Events Calendar

Mon
Tue
Wed
Thu
Fri
Sat
Sun
M
T
W
T
F
S
S
26
27
28
30
2
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
19
21
24
26
28
29
30
1
2
3
4
5
6
Neurology Certification Review 2019
2019-08-29 - 2019-09-03    
All Day
Neurology Certification Review is organized by The Osler Institute and will be held from Aug 29 - Sep 03, 2019 at Holiday Inn Chicago Oakbrook, [...]
Ophthalmology Lecture Review Course 2019
2019-08-31 - 2019-09-05    
All Day
Ophthalmology Lecture Review Course is organized by The Osler Institute and will be held from Aug 31 - Sep 05, 2019 at Holiday Inn Chicago [...]
Emergency Medicine, Sex and Gender Based Medicine, Risk Management/Legal Medicine, and Physician Wellness
2019-09-01 - 2019-09-08    
All Day
Emergency Medicine, Sex and Gender Based Medicine, Risk Management/Legal Medicine, and Physician Wellness is organized by Continuing Education, Inc and will be held from Sep [...]
Medical Philippines 2019
2019-09-03 - 2019-09-05    
All Day
The 4th Edition of Medical Philippines Expo 2019 is organized by Fireworks Trade Exhibitions & Conferences Philippines, Inc. and will be held from Sep 03 [...]
Grand Opening Celebration for Encompass Health Katy
2019-09-04    
4:00 pm - 7:00 pm
Grand Opening Celebration for Encompass Health Katy 23331 Grand Reserve Drive | Katy, Texas Sep 4, 2019 4:00 p.m. CDT Encompass Health will host a grand opening [...]
Galapagos & Amazon 2019 Medical Conference
2019-09-05 - 2019-09-17    
All Day
Galapagos & Amazon 2019 Medical Conference is organized by Unconventional Conventions and will be held from Sep 05 - 17, 2019 at Santa Cruz II, [...]
Mesotherapy Training (Sep 06, 2019)
2019-09-06    
All Day
Mesotherapy Training is organized by Empire Medical Training (EMT), Inc and will be held on Sep 06, 2019 at The Westin New York at Times [...]
Aesthetic Next 2019 Conference
2019-09-06 - 2019-09-08    
All Day
Aesthetic Next 2019 Conference Venue: SEPTEMBER 6-8, 2019 RENAISSANCE DALLAS HOTEL, DALLAS, TX www.AestheticNext.com On behalf Aesthetic Record EMR, we would like to invite you [...]
Anti-Aging - Modules 1 & 2 (Sep, 2019)
2019-09-07    
All Day
Anti-Aging - Modules 1 & 2 is organized by Empire Medical Training (EMT), Inc and will be held on Sep 07, 2019 at The Westin [...]
Allergy Test and Treatment (Sep, 2019)
2019-09-15    
All Day
Allergy Test and Treatment is organized by Empire Medical Training (EMT), Inc and will be held on Sep 15, 2019 at Aloft Chicago O'Hare, Chicago, [...]
Biosimilars & Biologics Summit 2019
2019-09-16 - 2019-09-17    
All Day
TBD
Biosimilars & Biologics Summit 2019 is organized by Lexis Conferences Ltd and will be held from Sep 16 - 17, 2019 at London, England, United [...]
X Anniversary International Exhibition of equipment and technologies for the pharmaceutical industry PHARMATechExpo
2019-09-17 - 2019-09-19    
All Day
X Anniversary International Exhibition of equipment and technologies for the pharmaceutical industry PHARMATechExpo is organized by Laboratory Marketing Technology (LMT) Company, Shupyk National Medical Academy [...]
2019 Physician and CIO Forum
2019-09-18 - 2019-09-19    
All Day
Event Location MEDITECH Conference Center 1 Constitution Way Foxborough, MA Date : September 18th - 19th Conference: Wednesday, September 18  8:00 AM - 5:00 PM [...]
Stress, Depression, Anxiety and Resilience Summit 2019
2019-09-20 - 2019-09-21    
All Day
Stress, Depression, Anxiety and Resilience Summit is organized by Lexis Conferences Ltd and will be held from Sep 20 - 21, 2019 at Vancouver Convention [...]
Sclerotherapy for Physicians & Nurses Course - Orlando (Sep 20, 2019)
2019-09-20    
All Day
Sclerotherapy for Physicians & Nurses Course is organized by Empire Medical Training (EMT), Inc and will be held on Sep 20, 2019 at Sheraton Orlando [...]
Complete, Hands-on Dermal Filler (Sep 22, 2019)
2019-09-22    
All Day
Complete, Hands-on Dermal Filler is organized by Empire Medical Training (EMT), Inc and will be held on Sep 22, 2019 at Sheraton Orlando Lake Buena [...]
The MedTech Conference 2019
2019-09-23 - 2019-09-25    
All Day
The MedTech Conference 2019 is organized by Advanced Medical Technology Association (AdvaMed) and will be held from Sep 23 - 25, 2019 at Boston Convention [...]
23 Sep
2019-09-23 - 2019-09-24    
All Day
ABOUT 2ND WORLD CONGRESS ON RHEUMATOLOGY & ORTHOPEDICS Scientific Federation will be hosting 2nd World Congress on Rheumatology and Orthopedics this year. This exciting event [...]
25 Sep
2019-09-25 - 2019-09-26    
All Day
ABOUT 18TH WORLD CONGRESS ON NUTRITION AND FOOD CHEMISTRY Nutrition Conferences Committee extends its welcome to 18th World Congress on Nutrition and Food Chemistry (Nutri-Food [...]
ACP & Stem Cell Therapies for Pain Management (Sep 27, 2019)
2019-09-27    
All Day
ACP & Stem Cell Therapies for Pain Management is organized by Empire Medical Training (EMT), Inc and will be held on Sep 27, 2019 at [...]
01 Oct
2019-10-01 - 2019-10-02    
All Day
The UK’s leading health technology and smart health event, bringing together a specialist audience of over 4,000 health and care professionals covering IT and clinical [...]
Events on 2019-08-29
Events on 2019-08-31
Events on 2019-09-03
Medical Philippines 2019
3 Sep 19
Pasay City
Events on 2019-09-04
Events on 2019-09-05
Galapagos & Amazon 2019 Medical Conference
5 Sep 19
Galapagos Islands
Events on 2019-09-06
Events on 2019-09-07
Events on 2019-09-15
Events on 2019-09-16
Events on 2019-09-18
2019 Physician and CIO Forum
18 Sep 19
Foxborough
Events on 2019-09-22
Events on 2019-09-23
The MedTech Conference 2019
23 Sep 19
Boston
23 Sep
Events on 2019-09-25
Events on 2019-09-27
Events on 2019-10-01
01 Oct
Articles

