Thursday, August 19, 2010

Winnable Battles

Public health practitioners are justifiably proud of the improvements in health status over the past 100 years. In fact, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has generated a list of the ten greatest public health achievements from 1900 to 1999. Major achievement areas include immunizations, tobacco, motor-vehicle safety, and control of infectious diseases, among others.

Now, ten years into the 21st century, those of us practicing public health must ask ourselves about our progress in this century. My sense is that we’ve made relatively slim headway in the past decade. Indeed, the end of the 20th century saw an unprecedented and largely unabated rise in childhood and adult obesity, and the beginning of the 21st century has seen deadly global outbreaks of SARS and novel H1N1 flu. Rates of tobacco use are still hovering around 20% here in the United States, and far higher in many other countries.

So, where do we go from here? Well, the CDC has offered a relatively new way of thinking about our 21st century health challenges. They have coined the term “winnable battles” to describe “public health priorities with large-scale impact on health and with known, effective strategies to intervene.” Winnable battle areas include HIV, motor vehicle injuries, obesity/nutrition/physical activity/food safety, healthcare associated infections, teen pregnancy and tobacco.

Interestingly, several winnable battle areas (i.e., tobacco and motor vehicle injuries) also show up on the list of the 20th century ten greatest public health achievements. Be that as it may, I think it is wise to generate a “winnable battle” list. It provides a clear health agenda for health departments, community-based organizations, and others interested in wide-scale health improvement.

For Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders though, I would add two additional winnable battles:

1. Screening and referring to medical care those individuals with chronic hepatitis B infection; and,

2. Increasing rates of screening for breast, cervical and colon cancer;

One in ten Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders carries the hepatitis B virus (HBV), a major cause of liver cancer. Most are unaware of their infection. A simple blood test can detect the presence of the virus, and there is now treatment that can decrease the likelihood of serious liver disease due to HBV infection.

Studies indicate that Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders do not receive preventive screenings for breast, cervical and colon cancer as often as non-Hispanic whites. The scientific literature now includes proven interventions to increase screening rates for these cancers among AAPIs.

A focus on winnable battles is efficient and sensible. We must act on this knowledge. Let’s hope that our collective legacy includes success in these areas.

Doug Hirano, MPH, APCA Executive Director

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