Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

Menu
  • About RWJF
  • Our Work
  • Research & Publications
View All:
  • Grants
  • Topics
  • Blogs

Health Policy

Public Health and Prevention

Prev | Next

Public Health and Prevention Two-Page Briefs

How Can Early Treatment of Serious Mental Illness Improve Lives and Save Money?

How Can Early Treatment of Serious Mental Illness Improve Lives and Save Money?

Serious mental illness incurs huge personal, social, and economic costs–including an estimated $193 billion a year in lost earnings alone. Early treatment and intervention for mental illness can improve lives and ultimately lower related health care costs.

Read the brief

Public Health and Prevention Two-Page Briefs

How Does Employment--Or Unemployment--Affect Health?

How Does Employment--Or Unemployment--Affect Health?

On average, American adults spend more than half their waking hours at work. For millions of Americans, a steady job in safe working conditions means more than simply a paycheck—employment can also provide numerous benefits critical to maintaining proper health.

Read the brief

Public Health and Prevention Two-Page Briefs

Why Does Education Matter So Much to Health?

Why Does Education Matter So Much to Health?

While it’s known that education leads to better jobs and higher income, research also shows strong links between education and longevity, reduced risk of illness, and increased vitality and school success for future generations.

Read the brief

Public Health and Prevention Two-Page Briefs

How Does Transportation Impact Health?

How Does Transportation Impact Health?

The U.S. transportation system can be harmful to our health, but it doesn’t need to be. While motorized transportation modes still dominate—leading to increased air pollution, traffic crashes, and decreased physical activity—opportunities abound to increase alternative transportation options that support walking and cycling, and improve health.

Read the brief

Public Health and Prevention Two-Page Briefs

What's New with Community Benefit?

What's New with Community Benefit?

Nonprofit hospitals are required to provide benefits to the communities they serve to keep a tax-exempt status. Nationwide, about 2,900 hospitals (60% of hospitals) are nonprofit and the financial benefit to these hospitals from being tax-exempt is estimated to be worth $12.6 billion annually.

Read the brief

Public Health and Prevention Two-Page Briefs

How Can Wellness Programs Save Employers Money While Making Employees Healthier and More Productive?

How Can Wellness Programs Save Employers Money While Making Employees Healthier and More Productive?

More than half of all Americans receive health insurance through their workplace. Increasingly, employers are complementing health insurance benefits by offering wellness programs that help improve employee health and productivity, lower health care costs, and boost the bottom line.

Read the brief

Public Health and Prevention Two-Page Briefs

Can Culture Change Offer Viable Solutions to Meet Increased Demands for Long-Term Care?

Can Culture Change Offer Viable Solutions to Meet Increased Demands for Long-Term Care?

Until recently, long-term care meant placement in an institution such as a nursing home. The “culture change” movement is transforming long-term care by promoting more home-like facilities and providing more options for consumers to receive care how and where they want it, in their communities.

Read the brief

Public Health and Prevention Two-Page Briefs

How Does Where We Live, Work, Learn and Play Affect Our Health?

How Does Where We Live, Work, Learn and Play Affect Our Health?

Our health is largely influenced by the choices we make for ourselves and our families. But the conditions in the communities where Americans live, learn, work and play also play an important role in people's ability to make those healthy choices.

Read the brief

View All Public Health and Prevention Two-Page Briefs

The Issue

Quality and affordable medical treatment is important, but staying healthy and disease-free depends even more on where we live, learn, work and play. Do we have clean drinking water, smoke-free workplaces and protections from health threats like pandemic flu? The answers to those critical questions play an enormous role in our ability to lead a healthy life.

The nation's public health system—our network of federal agencies and state and local health departments, as well as partners from the public, private and nonprofit sectors—exists to help us stay healthy by working to prevent deadly, costly, preventable diseases such as diabetes and heart disease and to ensure that we're prepared for emergencies.

