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Bosse Pettersson

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Title: Bosse Pettersson


1
ORIENTING POLICIES ON HEALTH DETERMINANTS - the
process of target setting in Sweden 1985-2006
lessons to learn Public lecture in Graz,
Pallais Attems, 19.30, 8 June 2006
Bosse Pettersson Deputy Director-General
2
Process in 10 phases
  • Bringing public health back on the agenda
    Health for All Alma Ata (1978) and WHO European
    38 targets
  • Plans, programmes, plans, programmes, plans,
  • Supporting and establishing regional and local
    capacity
  • Moving outside the health and medical care system
    re-establishing a Swedish National institute of
    Public Health - SNIPH (1992)
  • Professional training master programmes in
    public health gradually reaching out in other
    sectors
  • The policy process and high level political
    involvement the understanding of what
    deteremines health in contemporary societies, not
    to forget the historical context
  • Health objectives and targets set as determinants
  • Focus on monitoring and evaluation indicators
    of determinants
  • Re-orienting SNIPH to become the accountable
    central agency (2001)
  • Linking public helth to equity in health and
    sustainable economic growth

3
Is there a problem?
  • Health in general is very good
  • Among the highest life expectancy in the world
    both for women and men
  • Lowest smoking rates in Europe and worldwide
  • Alcohol consumption just below EU average
  • Low accident rates, especially among childen and
    in road traffic
  • Falling death rates up to age 65 in heart
    diseases
  • Improved survival in many cancer diseases
  • etc

4
But there are old and emerging problems!
  • Since the 1990s we have observed
  • Significant increase in sick leave, publically
    employed women by far the most suffering group
  • (Rapid?) increase in overwight and obesity among
    children and adolescents decrease in physical
    activity
  • Increased alcohol consumption and mixed drinking
    patterns
  • Increase in violence related injuries
  • Increase in fatal fall injuries among the elderly
  • Self reported increase in mental ill health,
    especially among childdren, adolecscents and
    women
  • Falling health life expectancy among women 45
    and older

5
In general mixed progress and failure
  • Health is improving in absolute terms for most
    people, but
  • for the least priveliged groups significantly
    slower
  • in relative terms health inequalities are
    increasing
  • Life expectancy beween municipalities and
    socio-economic status can differ up to
    approximately 6 years among Swedish men!

6
Is there anything to do?
  • Peopless well-being can be improved by health
    promotion
  • 85-90 per cent of the Swedish disease burden is
    caused by non communicable and/or chronic
    disesases, where premature deaths and
    disabilities can be prevented
  • Inequalities in health are not cased by chance
    the origin from systematic social unjustice

7
... and, if nothing is done ?
  • The next generation may be the first in modern
    times to experience shorter lives than their
    parents
  • It will pose a serious threat against the
    affordability of any well developed social
    welfare system
  • It has the potential to create unforseen
    political tensions in our societies health is
    becoming an issue of security

8
The Swedish National Public Health Institute
SNIPH (1)
  • Re-established 1992 (originally founded/operating
    1938-1968) for implemenation of prioritized
    health promotion and disease prevention
    programmes
  • Re-oriented 2001 to have a central position in
    facilitating, implementing, co-ordinating
    monitoring and evalution and further development
    of the national public health strategy
  • Directly under the Ministry of Health and Social
    Affairs
  • since 2002 a special Public Health Cabinet
    Minister

9
The Swedish National Public Health Institute
SNIPH (2)
  • Staffing and financial resources
  • 160 staff
  • Annual budget 2006 almost 100 tax funded (1
    9,4 SEK)
  • General 136 million SEK 14,5 mill
  • Note In addition,special funding for prevention
    of hiv/aids, illicit drugs and harmful alcohol
    consumption

10
Not alone state level
  • Besides SNIPH
  • National Board of Health Welfare
  • Swedish Institute for Infectous Diseases Control
    (SMI)
  • Swedish Medical Products Agency
  • The National Social Insurance Board
  • Swedish Work Environment Authority
  • National Institute for Working Life
  • Research Councils (funding) and institutions

11
Not starting from ZERO - building bricks in the
Swedish public health strategy
  • Modern public health and WHOs Health for All
    fir for purpose
  • Longstanding commitment across political parties
    although different emphasis and ideologies
  • Evolved as a concern on all political levels
    but, the regional a forerunner
  • Infra-structures for modern public health
    gradually in place from the 1980s state seed
    money speeded up the development

12
1. Historical
  • Long tradition of public health outside the
    medical sector since 17th century
  • Church
  • Popular movements
  • Public health institute est. 1938

13
2. Contextual 1 autonomous regional and local
levels WHERE PEOPLE ARE AT!
  • 21 County Councils/Regions (political)
  • All with community medicine/public health units,
    but mainly focusing on health and medical care
  • 290 municipalities (political)
  • App. 75-80 per cent with local health planners,
    policies and programmes

14
2. Contextual 2 local level
  • Municipalities the 3rd autonomous political
    level.
  • Initially health protection
  • Social welfare responsibility increasingly
    linked to health
  • Health promotion concept better understood than
    disease prevention

