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National Preventative Health Strategy

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Title: National Preventative Health Strategy


1
The Healthiest Country by 2020
National Preventative Health Strategy
Professor Mike Daube Deputy Chair - National
Preventative Health Taskforce October 2009
Acknowledgements R. Moodie, D. Holman, M.
Scollo, M. Swanson, D. Sullivan, S. Chapman, M.
Schultz, S. Allsop, Taskforce Secretariat, The
Age
2
What this talk is about
  • The Preventative Health Taskforce
  • Progress and process
  • Priorities for action obesity, tobacco,
    alcohol, national infrastructure
  • Comprehensiveness

3
Satius est initiis mederi quam fini
Desiderius Erasmus (1466-1536)
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SUCCESSES IN PREVENTION
  • Examples
  • Tobacco
  • Immunisation
  • HIV/AIDS
  • SIDS
  • Road Trauma

13
Road fatalities in Australia 1968 - 2008
4000
1968
1990 Speed camera programs introduced
nationally Compulsory wearing of bike helmets
(Vic) Black Spot programs introduced
3500
3000
1973 Seatbelt legislation mandatory nationally
2001 Alcohol interlock devices introduced
1998 Introduction of 50 km/h speed limits in
residential areas
1970 Victoria is the first state to introduce
mandatory seatbelts
2500
1976 Random breath testing began Child
restraint legislation introduced
2005 Expanded roadside drug testing
2000
1988 National roadside breath testing Speed
cameras introduced
1500
1989 Introduction of intensive road safety
advertising Zero blood alcohol for young
drivers Motor Vehicle Standards Act
1992 Bike helmets mandatory
1000
2003 Roadside drug testing (Vic)
500
1968
0
1971
1977
1983
1989
2001
1995
2007
1974
1980
1986
2004
1998
1992
1968
Source Transport Accident Commission 2009
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The power of comprehensive approaches
15
  • This means that between 1970 and 2007
  • 630,394 people were NOT injured, and
  • 45,557 were NOT killed
  • ..because of the introduction, progressively
    over time, of
  • seatbelts
  • speed limits,
  • alcohol limits and
  • enforcement relating to these road safety
    initiatives,
  • education campaigns, regulating safer cars and
    roads

16
current smokers Australians 18,
19802007males and females
Source Centre for Behavioural Research in Cancer
using ACCV and NDSHS data
17
WA 2008 Australian School Students Alcohol and
Drug (ASSAD) Survey
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Male lung cancer rates per 100,000 today as low
as they were in 1963
Sourcehttp//www.aihw.gov.au/cdarf/data_pages/mor
tality/index.cfm
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Death rates for COPD in men now as low as they
were in late 1950s
Sourcehttp//www.aihw.gov.au/cdarf/data_pages/mor
tality/index.cfm
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  • (The Government).. will treat preventative
    health care as a first order economic challenge
    because failure to do so results in a long term
    negative impact on workforce participation,
    productivity growth and the impact on the overall
    health budget.
  • K. Rudd, June 2008

21
Chair Professor Rob Moodie Deputy
Chair Professor Mike Daube
Members Professor Paul ZimmetProfessor Leonie
SegalDr Lyn RobertsMr Shaun LarkinMs Kate
CarnellDr Christine ConnorsDr Linda Selvey
The Taskforce was announced on 9 April
2008. Members have been appointed for three years.
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  • Purpose
  • To provide evidence-based advice to government
    and health providers both public and private
    on preventative health programs and
    strategies and
  • To support the development of a National
    Preventative Health Strategy.

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In its first 15 months, the Taskforce will
deliver to the Minister for Health and Ageing
  • advice on a Preventative Health Partnership
    between the Commonwealth and the States and
    Territories (provided in August 2008)
  • a longer three year work plan for the duration
    of its appointment (by September 2008)
  • a National Preventative Health Strategy (by
    June 2009).

