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Public Health From Chadwick To Cameron
Pete Hill & Sarah James
Public Health From Chadwick To Cameron
• Back in Time to 1842….
• What is Public Health?
• JSNA – What’s One of Those Then?
• Data – Lies Damned Lies & Statistics?
• Health – The Makeover
• Public Health Outcomes Framework
• Need v Demand
• Conclusions
Back in
Time
to1842
Origins of Public Health “That the various forms of epidemic, endemic, and other disease caused, or aggravated,
or propagated chiefly amongst the labouring classes by atmospheric impurities produced
by decomposing animal and vegetable substances, by damp and filth, and close and
overcrowded dwellings prevail amongst the population in every part of the kingdom,
whether dwelling in separate houses, in rural villages, in small towns, in the larger towns
— as they have been found to prevail in the lowest districts of the metropolis.”
“That such disease, wherever its attacks are frequent, is always found in connexion with
the physical circumstances above specified, and that where those circumstances are
removed by drainage, proper cleansing, better ventilation, and other means of
diminishing atmospheric impurity, the frequency and intensity of such disease is abated;
and where the removal of the noxious agencies appears to be complete, such disease
almost entirely disappears.”
Edwin Chadwick Report...from the Poor Law Commissioners on an Inquiry into the Sanitary
Conditions of the Labouring Population of Great Britain [online source]. London, 1842, pp. 369-
372.]
“That the younger population, bred up under noxious physical agencies, is inferior in
physical organization and general health to a population preserved from the
presence of such agencies.”
“That the population so exposed is less susceptible of moral influences, and the
effects of education are more transient than with a healthy population.”
“That these adverse circumstances tend to produce an adult population short-lived,
improvident, reckless, and intemperate, and with habitual avidity for sensual
gratifications.”
Step Up John Snow
The Broad Street Pump – 1854
Golden Square cholera
epidemic
500 deaths
First mapping to indicate
extent and local of
outbreak - mapped
incidence and checked
facts
“Health is as a positive concept
that emphasises social and
personal resources, as well as
physical capabilities. It involves
the capacity of individuals to
function and to cope with their
social and physical
environment, as well as with
specific illnesses and with life
in general” (WHO, 1984; Baggott,
1994).
Health and its determinants
JSNA What’s One of Those Then?
Our health, our care, our say white paper:
• identified the need for directors of:
• public health
• adult social services
• children’s services
to undertake regular strategic needs assessments of
the health and wellbeing status of their populations
• Need for joint planning and understanding
JSNA What’s One of Those Then?
“JSNA is a process that will identify the
current and future health and wellbeing
needs of a local population… leading to
agreed commissioning priorities that will
improve outcomes and reduce health
inequalities.” Department of Health (2007)
Guidance on Joint Strategic Needs Assessment
Describes a process that identifies current
and future health and wellbeing needs in
light of existing services, and informs future
service planning taking into account
evidence of effectiveness.
• Identifies the “big picture” in terms of the
health and wellbeing needs and
inequalities of a local population.
• Assists commissioning services and
interventions that will achieve better health
and wellbeing outcomes and reduce
inequalities
JSNA What’s One of Those Then?
The Local Government and Public Involvement in Health Act 2007 Section 116 specifies that local authorities
and Primary Care Trusts (PCTs) produce a Joint Strategic Needs Assessment (JSNA) of the health and
wellbeing of the local community
“The Department of Health expects local
authorities to commission on an ‘any willing
provider’ basis and they will work to ensure that
voluntary, community and social enterprise
organisations are supported to play a full part in
providing services.”
Healthy Lives Healthy People December 2010
JSNA Data Inventory • People receiving housing benefit
• Number and proportion of households in fuel poverty
• Noise and vibration levels monitored by environmental health
• Information on food poisoning outbreaks – type, location and
number of people affected
• Level of flooding risk
• Proposed developments in the area that might affect population
health and wellbeing
• Houses in multiple occupation
• Housing condition (private sector)
• Overcrowding
• Number of unfit dwellings
• Number of Gypsy and Traveler sites and estimated populations
• Performance and other indicators on local social housing providers
• Perceptions of antisocial behavior
Other Contributing Data • Environmental Quality
• Air Quality
• Contaminated Land
• Private Water Supplies
• IPPC Permits
• Smoking
• Health & Safety at Work
• Accident data
• Young Persons at Work
• Cold and Hot Weather Risk Assessment
• Public Health
• Accumulations
• Filthy & Verminous Premises
• Nuisance Complaints
A Little History
NHS Timeline
5th July 1948
NHS Formed
1952
Prescription
charges
introduced
1950 New
NHS hits
budget
problems
1962 Enoch
Powell’s
Hospital Plan
introduces
Local Health
Authorities
1980 Black Report
finds health
inequalities
between social
groups
1987 Whitehead
report continues
Blacks work
1990 Community
Care Act Health
services now
commissioned
from NHS
1992 NHS Trusts
Formed
1998 Acheson
Report on Health
Inequalities
Health – The Makeover
Funding Department of Health
Public Health
England
Local
Authorities
Health & Wellbeing
Boards
Providers
NHS
Commissioners
NHS
BUDGET
£100
billion
Public
Health
Budget
£5
billion
Specific Public Health Services
Ring
Fenced
Grant
GP’s
Public Health Outcomes Framework
Main Aims
Increased healthy life expectancy.
