Abstract
Chronic diseases are the dominant issues for global public health in terms of mortality, morbidity, and cost, and they have been identified as such for >40 years. Despite their predominance, however, these diseases—cardiovascular disease (CVD), diabetes, cancer, pulmonary disease, mental health, and dementia—attract little attention in the public health curriculum and even less from the funding community. We explore the rationales that have perpetuated this inability or unwillingness to match need with effort. We examine 3 concepts that impede changing this relationship: 1) the traditional contextual view of public health that emerged, to be sure with great success, in the post–World War II era; 2) the failure of public health to transition to economic development as the goal of health assistance; and 3) the unwillingness of public health to confront social, political, and economic policies as the foci of upstream drivers of the public's health. We conclude with a discussion of the need for public health to expand its horizon and tear down the walls of the silos that inhibit the emergence of relevant global public health.
Highlights
Chronic diseases are the dominant issues for global public health in terms of mortality, morbidity, and cost, and they have been identified as such for >40 years
Modern global health assistance was founded on humanitarianism, and this received a boost as part of the post-World War II global order
Government global health assistance, international organization programs, and private philanthropic contributions flowed to the post-war problems, and grant-dependent schools of public health followed suit
Summary
Chronic diseases are the dominant issues for global public health in terms of mortality, morbidity, and cost, and they have been identified as such for >40 years. Government global health assistance, international organization programs, and private philanthropic contributions flowed to the post-war problems, and grant-dependent schools of public health followed suit. This recognition that the health patterns around the world had changed did not alter the behavior of either the donor or academic communities, especially in the United States.
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