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The Strategy will
  • Provide a blueprint for tackling the burden of
    chronic disease currently caused by obesity,
    tobacco, and excessive consumption of alcohol.
  • Will be directed at primary prevention.
  • Will address all relevant arms of policy and
    all available points of leverage, in both the
    health and non-health sectors, in formulating
    its recommendations.

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Consultations A broad range of participants from
peak national/state associations and local
stakeholders
  • Hobart ? Sydney
  • Launceston ? Adelaide
  • Darwin ? Mt Gambier
  • Alice Springs ? Perth
  • Dubbo ? Kalgoorlie
  • Canberra ? Melbourne
  • Brisbane ? Wodonga
  • Cairns

Indigenous groups including the National
Indigenous Health Equality Council Ministers
individual meetings State government officials
in all states and territories Round Table
thematic, with various groups and sectors
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  • 400 Submissions
  • Plus
  • Health and Hospital Reform Commission
  • House of Reps Inquiry into Obesity

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  • Why act?
  • Prevention of premature death and illness
  • Do we risk the next generation of Australians
    living shorter lives?
  • Improve workplace productivity and participation
  • Better allocation of resources (decrease
    overloading of the health, welfare and police
    systems)
  • The market as it currently works fails our health
    obesity is a commercial success and market
    failure

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  • Put together, smoking, obesity, harmful use of
    alcohol, physical inactivity, poor diet and the
    associated risk factors of high blood pressure
    and high blood cholesterol cause approximately
    32 of Australias illness

32
  • Obesity Current Snapshot
  • The number of overweight and obese adults
    increased from 4.6 million in 1989-90 to 5.4
    million in 2004-05.
  • Approximately 25 of children are overweight or
    obese, up from an estimated 5 in the 1960s.
  • The mean waist circumference increased between
    2000 and 2005, and weight increase was most
    pronounced in young adults, particularly women.
  • The total financial cost in Australia of obesity
    alone, not including overweight, was estimated at
    8.3 billion in 2008.

33
  • We risk the next generation of Australians living
    shorter lives

Prevalence of overweight and obesity in
Australian children aged 7-15 years, 19852007.
34
  • Recent trends in Australian children predict
    that their life expectancy will fall two years by
    the time they are 20 years old, setting them back
    to levels seen for males in 2001 and for females
    in 1997.
  • (As from Holman C and Smith F. Implications of
    the obesity epidemic for the life expectancy of
    Australians. Report to the Public Health Advocacy
    Institute of Western Australia 2008)

35
  • Tobacco Current Snapshot
  • Tobacco use is currently the single biggest
    preventable cause of death and disease in
    Australia
  • Smoking rates among Indigenous Australian are
    more than double those in the rest of the
    community
  • Almost one in five pregnant women report smoking
    during pregnancy, including 42 of teenagers and
    52 of Indigenous women, posing serious risks to
    the mothers, and long-lasting and far-reaching
    effects on their offspring.

36
  • Alcohol Current Snapshot
  • 83 of Australians are drinkers, and 1.4 million
    Australians consume alcohol on a daily basis.
    Overall per capita consumption of alcohol in
    Australia is high by world standards, with the
    country currently ranked within the top 30
    highest alcohol-consuming nations, out of a total
    of 180 countries.
  • Consumption accounts for 3.2 of the total burden
    of disease and injury in Australia 4.9 in males
    and 1.6 in females.
  • The annual tangible net cost to the Australian
    community from harmful drinking is estimated to
    be almost 11 billion.
  • It is also estimated that alcohol is responsible
    for insurance costs totalling 14 million a year.

