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Health and Social Policy: Time to Reshift the Paradigm?

Health and Social Policy: Time to Reshift the Paradigm?. Will Ross, M.D. Associate Dean for Diversity Associate Professor of Medicine Washington University School of Medicine. June 11, 2008. Objectives. Identify the benefits and limitations of the WHO definition of health

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Health and Social Policy: Time to Reshift the Paradigm?

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  1. Health and Social Policy: Time to Reshift the Paradigm? Will Ross, M.D. Associate Dean for Diversity Associate Professor of Medicine Washington University School of Medicine June 11, 2008

  2. Objectives • Identify the benefits and limitations of the WHO definition of health • Debate the roles of genetics and social forces in perpetuating health disparities • Promote a health model that embraces an ecological approach to reducing health disparities

  3. Is it the right time for a paradigm shift?

  4. Is Health Care Breaking Through as a Political Issue? Thinking about the campaign for the presidential election in 2008, what two issues would you most like to hear the presidential candidates talk about? (open-ended, top 4 responses shown) Note: Adds up to more than 100% due to multiple responses. Source: Kaiser Health Tracking Poll: Election 2008

  5. Disparities in Healthcare Quality* • The evidence is “overwhelming” • Disparities exist even when insurance status, income, age, and severity of conditions are comparable • Minorities are less likely than whites to receive needed services • Disparities contribute to worse outcomes in many cases • Differences in treating heart disease, cancer, & HIV infection partly contribute to er death rates for minorities • *Unequal Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Healthcare, 2002.

  6. Eight Americas: Investigating Mortality Disparities Across Races, Counties, and Race-Counties in the United States Christopher J.L. Murray, MD, DPhil Institute Director, Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation Professor of Global Health, University of Washington Majid Ezzati, Ph.D. Associate Professor Harvard School of Public Health Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation September 12, 2006

  7. Definitions of the Eight Americas • America 1: Asians living in countries where Pacific Islanders < 40% of population • America 2: White low-income rural Northland • America 3: Middle America • America 4: White poor Appalachia and Mississippi Valley • America 5: Western Native Americans • America 6: Black middle America • America 7: Black poor rural south • America 8: Black high-risk urban Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation

  8. Dorothy Lange’s “Migrant Mother” Collection. FSA-OWI, 1936

  9. President Roosevelt signs Social Security Act, at approximately 3:30 pm EST on August 14, 1935

  10. Civil rights demonstrator May 3, 1963, Birmingham, Ala. Medical Committee for Human Rights Archive, US Health Activism History Collection Institute of Social Medicine and Community Health, Philadelphia, PA

  11. “The time has come for an all-out world war against poverty. The rich nations must use their vast resources of wealth to develop the underdeveloped, school the unschooled, and feed the unfed. Ultimately a great nation is a compassionate nation. No individual or nation can be great if it does not have a concern for ‘the least of these’". Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr, Excerpted from his Nobel Prize Lecture, University of Oslo, December 11, 1964

  12. President Lyndon B. Johnson signs the 1965 Social Security Amendments (Medicare and Medicaid)

  13. Hurricane Katrina Lee Celano for The New York Times, Tuesday November 6th, 2007

  14. World Health OrganizationDefinition of Health1 But it also includes . . . “ . . . governments have a responsibility for the health of their peoples which can be fulfilled only by the provision of adequate health and social measures”. “ . . . a state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease and infirmity.” 1 The Constitution was adopted by the International Health Conference held in New York from 19 June to 22 July 1946, signed on 22 July 1946 by the representatives of 61 States (Off. Rec. Wld Hlth Org., 2, 100), and entered into force on 7 April 1948. Amendments adopted by the Twenty-sixth, Twenty-ninth, Thirty-ninth and Fifty-first World Health Assemblies (resolutions WHA26.37, WHA29.38, WHA39.6 and WHA51.23) came into force on 3 February 1977, 20 January 1984, 11 July 1994 and 15 September 2005 respectively and are incorporated in the present text.

