11.2.2. Public
health services
Public health
can be defined as the art and science of preventing disease, prolonging life
and promoting health through the organized efforts of society. It differs from
health services in its focus on the population and not on the individual, and
involves efforts by all sectors and levels of government. Primary prevention
aims at reducing or removing the cause of a disease or illness, while secondary
prevention seeks to identify individuals at an early stage of the disease, when
this is still reversible.
Many countries
have developed national public health strategies, inclusive of a set of goals
to be achieved. The strategies differ, reflecting the national context and
political choices, but they also have much in common, for example the
widespread emphasis on tackling inequalities in health. Comprehensive policies
to reduce social inequalities in health can be seen in England, Sweden, and at
local level in the Netherlands (Judge et al 2006). The concept of health
strategies has echoes at international level. In the EU, following the
Maastricht Treaty in 1992, eight priority areas were identified for community
action programmes based on the burden of the disease, its socioeconomic impact,
the degree to which it is amenable to preventive action, and on the fact
whether the programmes would be valuable and complementary to current practice
in the member states (Merkel and Hübel, 1999). These priority areas were
identified as: health promotion, cancer, AIDS, drug
dependence, health monitoring, injuries, rare diseases and
pollution-related diseases. The latest of the EU’s multi-annual public health
programmes ran from 2003 to 2008, and aimed at improving information and
knowledge for the development of public health, enhance the capability of responding
rapidly and in a coordinated fashion to threats to health, and promote health
and prevent disease by addressing health determinants across all policies and
activities. The programme’s implementation is overseen by the European
Commission’s Public Health Executive Agency.
No country has a
systematic procedure for making decisions affecting public health, or setting
priorities among different public health interventions. One exception may be in
the UK with the recent inclusion of public health intervention cost
effectiveness evaluation in the remit of the National Institute of Health and
Clinical Excellence. The methodology used for making decisions and setting
priorities in public health typically relate to population health status,
epidemiological data, burden of disease and, at times, scope for prevention.
Also important in this process, however less documented, are political
negotiations, pressure from interest groups and informal processes (Allin et al
2004).
Spending on
public health is extremely difficult to accurately measure and compare across
countries. The data suggest that, despite increased attention at policy level
and development of national policies, there has been an increase in funding
only in some countries, e.g. Austria (from 1.6% total health spending in 1995
to 2% in 2005), and the Netherlands (from 3.5% to 4.7%) (OECD Health data
2007). Very low levels of funding are seen in most countries, with public
health and prevention accounting for about 0.7% in Italy, to 4.7% in the Netherlands
and 3.9% in Finland. Spending on prevention included a wide range of programmes
such as vaccination programmes and public health campaigns on alcohol abuse and
smoking. It is important to exercise caution when interpreting public health
expenditure data: some public health programmes may not be accounted for, such
as those related to GP practice; public health activities may be coordinated or
funded by other ministries e.g. social and environmental sectors; and the costs
for some activities, in particular occupational health programmes, may fall on
private enterprises.
Several European
governments have moved mental health problems up on their political agenda, and
are showing signs of tackling the stigma, discrimination and health threats
associated to mental illness. However, spending on mental health varies widely
across Europe. Only five countries spend at least 10% of their health budget on
mental health, with the lowest levels of under 2.5% and 3% in CEE countries (McDaid et al, 2005).
A common
limitation in the area of public health policy in Europe is the relative lack
of evidence to support policy decisions and evaluate the effectiveness of
programmes. More research is needed to evaluate the effectiveness and
cost-effectiveness of public health interventions. Commentators have argued
that it is important to move beyond the ‘black box’ that describes the current
thinking of economic evaluation in the area of public health, and that the
mechanisms of economic appraisal can and should be applied to public health to
better inform policy makers (Kelly et al, 2005). One of the exceptions to the above limitations is
screening. In terms of mental health, while the evidence base on the
availability of cost effective pharmaceutical and psycho-social treatments
continues to grow, there are substantial gaps in our knowledge on the
prevalence of mental health disorders.