Released 08/07/2010
In his first speech on public health, Health Secretary Andrew Lansley has set out his vision for a new Public Health Service that will encourage society to work together to get healthy and live longer.
Speaking at the UK Faculty of Public Health's annual conference, Lansley explained the philosophy behind the new approach and outlined what the framework required to deliver more effective Public Health might look like.
The plans to create a healthy nation are centred on a whole new approach which focuses on behaviour change; and which goes beyond constraining the supply of illegal drugs, alcohol and tobacco, and begins to understand and influence the drivers of demand.
The framework of empowerment includes:
A White Paper, to be published later this year, will set out in more detail how the Public Health Service will work.
Lansley said: "For too long our approach to public health has been fragmented, overly complex and sadly ineffective. We want to free the system up - to create a framework which empowers people to make the changes that will really make a difference to the nation's lives.
"Working with communities and schools to develop young people's confidence and self-esteem. Seeing diet, exercise and education about drugs, alcohol and smoking not as an end in itself, but as a means to an end, to empower young people to take better decisions when young, so that they enjoy greater health and well-being though life.
"This is why we need genuinely local strategies, based in neighbourhoods and schools. This is why we need to throw off the old ways and start seeing people and families as a whole, using local voluntary and charitable organisations more, cutting across boundaries, encouraging innovation, utilising the power of technology, joining up professions and budgets and putting the people - not the system - at the heart of the strategy. Making us all accountable for results, not for processes.
"My vision is for a new Public Health Service which rebalances our approach to health, and draws together a national strategy and leadership, alongside local leadership and delivery and, above-all, a new sense of community and social responsibility.
"We will not be dictating the ‘how' when it comes to achieving better public health outcomes. But we will be very clear about the ‘what' - what we want to measure and achieve, such as: increases in life expectancy, decreases in infant mortality and health inequalities, improved immunisation rates, reduced childhood obesity, fewer alcohol related admissions to hospital, and more people taking part in physical activity," said Lansley.
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