Passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 marks an important step toward making health care available to all Americans. However, implementation of the legislation over the next decade faces organizational, political, and economic challenges (
Chronic diseases such as heart disease, cancer, hypertension, stroke, and diabetes now account for 80% of deaths in the United States and 75% of health care costs. In 2005, 44% of all Americans had at least 1 chronic condition and 13% had 3 or more. By 2020, an estimated 157 million US residents will have 1 chronic condition or more (
Health care reform legislation promises better access to screening and early intervention for chronic conditions for vulnerable populations. Similarly, advances in understanding the role of the human genome in the expression of chronic conditions offers hope for new treatments (
To lower the incidence of chronic diseases and thus the costs they impose on our society and health care system will require addressing the deeper causes of the increase in recent decades. Much evidence suggests concrete action that could help to prevent further increases in chronic diseases. We suggest 4 broad strategies.
First, the United States needs to bring its environmental and consumer protection regulations into the 21st century. Air pollution, especially in urban and low-income areas, contributes to illnesses and deaths from cancer and heart and respiratory diseases. In 2002, at least 146 million people in the United States lived in areas that did not meet at least 1 US Environmental Protection Agency air pollution standard (
Second, the nation needs to maintain and strengthen federal, state, and local public health infrastructure. In 2004, Frieden charged local public health officials in the United States with being “asleep at the switch” in their response to the growing threats from chronic disease (
Third, the country needs to offer new incentives to create a built environment that promotes health. Increased physical activity protects against several chronic conditions, yet urban, suburban, and rural environments often make it difficult to walk, bicycle, or use other forms of active transport. Government can help people make more healthful choices the default choice by modifying zoning rules; developing transportation systems that encourage active transport; and designing schools, workplaces, and communities that promote physical activity and discourage being sedentary.
Finally, the nation’s health care system needs to modify its practices to make prevention of chronic diseases a priority. This modification could be achieved by extending the reach of evidence-based intervention programs; strengthening community health centers; increasing reimbursement for services such as tobacco use cessation, nutrition, and alcohol counseling; and providing health professionals with additional prevention skills (
These 4 strategies offer several advantages. They rely on off-the-shelf science, reducing the necessity of additional years of research before implementation. Each contributes to improvements in various chronic conditions. The proposed measures can contribute to reductions in cancer, diabetes, hypertension, and heart disease (
Updating environmental and consumer protection, strengthening the public health infrastructure, improving the built environment that influences health, and making prevention a priority for our health care system have the potential to win broad voter and policy maker support. Although any policy reforms that threaten the status quo will be opposed by some special interests, these recommendations will benefit most people in the United States, save taxpayer dollars, and help the nation to achieve its health goals. Implementing the 4 simultaneously will help to achieve synergies that can accelerate and magnify their effect. By providing the leadership needed to realize these changes, health professionals can increase the likelihood that health care reform will succeed and that the nation’s health will improve.
No conflicts of interest are reported.
The findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Public Health Strategies to Prevent Cardiovascular and Respiratory Diseases, Some Cancers, Diabetes, and Other Chronic Conditions
| Specific Objectives | |
|---|---|
| Strengthen and update consumer and environmental protection | Reduce fat, sugar, and salt in food; reduce promotion of unhealthful food; reduce air pollution; reduce tobacco use; restrict expanded promotion of alcohol and tobacco to youth. |
| Support public health infrastructure | Strengthen screening for risk conditions; fund local and state health departments for sustainable, community-based comprehensive campaigns against chronic diseases; establish and strengthen chronic disease surveillance programs to inform prevention; prevent budget cuts that undermine infrastructure. |
| Improve built environment | Encourage walking, biking, and other forms of active transportation; develop design guidelines that support active living in schools, communities, and workplaces; use zoning to improve food and physical activity environments; encourage mass transit. |
| Make prevention a health care priority | Provide financial and organizational incentives for primary prevention by using evidence-based interventions; improve training of primary care providers; develop stronger links between public health and health care systems; strengthen community health centers. |