Americans tend to think of public health only during times of crisis. With
debates about smallpox vaccination and bioterrorism preparedness and the
outbreak of anthrax, SARS and monkeypox, recent memory has given Americans
plenty of occasions to see the nation's public health community in action.
The success that health officials had in containing these health
emergencies gives the impression of a robust public health infrastructure. These
recent successes belie the reality that the nation's public health is in a
fragile, precarious state after years of financial and political neglect.
Although controlling infectious diseases and responding to acts of
bioterrorism have garnered the most public attention, they are only two of the
functions of state and municipal public health departments.
In the post-September 11 climate, bioterrorism preparedness has received
significant funding from the federal government. In January 2002, the Department
of Health and Human Services announced $1.1 billion in grants to state and
municipal health departments to shore up their capabilities to respond to
bioterrorism. The 2004 budget proposes to give HHS $3.6 billion to prevent and
to combat bioterrorism.
The infusion of federal funds and its well-meaning emphasis on
bioterrorism is, however, having unintended consequences. The availability of
federal funds has become an excuse for cash-strapped states to cut their funding
for public health programs. And these state cuts stand to immediately affect
more people than the federal funds will help.
The emphasis on bioterrorism has compromised the overall effectiveness of
the public health system by forcing it to divert funds, resources and manpower
from chronic diseases and health promotion programs.
For instance, the rural Larimer County, Colo., health department gained
$100,000 in federal bioterrorism funds but lost $700,000 in state funds. The
result? It gained 1.4 positions to fight bioterrorism but had to cut 15 other
positions that affected family planning and child immunization programs, leaving
200 women without access to birth control and more than a thousand children
without their needed immunizations. In a referendum in the November 2002
election, the county asked its residents to consider a tax increase to offset
the state funds lost by the health department. The proposal was voted down.
Small towns are not the only ones affected. Los Angeles received $28
million for bioterrorism preparedness in 2002, but it still expects to run an
$800 million deficit for the next three years. It has already closed 16 health
centers and school clinics, and has considered shutting two of its six public
hospitals, eliminating more than 455,000 patient visits. Only a taxpayer-backed
bailout in the November 2002 election keeps the two hospitals operating.
At a time when public health departments are being asked to do more, they
are losing much needed funds and resources, and the funds that are available are
not being directed to the programs where they are most urgently required.
Adrienne LeBailly, the director of the Larimer County health department, told
the American Medical Association, "It would have been nice to have the
bioterrorism money to enhance the services that we used to have. ... At this
point, I feel like we've been hurt more. I certainly wasn't expecting to have a
weaker public health infrastructure than we had before 9/11."
While bioterrorism preparedness can serve as a catalyst for the reform of
the U.S. public health infrastructure, there has to be a recognition that public
health work also involves the protection of community health, the prevention of
disease and injury, the promotion of health, and the surveillance of disease
incidence and health factors.
In studying the nation's public health efforts, the Institute of Medicine
described the system as ready for a major overhaul that would recognize the many
determinants of good health, that would strengthen the governmental structure of
public health, that would recognize more than just government efforts can
contribute to public health, and that would enhance communication across all of
the many contributors to the public health enterprise.
The recommendations might sound very different from preparing for a
bioterrorist attack. And they are. These recommendations are meant to create an
effective and responsive public health system for the long term. The provision
of funds for bioterrorism preparedness addresses a short-term need, but neglects
the pressing, systematic reforms that can not be delayed any longer.
D. George Joseph studies the history of public health at the Yale School
of Medicine.
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is for general information purposes only and is not to be construed as
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construed or intended as providing medical or legal advice. The decision
whether or not to vaccinate is an important and complex issue and should
be made by you, and you alone, in consultation with your health care
provider.
"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
"Who gets to decide what the greater good is and how many will be sacrificed to it?"