15
Professional training MPH programmes critical
to skilled workforce
  • Piloting started on national level in 1988
  • Established during the 1990s
  • Still increasing interest
  • 14 universities university colleges with MPH
    programmes (Complete or partial)
  • Well educated workforce in modern public health
  • Emerging employment opportunities

16
Why determinants as objectives and targets?
  • Politicians cannot directly prevent deaths and
    illness in cancer, nor heart diseases etc, but
    can influence what is behind the upstream
    approach
  • Inequalities overall priority

17
(No Transcript)
18
Model for national public health strategy the
principal foundation
National public health objective domains
Health determinants
Health outcomes distribution
Inter- ventions
Bosse Pettersson, 2003
19
Model for national public health strategy the
links
National public health objective domains
Health determinants
Impact efficiency
Health outcomes distribution
Correlation
Inter- ventions
Upstream approach
Bosse Pettersson, 2003
20
One overall national public health aim
  • To create social conditions that will ensure
    good health for the entire population.
  • Equity perspective on health.
  • To be achieved by implementing initiatives in 31
    national policy areas related to 11 objectives.

21
11 public health objectives
  • Participation and influence in society.
  • Economic and social security.
  • Secure and favourable conditions during childhood
    and adolescence.
  • Healthier working life.
  • Healthy and safe environments and products.
  • A more health promoting health service.
  • Effective prevention against communicable
    diseases.
  • Safe sexuality and good reproductive health.
  • Increased physical activity.
  • Good eating habits and safe food.
  • Reduced use of tobacco and alcohol, a society
    free from illicit drugs and doping and a
    reduction in the harmful effects of excessive
    gambling.

22
11 Objective domains in brief
One overarching aim To provide societal
conditions for good health on equal terms for the
entire population
9-11 Physical activity -Eating habits and safe
food -Tobacco, alcohol, illicit drugs, doping,
harmful gambling
Lifestyles and health behaviours
4-8 Healthier working life Sound and safe
environments products A more health promoting
health care system Effective protection against
communicable diseases Safe sexuality and a good
reproductive health
Settings and environments
1- 3 Participation and influence on the society
Economic and social security Safe and
favorable growing up conditions
Societal structures and living conditions
Bosse Pettersson, 2003
23
How to make it work?
  • a special Minister of Public Health appointed
    National high-level Steering Committee
  • sectoral responsibilities defined for more than
    30 national agencies by existing political domain
    objectives
  • public health integrated into daily business
    existing sectoral objectives and targets
    influencing health

24
Implementation by monitoring evaluation
  • INDICATORS
  • for monitoring and evaluation the policy
  • to be agreed by involved state agencies, and
    negotiated with local municipalities and regional
    County Councils
  • to form the base for the new Public Health Policy
    Report, to be delivered by the Government to the
    Parliament once each 4th year, first in 2005

25
Demands on indicators
  • Strong correlation to health.
  • Strong validity for the determinant.
  • Meaningful and possible to change by political
    decisions.
  • Be relatively inexpensive to admininstrate.
  • Stratified by sex, age, type of family, different
    geographical levels (including the municipal
    level), socio-economic group and ethnicity where
    possible.

Bernt Lundgren 2004
26
Monitoring and evaluation of public health
strategy
Public Health Policy report
Health determinants
Impact efficiency
Health outcomes distribution
Correlation
Inter- ventions
Info
Population Health report etc
Monitoring evaluation
system
Indicators
Bosse Pettersson, 2003
27
The Swedish National Public Health Institute
SNIPH (2)
  • Remit 3 major missions
  • Monitoring and evaluation of the public health
    strategy and facilitate its implementation
  • Centre of knowledge for effective health
    promotion and disease prevention methods
  • Overall supervision of selective preventive
    legislation in the fields of alcohol and tobacco

28
Tools for implementation
  • Determinants indicators with inequality and
    gender dimensions
  • Governmental directives to concerned sectoral
    state agencies
  • Health Impact Assessment (HIA) recognized
  • Datasets and planning tools for reviewing and
    integration public health at local municipal
    level are elaborated
  • Basic municipal public health data on the web
  • Local Welfare Management Systems (LOWEMANS)

29
Shortcomings and criticism
  • to vague, determinants are difficult to explain
  • to small resources allocated for general public
    health infrastructures
  • Intervention research is lacking
  • need training of exiting professionals in
    concerned sectors
  • lack of funding to municipalities and county
    councils where major efforts are expected to take
    place

30
Good practices work
  • traffic accidents speed limits, road
    construction, safe vehicles, bicycle helmets
  • high taxes on alcohol reduces health related harm
  • comprehensive tobacco prevention reduces smoking
    incidence and related illness and premature deaths

31
Public health increasingly a global and
international matter
  • EU
  • Public Health Programme
  • Health inequalities
  • Health in other policies agriculture
  • WHO
  • Strengthen public health
  • dimension MDGs
  • Non-communicable diseases
  • Alcohol
  • Diet physical exercise
  • Tobacco
  • Reproductive and maternal
  • child health
  • Mental health
  • Health Promotion Bangkok Charter
  • HIV/aids
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