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Taking strategic and sustained action can
  • prevent hundreds of thousands of premature deaths
    and chronic illness between now and 2020 and
    beyond
  • minimise the impending overload of the health and
    hospital systems
  • increase the productivity of Australias
    workforce
  • assist in avoiding the health and social costs
    that would otherwise be incurred
  • improve the health status of those who are most
    disadvantaged (especially Indigenous Australians)

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  • The Strategy supports people to make healthy
    choices become
  • the easiest
  • the most common
  • the most preferred choices
  • ..It proposes the close engagement of
    governments, health groups, industry and other
    stakeholders

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  • The Strategy sets out a phased roadmap for
    action that is
  • Progressive
  • Determined
  • Comprehensive
  • Sustained
  • ..over the next ten years and
    beyond

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  • Whats different?
  • Comprehensive approach issues, key groups, etc
  • Strategy phased, specific
  • Formula (adaptable)
  • Stretch targets but achievable
  • Governmental commitment
  • Responsive regulation

42
  • Whats missing?
  • Three issues
  • Havent solved all worlds problems..
  • (But starting point remit as given other
    issues addressed in specific and
    infrastructure.etc.)

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  • 2020 Targets
  • Halt and reverse rise in overweight and obesity
  • Reduce daily smoking from 16.6 to 10.0 or less
  • Reduce the proportion who drink at short term
    harm from 20 to 14 and the proportion drinking
    at longer term harm from 10 to 7
  • Contribute to the Close the Gap target for
    Indigenous people

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  • What difference will the Strategy make?
  • 1 million fewer Australians will smoke
  • Premature deaths in almost 300,000 Australians
    now living will be prevented
  • 330,000 fewer alcohol related hospitalisations
    can be achieved (at a cost saving of nearly 2
    billion to the national health sector by 2020)
  • obesity can be stabilised at current levels -
    reduce an estimated 1.25 million deaths..and
    save half a million lives between now and 2050

45
  • Obesity - 10 linked steps
  • 1. Drive environmental change
  • - throughout the community to increase levels of
    physical activity and reduce sedentary behaviour
  • 2. Drive change within the food supply
  • - to increase availability and demand for
    healthier food products
  • 3. Embed physical activity and healthy eating in
    everyday life

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  • 4. Encourage people to improve their levels of
    physical activity and healthy eating
  • - through comprehensive social marketing
  • 5. Reduce exposure of children and others to
    marketing, advertising, promotion and
    sponsorship
  • - of energy-dense, nutrient-poor foods and
    beverages
  • 6. Strengthen, skill and support primary
    healthcare and public health workforce
  • - to support people to make healthy choices

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  • 7. Address maternal and child health
  • - enhancing early life and growth patterns
  • 8. Support low income communities
  • - to improve their levels of physical activity
    and healthy eating
  • Reduce obesity prevalence and burden among
    Indigenous Australians
  • Build the evidence base, monitor and evaluate
    the effectiveness of actions

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Environmental change Key actions
  • create a new Prime Ministers Active Living
    Council
  • develop a business case for a COAG Active Living
    National Partnership Agreement
  • conduct research on economic barriers and
    enablers, policies and tax incentives to inform a
    national active living framework and action plan

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Drive change within the food supply Key
actions
  • develop a comprehensive National Food and
    Nutrition Framework
  • commission a review of economic policies and
    taxation systems
  • develop methods for using taxation, grants,
    pricing, incentives/subsidies to promote
    production, access to and consumption of
    healthier foods
  • agree a Healthy Food Compact between governments,
    industry and health organisations
  • introduce food labelling on front of packs and
    menus to support healthier food choices

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Workplace programs
  • Introduce
  • a national accord to establish best practice
    workplace programs
  • a voluntary industry scorecard, benchmarking and
    awards scheme for workplace health
  • nationally agreed accreditation standards for
    providers of workplace health programs
  • action research to strengthen effective workplace
    health promotion programs
  • a national workplace health leadership program
    with resources, tools and best practice
    guidelines

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School Programs
  • Ensure
  • HPE for all Australian children as part of the
    second stage of national school curriculum
    development
  • a requirement for at least two hours of physical
    activity per week for students K10
  • national program to support implementation of
    new curriculum, including guidance and
    professional development opportunities
  • expanded coverage of out-of-school-care programs

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Community Programs
  • Develop partnerships with
  • COAG to develop a national series of
    comprehensive 5 year intervention trials
    including in disadvantaged and Indigenous
    communities
  • ALGA eg local councils to adopt Healthy Spaces
    and Places planning guidelines
  • Community leaders to develop a new Healthy and
    Active Families initiative