  15. Do we have the financial resources to capitalize our paradigm shift?

  16. The Marshall Plan “American should do whatever it is able to do to assist in the return of normal economic health in the world, without which there can be no political stability and no assured peace." Secretary of State George C. Marshall June 5, 1947 Harvard University Children playing amid new housing construction in Marseille, France. Courtesy of the George C. Marshall Research Library, Lexington, Virginia. GCMRL#3118)

  17. "The Americans will always do the right thing - after they've exhausted all the alternatives.” Winston Churchill

  18. U.S. Health Expendituresas Share of GDP Expected to RiseThrough Next Decade Expenditures as percent of gross domestic product (GDP) Projected Source: Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Office of the Actuary, 1998–2003 from CMS Health Accounts data file nhegdp03.zip available at http://www.cms.hhs.gov/statistics/nhe/default.asp; 2004–2014 published in Heffler et al., "U.S. Health Spending Projections for 2004–2014," Health Affairs Web Exclusive (February 23, 2005): W5-74–W5-85.

  19. Higher Spending Does Not Necessarily Lead to Higher Quality Source: Baicker and Chandra (Health Affairs 2004)

  20. Benefits of Human Genome Project

  21. Annualized Growth of the NIH Budget, 1971 to 2005 (The growth rates shown have been adjusted for inflation) Loscalzo J. NEJM, 2006;354:1665-1667

  22. As the NIH budget flattens, competition for grants escalates

  23. “Will – Isn’t this so-called paradigm shift just a back door attempt to market a socialized medicine scheme?”

  24. Income inequality and life expectancy at birth among industrialised countries Less inequality More inequality De Vogli, R. et al. J Epidemiol Community Health 2005;59:158-162

  25. Pathways by which Socioeconomic Status Affects Health Behaviors

  26. Impact of social factors on risk of hypertension and diabetes NHANES III 1988-1994

  27. www.macses.ucsf.edu Accessed June 5, 2008

  28. Policies that impact income and wealth distribution, educational attainment and occupational mobility. • Educational policies • Fiscal policies • Skills training policies • Policies that buffer individuals from the damaging conditions of living below the top rungs of the socioeconomic ladder. • Policies affecting the environment • Policies affecting the workplace • Policies enabling healthier behaviors Two kinds of policies are required to reducepremature death and eliminate health disparities:

  29. Recent study examined Medicare claims over the past two decades for evidence of racial and geographic disparities in several indicators of health care quality • Sixty-four percent of white women ages 65 to 69 received recommended breast cancer screenings in 2004 and 2005, compared with 57% of black women, while screening rates by state ranged from 74% in Maine to 56.9% in Mississippi (Wilde Mathews, Wall Street Journal, 6/5); • In all but two states, blacks with diabetes were less likely than whites to receive annual hemoglobin testing, and in Colorado, 66% of blacks were screened, compared with 88% of blacks in Massachusetts (New York Times, 6/5); andBlacks nationwide had their legs amputated at about four times the rate of whites. Black residents of Louisiana, Mississippi and South Carolina had six amputations per 1,000 Medicare beneficiaries, while blacks in Colorado and Nevada had less than two per 1,000 beneficiaries (Appleby, USA Today, 6/5). Dartmouth Atlas of Healthcare, www.dartmouthatlas.com. Accessed June 6, 2008

  30. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Announces $300-Million Commitment to Narrow Health Disparities Across Lines of Race and Geography Disparities in the quality of care spur nation's largest health care philanthropy to attack the problem in 14 communities across America June 5, 2008

  31. Aligning Forces for Quality will concentrate its resources in 14 communities across the country: Cincinnati, Ohio Cleveland, Ohio Detroit, Mich. Humboldt County, Calif. Kansas City, Mo. Maine Memphis, Tenn. Minnesota Seattle, Wash. South Central Pennsylvania Western Michigan Western New York Willamette Valley, Ore. Wisconsin

  32. “If you don’t know where you are going, you might wind up somewhere else.” Yogi Berra

  33. Revised definition of health: A condition of physical, mental, spiritual, and social well-being arrived at through a balance of prevention, health education and health protection, culminating in an enhanced socially and economically productive life. World Health Organization, 1948 Downie, Fyfe, and Tannahill, 1990 Saracci, 1997

  34. Are we ready for a paradigm shift?

  35. In order to resolve health care disparities, we must pay attention to the broader social forces that influence health. We must recognize that our health is intimately related to the health of our neighborhoods, and that health care should be tied to health promotion, the formation of healthy communities that provide a safe living environment, living wage jobs, affordable housing, and high quality schools. Conclusion:

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