But public health has never been funded in a systematic, strategic way in the United States. Federal funds are a mixture of population-based and competitive grants, so some states receive funding and others do not. State and local funding varies dramatically based on the structure of a state's public health department. This patchwork approach is further complicated by the fact that the current economic climate has forced many state and local health departments to cut budgets, reduce staff and provide fewer services for their communities. In 2009-2010, 40 percent of local health departments cut or reduced programs or services, including emergency preparedness efforts and preventive health services for pregnant women, mothers and children.

Ensuring a consistent funding stream for public health is just one step toward strengthening the nation's public health system. We also need to build the evidence for what programs, policies and services are most effective in keeping people healthy and safe. Smarter laws and policies—those that are based on sound, scientific research demonstrating their effectiveness, such as seatbelt laws and clean indoor air regulations—protect millions of people. Communities can also use sound data to help them determine how to improve health outcomes like mortality (how long people live) and morbidity (how healthy people are). And state and local health departments can use this data to help direct limited resources toward priority health concerns through proven programs and services.

Why This Matters

America spends more than $2 trillion annually on health care—more than any other nation—yet less than four cents of every health care dollar we spend goes toward prevention and public health. Tens of millions of Americans, especially those in low-income communities, still suffer every day from preventable illnesses and poorly managed chronic diseases. And despite our health care spending, the United States ranks 36th for life expectancy, our infant mortality is higher than that of many less affluent countries and health disparities persist.

Many of the leading causes of death in the United States are largely preventable, with 80 percent of the risk factors being behavior-related. Behavior choices such as smoking, unhealthy eating and physical inactivity increase the chances of developing deadly, costly diseases. But too many Americans are denied affordable, healthy food to eat, clean air to breathe and safe places to exercise. Americans at every income and education level should have the same opportunities to be healthy.

Public health makes staying healthy easier. From smoke-free air laws that promote clean indoor air to community farmers' markets that offer fresh, nutritious produce, public health lays the groundwork for the kinds of choices that ultimately help people stay healthy and prevent disease. Where we live, learn, work and play has a dramatic impact on our health. Everyone deserves an opportunity for a long and healthy life. Yet despite trillions of dollars in annual health care spending, millions of Americans live sicker, shorter lives because of differences in education, wealth, race/ethnicity, and where and how they live. Public health helps overcome these disparities in order to protect our nation''s most vital resource—its health.

Right now there are no consistent standards and measures across the country that let public health departments know how well they are doing. As a result, communities can't share best practices and can't be assured that scarce public health dollars are being spent as effectively as possible. One of the best ways to achieve a stronger, more coordinated public health system is by establishing consistent standards and motivating continual quality improvement, ensuring that every community—from Maine to Alaska—has access to the best safeguards for protecting and promoting health. The new national voluntary accreditation system for state, local and tribal health departments, set to launch in September 2011, will help ensure that people can expect the same quality of public health programs and services no matter where they live.

Policy Context

If we want a healthier nation, we need to find smarter ways to prevent disease and health crises in the communities where we live, learn, work and play. The public health system, comprised of federal agencies and state and local health departments, lays the groundwork for the kinds of choices that ultimately help people stay healthy and prevent disease.

Several states have slashed their support for public health preparedness over the last decade. This was one reason for the creation of the Prevention and Public Health Fund—a mandatory fund created by the Affordable Care Act (ACA)—aimed at assisting state and community efforts to prevent illness and promote health, so that all Americans can lead longer, more productive lives. The Fund represents an unprecedented investment—$15 billion over 10 years—that will help prevent disease, detect it early and manage conditions before they become severe. However, recent cuts by Congress to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention budget and other federal health programs are cause for concern. Moreover, local public health departments reported losing 29,000 jobs from 2008 to 2010, approximately 19 percent of the 2008 nationwide LHD workforce. To make matters worse, as the number of public health professionals and the resources available to them has fallen, preventable disease rates and the number of public health emergencies have gone up. A new, sustained public health paradigm is necessary to reverse this trend.