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Comprehensive social marketing Key actions
  • work with states and territories to implement a
    comprehensive, sustained social marketing
    strategy to increase healthy eating, physical
    activity and reduce sedentary behaviour
  • build on the Measure Up and Go for 2 and 5
    campaigns
  • choose messages most likely to reduce prevalence
    in socially disadvantaged communities
  • provide extra reach to these groups

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Exposure of children and others to marketing,
advertising, promotion and sponsorship of EDNP
foods and beverages Key actions
  • phase out television advertising before 9pm and
    promotion to children and others of unhealthy
    food beverage products
  • develop and adopt an appropriate set of
    definitions and criteria for determining EDNP
    foods and beverages
  • introduce a responsive regulation approach to
    monitor and evaluate the impact of voluntary self
    regulation of childrens exposure to unhealthy
    food advertising

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Tobacco 11 steps for action
  • 1. Make tobacco products significantly more
    expensive
  • 2. Increase the frequency, reach and intensity of
    social marketing campaigns
  • 3. End all forms of advertising and promotion of
    tobacco products
  • 4. Eliminate exposure to second hand smoke in
    public places

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Tobacco
  • 5. Regulate manufacturing and further regulate
    packaging and supply of tobacco products
  • 6. Ensure all smokers in contact with health
    services are encouraged and supported to quit
  • 7. Work in partnership with Indigenous groups to
    boost effort to reduce smoking and exposure to
    tobacco among Indigenous Australians
  • 8. Boost efforts to discourage smoking in other
    highly disadvantaged groups

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Tobacco
  • 9. Assist parents and educators to discourage
    tobacco use and protect young people from second
    hand smoke
  • 10. Ensure the public, media, politicians and
    other opinion leaders remain aware of the need
    for sustained and vigorous action to discourage
    tobacco use
  • 11. Ensure implementation and measure progress
    against and towards targets

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Make tobacco products significantly more
expensive Key actions
  • Ensure that the average price of a packet of 30
    cigarettes is at least 20 (in 2008 terms)
    within three years
  • Contribute to developing and implementing
    international agreements
  • Introduce a national strategy to combat illicit
    trade of tobacco
  • .Australia is one of the lowest tobacco
    countries
  • in the OECD (16/18)

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Social marketing campaigns Key actions
  • Increase the frequency, reach and intensity of
    social marketing campaigns
  • Design messages and place media to ensure reach
    with young smokers and socially disadvantaged
    groups
  • This does require dollars -
    but just like any
  • good advertising we know it works

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Advertising and promotion Key actions
  • end all remaining forms of advertising and
    promotion of tobacco products, including where
    feasible, through new and emerging forms of media
  • amend legislation to ensure tobacco is out of
    sight in retail outlets
  • eliminate the promotion of tobacco products
    through design of packaging

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Exposure to second hand smoke in public places
Key actions
  • Amend current legislation to
  • Prohibit smoking in any public place where
    children are likely to be exposed
  • Ensure children are not exposed to tobacco smoke
    in cars
  • Protect against second hand smoke in workplaces
    including outdoor areas

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Regulation of manufacturing, packaging and
supply Key actions
  • Improve consumer information related to tobacco
    products
  • Tighten and enforce legislation to eliminate
    sales to minors
  • Governments to regulate design, contents and
    emissions and establish a regulatory body to
    advise on disclosure issues
  • Investigate the feasibility of legal action by
    governments and others against tobacco companies

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Encouragement to quit Key actions
  • Ensure state and territory healthcare services
    are smoke free, indoors and outdoors
  • Increase availability of Quitline services and
    resource Quitline to respond to enhanced social
    marketing activity
  • Ensure NRT is affordable for those for whom it is
    clinically appropriate

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Disadvantage Key actions
  • Major focus on Indigenous smoking, including
    placing specialist Tobacco Control Workers in
    Indigenous community health organisations
  • Support for other disadvantaged groups, such as
    people with mental health problems

