Abstract
Over the last 200 years, life expectancy has more than doubled in Western countries, from 40
years at the beginning of the 19th century to about 80, with improvement in health and life
quality. The widest gain in life expectancy was between 1880 and 1920, mostly thanks to
public health improvements like foods safety, clean water, sanitation, the large production
and distribution of vaccines and the study and delivery of important educational topics like
personal hygiene, air quality, or healthy housing. From 1920 to today, an epidemiological
transition occurred, gradually displacing the pandemics of infection by chronic diseases. This
led to a disruptive change in facing public health characterized by an increasing use of
epidemiological tools, data and a lot of information about population, to use to guide
intervention. Globalization further complicated the picture, creating connections and
interdependence among countries, increasingly related one another regardless of national
borders, in a growing context of economic integration, communication, cultural and travel
diffusion. This played an unexpected role in the burden and distribution of determinants of
health. Health care systems all over the world need a right governance and a high resilience
to promote the positive determinants of health and limit the negative ones: indeed, their
unmanaged distribution among the population seriously undermines the sustainability of the
system itself. A system is said to be sustainable if it meets the needs of the present without
compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. Long-term
sustainability of healthcare systems is not only about finance and affordability, nor about
efficiency and effectiveness; it also depends on different, cross-sectoral factors that can
rapidly change or interfere with one another. In the complexity described above, Public
Health challenge may be faced through two essential tools: data-driven decision-making and
stakeholders’ involvement. First, in the era of “Big Data”, healthcare organizations and
systems have to deal with the current growing amount of healthcare data. This means having
a wider picture of populations based on a broad set of variables. Consequently, on one hand
Evidence Based Public Health (EBPH) uses the data coming from the best available evidence
in order to standardize the public health decision making process in the intervention context.
On the other, personalized public health (PPH), uses data to stratify the population, in order
to address the right public health interventions to the right targets. Second, the engagement of
stakeholders is proved to contribute to resilience and flexibility, to learning opportunities and
innovation, to the identification of new opportunities, and to the improvement of sustainable
performance. The WHO Global Strategy for Women’s, Children’s and Adolescents’ Health
(2016- 2030) emphasizes the need to bring together many stakeholders as agents of change.
Stakeholders’ involvement can be fostered in 6 steps: first of all, there is the need to identify
stakeholders, secondly defining roles and resources per each of them; third, it is necessary to
detect dynamics among stakeholders; fourth, the optimal stakeholder group must be
identified; fifth, a stakeholder engagement plan must be created and, finally, the level of
engagement must be continuously monitored. This way of working requires the ability to
interact with many people, matching together different values and perspectives to achieve a
common goal. That’s why public health experts’ leadership plays a fundamental role in health
programs planning: leaders should have a vision of what can be reached and must be able to
communicate it to the others; they also should motivate people and manage the team
dynamics, being able to negotiate for support. Nowadays, it is proved that one of the m
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | 53 Days of Preventive Medicine - International Congress - 24-27. September 2019. Niš, Serbia |
Pages | 43-44 |
Number of pages | 2 |
Publication status | Published - 2019 |
Event | 53rd Days of Preventive Medicine International Congress - Nis, Serbia 24-27 - Nis (Serbia) Duration: 24 Sept 2019 → 27 Sept 2019 |
Conference
Conference | 53rd Days of Preventive Medicine International Congress - Nis, Serbia 24-27 |
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City | Nis (Serbia) |
Period | 24/9/19 → 27/9/19 |
Keywords
- sustainable development
- public health
- stakeholder engagement