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A Public Health Action Plan to Prevent Heart Disease and Stroke

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Section 3. Recommendations: A Call to Action

Fundamental Requirements

The Working Group determined that two of the Expert Panels' recommendations were paramount and should be elevated above the others as fundamental requirements. These requirements address the crosscutting aspects of effective communication, as well as strategic leadership, partnerships, and organization.

Effective Communication

  • The urgency and promise of preventing heart disease and stroke and their precursors (i.e., atherosclerosis, high blood pressure, and their risk factors and determinants) must be communicated effectively by the public health community through a new long–term strategy of public information and education. This new strategy must engage national, state, and local policy makers and other stakeholders. 

    Together, these partners must help the public understand three basic messages. First, heart disease and stroke and related conditions pose a serious threat to the health and well–being of all Americans, especially (but not only) during the middle and older adult years. Second, prevention is possible by reversing community–acquired behaviors, risks, and health disparities. Third, the consequence of failing to intensify preventive efforts is steep escalation in the burden and cost of these diseases in the next two decades and beyond. Success requires a communications infrastructure that includes federal, state, and local public health agencies, tribal organizations, and other government agencies working in partnership with the media and other related sectors. 

    Communication and education are fundamental to achieving policy and environmental changes, which are strongly recommended in this plan. In addition, policy makers must receive the information necessary to appreciate the urgency of the cardiovascular disease (CVD) epidemic and the opportunity that exists to arrest and reverse it. Leaders in prevention have argued for more than a decade that a broad societal commitment is needed for effective public health efforts to prevent heart disease and stroke. This commitment will depend on critical stakeholders devising and adopting a long–range strategy to convey clear, consistent, and contemporary messages to the public and policy makers.

 
Strategic Leadership, Partnerships, and Organization 

  • The nation's public health agencies and their partners must provide the necessary leadership for a comprehensive public health strategy to prevent heart disease and stroke. 

    Appropriate organizational arrangements and sufficient support are needed to achieve effective collaborations among all major partners and to implement the plan. Public health agencies must develop the expertise to create and maintain strong partnerships to advance the agenda for preventing heart disease and stroke at local, state, and national levels. Both traditional and nontraditional partners, including many beyond the health sector, are needed to fully implement the plan.

    Strong and committed public health leadership is required to undertake and sustain major new efforts sufficient to arrest and reverse the nation's CVD epidemic. An agency with an appropriate mission, a tradition of relationships with official health agencies and national organizations of public health professionals, and extensive experience in developing and implementing population–wide and community–based health strategies could provide the necessary leadership. 

    Developing and maintaining effective partnerships requires that public health agencies acquire nontraditional skills and competencies such as knowledge of other relevant organizations and agencies and expertise in communication, collaboration, and negotiation. These skills are presently limited in many if not most public health agencies. When these limitations are overcome, other agencies and organizations in the health sector and in fields that indirectly affect health (e.g., education, agriculture, transportation, community planning) can become engaged in cardiovascular health (CVH) issues and activities.

Next Section: Recommendation for the Five Essential Components of the Plan

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Date last reviewed: 05/12/2006
Content source: Division for Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion

 
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