It’s All Public Health, and It’s Driven by Data

public health

“It’s All Public Health, and It’s Driven by Data” Article by Irv Lichtenwald,  Medsphere CEO & President

Americans are used to seeing California as a bellwether. Whether or not that’s a good or bad thing often depends on individual perspective.

But there’s less room for differences of opinion when it comes to housing and homelessness. With a booming economy that is now the fifth largest on planet Earth, California has also experienced a dramatic rise in homelessness in recent years. In Los Angeles County alone, homelessness has risen in three of the last four years, with a 12 percent increase in the last year.

The reasons for California’s uptick in homelessness are treated as obvious. Average rent in the LA area is now north of $2,000 a month, pushing many residents on the financial edge over the brink.

If nationwide data are any indicator, that’s a lot of vulnerable people. According to a widely referenced Bankrate survey, only 40 percent of Americans would be able to pay an unexpected $1000 expense with dollars in savings.

While Forbes would have us believe it doesn’t matter because Americans have broad access to credit in an emergency, there’s a truth beyond shilling for big banks that the magazine willfully ignores.

Living on the cusp of insolvency is a balancing act. Millions have little in savings because they exist paycheck to paycheck. Borrowed money and high interest rates just push the vulnerable past the breaking point and out onto the streets.

Maybe that cocktail of problems is why the ranks of the homeless in LA are swelling. Perhaps, in an unlucky month, the fridge stopped working and the car broke down at about the same time someone was diagnosed with diabetes and the rent went up.

Or maybe there was some of that and some mental illness or addiction thrown in just to further gum up the works. Misfortune is pricey in America.

And this is where Fortune, or at least one columnist for the publication, really fails to grasp the problem. People are not just borrowers, or renters, or consumers, or employees, or patients. They are all these things and more. When a serious problem occurs with any one of these personas and there is no cushion—time, money, support—to deal with it, everything suffers, including, sometimes especially, health.

Which is why there even exists the discipline of public or population health. Any tear in the fabric is potentially harmful. Public health seeks to prevent these lacerations.

“While a doctor treats people who are sick, those of us working in public health try to prevent people from getting sick or injured in the first place,” reads the About page on the American Public Health Association (APHA) website. “We also promote wellness by encouraging healthy behaviors.”

Among the practitioners of public health, APHA includes the obvious—social workers, public health doctors and nurses, health educators—and the less conspicuous—restaurant inspectors, as well as scientists and researchers.

Is this list complete? In addition to those professions that endeavor to improve public health, should it also include those with the power to dismantle it?

Maybe that’s a step too far. Still, healthcare is evolving from a system of treating illness and disease to one that understands the superiority—economic and otherwise—of preventing it.

“Knowing what circumstances a patient might experience, ranging from a person’s access to transportation to their food security or level of education, helps clinicians find easy-to-solve problems outside of the care environment that can have a huge and costly impact on a patient’s well-being,” observes Healthcare IT News in covering recent joint efforts by Waystar and KPMG to integrate social determinants of health into projections for high-risk populations.

“When we look at economic stability, how patients access healthcare resources, the access they have to primary/follow-up care … all of those areas for us are areas of risk and until recently we didn’t have much insight into them,” said KPMG principal Larry Burnett.

Maybe we didn’t have strong data, but anecdotally we’ve known these things forever—at least since Bono explained in 1988 that “the rich stay healthy, the sick stay poor.”

So, are we only now understanding in detail what contributes to good and bad health because we finally have tools to identify the challenge? Do we grasp that almost everything in a person’s life is a health component because we can control all those puzzle pieces?

Nope. Not by a long shot. But we are headed in the right direction.

Recall that decades ago there was almost no recognition of the impact of unreliable transportation on evaluation and treatment, little understanding of food deserts, scant appreciation for the deleterious effects of loneliness.

Now we know that most everything in life contributes to overall health, and the ubiquity of IT systems means we can start to track that data in meaningful ways.

Should healthcare be responsible for so many aspects of a person’s life? Not directly, no. We’re not talking about taking responsibility. Instead, many if not most patients don’t even know how their behavior may be negatively impacting life. Data can tell them what they might want to improve, even if they never do.

The bottom line on the public health approach to personal health is just that—the bottom line. As we’re seeing now, measles outbreaks, opioid addiction epidemics, diseases of desperation—all these and more afflictions have tremendous costs in both blood and treasure for American society.

Ultimately, we’ll decide that population health, as well as personalized and preventive medicine—disciplines that depend on and benefit from data—are both the correctly humane approach and the steps necessary to keep healthcare from overwhelming the economy.