorient the practice of surveillance and health statistics in the United States to provide this needed understanding of the reasons for health disparities among population subgroups. The use of population health models could also encourage the development of a more balanced portfolio of data reflecting both the wide range of influences on population health and the need for a wider range of measures of population health.
| POPULATION HEALTH MODELS AND PUBLIC HEALTH RESEARCH |
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The use of models of population health can help to focus on the importance of considering the full range of influences on a populations health,39 including the societys political context and the role of public policies and laws directed toward multiple sectors, enfranchisement, and community empowerment.40 Research guided by models of population health would explore simultaneously the nature and strength of interactions among multiple factors influencing population health, rather than merely examining the relationship between population health and factors selected according to the particular interests of researchers.41 Such research on influences would be informed by the recognition that influencing factors may operate differentially over time, in different settings, and at different geopolitical levels.4145 Multilevel models of population health are needed to explore differences in the relative strength of influencing factors and their interactions at these different levels.44,4651
A focus on the multiplicity of influences on population health and their interactions must also be accompanied by a clearer distinction between individual and population health and efforts to improve the assessment of population health in the health statistics enterprise. Finally, both point-in-time and longitudinal research must seek to identify differential influences on population health among different populations and subpopulations.52
| STIMULATING DEBATE ABOUT POPULATION HEALTH MODELS IN THE UNITED STATES |
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Some of this reorientation has already begun. The US National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics, the congressionally mandated public advisory body on health information policy to the secretary of the US Department of Health and Human Services, has sought to advance the use of a population health framework and models of population health in its recent report, Shaping a Health Statistics Vision for the 21st Century.56 The National Institutes of Health has also sought to advance a population health agenda in its report Progress and Promise in Research on Social and Cultural Dimensions of Health: A Research Agenda.48 We hope that the collection of articles in this issue of the American Journal of Public Health can contribute further to stimulating discussion and debate in the United States over models of population health.
Accepted for publication September 19, 2002.
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