Public Health and Prevention Fast Facts

Federal Grants for Tobacco Prevention

Federal grants have helped to cushion the impact of state funding cuts, but some of that funding is temporary and will run out this year.

Read more

Vaccinations

Routine childhood vaccinations result in $50 billion saved annually in direct and indirect costs.

Read more

RWJF Program Areas

Public Health
Public Health

Learn How We Work Toward

Prevention
Prevention

Most Requested

Feature

RWJF Roadmaps to Health Prize

The RWJF Roadmaps to Health Prize honors outstanding community partnerships which are helping people live healthier lives. The six winners w...

Read more

Blog Posts

Scholars Pose Endgame Strategies for Tobacco Use

Do we need an endgame strategy to finally end the devastating hold tobacco has on its users? Scholars, scientists and policy experts grapple...

Read more

Feature

2013 County Health Rankings & Roadmaps

The County Health Rankings & Roadmaps can be put to use right away to help create a culture of health in your community.

Read more

Blog Posts

Stable Jobs = Healthier Lives

“Stable Jobs = Healthier Lives” tells a visual story on the role of employment in the health of our communities.

Read more

Feature

RWJF DataHub

The RWJF DataHub tracks state-level data, and allows visitors to customize and visualize facts and figures.

Read more

Blog Posts

Recommended Reading: Are Mammograms More Hopeful than Helpful?

A New York Times article raises the controversial question of whether the uber-awareness campaign about breast cancer led to more mammograms...

Read more

Blog Posts

Arguments For, and Against, a Tax on Sugar-Sweetened Beverages

Over the past few years, many cities and states have considered taxing sodas and other sugary beverages. At the American Public Health Assoc...

Read more

National Program

Forward Promise

Forward Promise is a new initiative focused on improving the health and success of middle- and high-school-aged boys and young men of color....

Read more

Blog Posts

Public Health Touches Everybody: Washington State's Mary Selecky on Accreditation

NewPublicHealth is speaking with directors of health departments who recently were accredited by the Public Health Accreditation Board. We ...

Read more

Blog Posts

How Will the Affordable Care Act Impact Public Health?

A new commentary by Dr. Georges Benjamin, president of the American Public Health Association, looks at how the Affordable Care Act (ACA) is...

Read more

Blog Posts

VIDEO: Alex Briscoe on the Future of Public Health

Finally, Briscoe talks about "the trump card" in achieving better health outcomes: the resilience of communities and individuals. Watch the ...

Read more

Blog Posts

Extending the Cure Releases Antibiotic Resistance Research

In recent years many bacteria have become resistant to drugs that commonly vanquished them, depleting a natural resource—antibiotics—that ha...

Read more

RWJF Home → Topics → Health Policy
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Email
  • RSS

Our mission: to improve the health and health care of all Americans.

  • About RWJF
    • Our Mission
    • Program Areas
    • From Our President
    • Leadership & Staff
    • Annual Reports
    • Newsroom
    • Job Opportunities
    • Office Location
    • Our Policies
  • Our Work
    • Health Policy
    • Prevention
    • Cost and Value
    • Leadership
    • All Topics
  • Program Areas
    • Childhood Obesity
    • Coverage
    • Human Capital
    • Pioneer
    • Public Health
    • Quality/Equality
    • Vulnerable Populations
  • Research & Publications
    • Find RWJF Research
    • Assessing Our Impact
    • How We Work
    • Data Center
    • RWJF DataHub
  • Grants
    • What We Fund
    • Calls for Proposals
    • Grantee Resources
    • FAQs
  • Blogs
    • Human Capital
    • New Public Health
    • Pioneering Ideas
  • My RWJF
    • Subscription Management
    • My Profile
  • Contact RWJF
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

© 2001–2013 Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. All Rights Reserved.