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Support, monitoring and measuring progress Key
actions
  • Ensure public is constantly alerted to
    information about tobacco and the impact of new
    research findings
  • Establish a National Tobacco Strategy Steering
    Committee
  • Address current gaps in surveillance systems to
    ensure targets are met

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Alcohol 8 key actions
  • 1. Improve the safety of people who drink and
    those around them
  • 2. Increase public awareness and reshape
    attitudes to promote a safer drinking culture
    in Australia
  • 3. Regulate alcohol promotion
  • 4. Reform alcohol taxation and pricing
    arrangements to discourage harmful drinking

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Alcohol 8 key actions
  • 5. Improve the health of Indigenous Australians
  • 6. Strengthen, skill and support primary
    healthcare to help people make healthy choices
  • 7. Build healthy children and families
  • 8. Strengthen the evidence base

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Improve safety Key actions
  • harmonise liquor control regulations and
    implement best practice on nationally consistent
    approaches to policing and liquor control laws
  • increase available resources for policing and
    enforcement of liquor control
  • through COAG, develop a national partnership
    model of policing and enforcement

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Public awareness Key actions
  • develop a comprehensive, sustained national
    social marketing and public awareness strategy,
    building on current state and federal campaigns

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Regulate promotions Key actions
  • In a phased approach, phase out alcohol
    promotions
  • - advertising during live sport broadcasts
  • - advertising during high adolescent/child
    viewing times
  • - sponsorship of sport and cultural events
  • Introduce responsive regulation
  • - monitor the voluntary approach to alcohol
    promotions agreed by MCDS (April 2009)
  • - develop co-regulatory approaches where gaps
    in effectiveness are found
  • - introduce legislation if co-regulatory
    approaches are ineffective

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Reform alcohol taxation and pricing
arrangements Key actions
  • commission independent modelling for a
    rationalised (tiered, volumetric) tax and
    excise regime for alcohol that discourages
    harmful consumption and promotes safer
    consumption
  • direct a proportion of revenue from alcohol
    taxation towards initiatives that prevent
    alcohol-related societal harm

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Other initiatives Key actions
  • Develop a more comprehensive network of
    alcohol-related referral services and programs
    to support behaviour change in primary
    healthcare
  • Increase access to health services for
    Indigenous people who are drinking at harmful
    levels and support locally developed
    initiatives in Indigenous communities
  • Establish a multi-site trial of alcohol
    diversion programs

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Other initiatives Key actions
  • Protect the health and safety of children and
    adolescent brain development
  • Promote informed community discussion about the
    appropriate age for young people to begin
    drinking
  • Support parents in managing alcohol issues at all
    stages of childrens development
  • Improve systems of alcohol data collection
  • Develop a set of essential indicators on alcohol
    consumption, health and social impacts

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Infrastructure Key actions
  • Establish a National Preventive Health Agency
  • Create a web-based clearing house for
    organisational plans achievements and conduct
    periodic surveys of barriers and enablers to
    action
  • Establish a national recognition and awards
    scheme
  • Undertake a workforce audit and develop a
    workforce strategy

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  • Establish prevention as a priority for the
    Health Workforce Australia Agency
  • Implement and extend the National Health Risk
    Survey program
  • Develop a National Strategic Framework for
    preventive health research supported by
  • strategic research fund
  • research register
  • network of research centres

Infrastructure
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REACTIONS
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Health Groups
  • Very supportive
  • Some wanted more
  • Some minor comments re not addressing all social
    ills (rapidly countered by others)

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INDUSTRIES
  • Tobacco opposed
  • Alcohol largely opposed
  • Food/junk food support education, etc. oppose
    restrictions, regulation, legislation

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GOVERNMENT
  • Release September 1
  • Open for comment
  • Action already NPA
  • Minister By not acting we are killing people
  • Further responses later this year/early next year

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  • Sitting on our hands is
  • not an option
  • Rob Moodie

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The Healthiest Country by 2020
National Preventative Health Strategy
www.preventativehealth.org.au
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