Reduced differences in life expectancy
and healthy life expectancy between
communities
Four Domains of Indicators
1. Improving the wider determinants of health
2. Health improvement
3. Health protection
4. Healthcare public health and preventing premature mortality
Framework will operate from April 2013
An example There is an eight year
gap in male life
expectancy between St
Pancras and Somers
Town wards and
Hampstead
3.5
miles!
An example
a seven year gap in
female life expectancy
between Hampstead and
Kentish Town.
2 miles!
In Most Authorities
There is at least a 7
year gap between the
most and least deprived
Wards!
EH Indicators
The percentage of the population affected by noise
Fuel poverty
Smoking prevalence – adult (over 18s) Smoking prevalence – 15 year olds
Air pollution
Public sector organisations with board approved sustainable development management plan
Comprehensive, agreed inter-agency plans for responding to public health incidents
Mortality from communicable diseases
Excess winter deaths Diet
Falls and injuries in the over 65s
Housing & Health
• HHSRS
• Decent Homes Standards
• House Condition Survey
• HMO Licensing
Healthcare
Costs Community
Stability
Dangerous
Stairs
X Cold
Trip
Hazards
Falls
Access
Problems
Isolation
Loneliness
Stress
Lack of
Money
Pneumonia/ Heart
Attacks
Death
Access to
Burglars
Overcrowding
Damp &
Mould
Stress
Worry
Rubbish
Colds
Work
Absence
Asthma
Bullying
Truancy
Anti Social
Behaviour
Graffiti
Low Educational
Achievement
Unemployment
Drugs/ Alcohol
Sleep
Deprivation
Suicide Depression
Environmental
targets CO2
Crime &
Disorder Costs
Environmental
Clean Up Costs
EHP’s Need To Be…..
“Give me a smart idiot over a stupid genius any day.” –Samuel Goldwyn
“A business that makes nothing but money is a poor business.” - Henry Ford
Totals
Hazard
Expected Number of
Incidences Causing
Harm
Estimated Total
Costs to Mitigate
within the Stock
Expected
Annual Saving to
NHS
Damp &
Mould 70 £775,250 £28,113
Falling on
Level
Surfaces
etc
626 £241,072 £1,660,965
Excess
Cold417 £2,082,081 £7,101,366
Crowding
& Space 0 £0 £0
Falling on
Stairs etc4589 £1,551,082 £11,295,269
Entry by
Intruders417 £436,182 £182,238
£5,085,667 £20,267,951
Cost Analysis
Where Does Your Service Fit In
The Health Jigsaw?
Need v Demand Know your population
• How many people at risk?
• What is the structure of the
population at risk?:
• Age
• Sex
• Ethnicity
• What is the deprivation status
of those at risk?
Are You in a Position to
Say No?
In Conclusion - JSNA
And God said, 'Let there be light' and there was light, but the Electricity Board said He would have
to wait until Thursday to be connected. – Spike Milligan
.
•Identifies the most important needs within
a population for the wider determinants of
health
E.g. housing quality is more of a priority
than stroke
•Measures need (not demand!)
•Measures, understands and articulates the
needs of individuals, groups and
populations relating to the wider
determinants of health and wellbeing.
• Sets priorities for partners to work together
to address
“The price of a good sanitary environment and the control of pestilence is
eternal vigilance on the part of the medical officer of health. The promotion of
health in a community -in the home, at work, and at play - demands his
constant attention, in co-operation with the sociologist; and education in health
needs for its fulfilment a completely new approach, with teacher, psychologist,
and health officer in joint harness.”
“In fact, when the prospects of a true health service, relieved of the burden of
the medical care of the sick, are properly examined, one is amazed and
enchanted by the gleaming horizon”.
Nye Bevan’s Speech:16 September 1948,
to the Society of Medical Officers of Health
Public Health From Chadwick To Cameron
Pete Hill
Corporate Special Projects Officer
Welwyn Hatfield Borough Council
01707-357404
Sarah James
Chartered Environmental Health
Practitioner
Watford Borough Council
01923 278582