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      Covid-19: an Imperative to Bridge the Gap Between Medicine And Public Health

      editorial
      , MD, ScM
      Journal of General Internal Medicine
      Springer International Publishing

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          Abstract

          The gap between public health and medical care has not served us well. The current pandemic of the disease caused by SARS-CoV-2 tragically paints this picture only too clearly. We may have been able to avert this crisis, and certainly would have been better prepared to deal with it, if these two elements of our health care systems had been working smoothly and efficiently as partners. Medicine and public health share a common mission, the minimization of disease and the alleviation of human suffering. However, important differences have prevented their integration and effective working collaboration (see Table 1) both presently and in the past. 1 Table 1 A Brief Summary of Differences Between Medicine And Public Health (Adapted From 1 ) Characteristics of Medicine Purpose is cure of disease and alleviation of suffering in individuals Emphasis on treatment of illness Based largely on basic biology and biomedical sciences Uses deterministic reasoning based on pathophysiology Located in hospitals, clinics, and offices Characteristics of Public health Goal is the prevention or control of disease in a population Emphasis on disease prevention and early detection Depends on epidemiology and statistics Relies on probabilistic analysis and causal inference Based in organizations, mostly within governments and communities While medicine is essentially aimed at the diagnosis and treatment of diseases, the role of public health is primarily the prevention of disease. In medicine, reasoning derives from a fundamental understanding of disease biology and pathophysiology, and the scientific rationale for therapeutics, whereas decisions in public health result from probabilistic inferences based on counts and statistics of diseases in populations. Much has been written about this divide and its consequences, and multiple attempts have been made to create a unified infrastructure. 2 However, these efforts have been thwarted by separation of the public and private sectors, their funding, and the responsibilities assumed by each, as well as by differences in education and licensure of professionals and a history and culture that assumes that medicine must advocate for individuals as opposed to the “medical commons.” 3 In the past, there was less urgency to resolve these differences because almost everything needed to prevent major diseases could be accomplished through the public health infrastructure alone. For example, cholera could be prevented through sanitation of the water supply, tuberculosis via proper ventilation and adequate housing, typhoid fever through clean food inspections and handling, tropical diseases via control of insect vectors, and common infectious diseases through immunizations. However, now we are left with a different spectrum of illnesses that are not solvable by either discipline working alone. Presently, the major causes of death and disability are chronic illnesses, including heart disease and cancer, and modern global infectious diseases such as Covid-19. Chronic illnesses are largely the result of genetic factors, often pared with difficult to alter life style aberrations. Their control requires medical technologies for screening and early diagnosis, frequently life-long treatments, and anticipatory medical care for the prevention of complications. Public health is needed for population-based initiatives to facilitate screening and medical care, to foster healthy lifestyle choices, and to eliminate environmental disease factors. Modern global infectious diseases, as we are now seeing with the emergence of Covid-19, require an even more robust partnership. The medical care system must provide lifesaving treatment and be relied on for testing and early identification of cases. Just as importantly, it must also engage with individuals to encourage preventive measures. Flexner envisioned this over a century ago when he wrote: “The physician’s relationship was formerly to his patient—at most to his patient’s family—and it was almost altogether remedial. If the patient had something the matter with him; the doctor was called in to cure it……..But the physician’s function is fast becoming social and preventive, rather than individual and curative. Upon him society relies to ascertain, and ( through measures essentially educational) to enforce, the conditions that prevent disease and make positively for physical and moral well-being.” 4 This seems especially prescient now during Covid-19. However, it’s clear that medicine can’t deal with epidemics alone. Disease containment requires public health surveillance and early recognition of index cases, then meticulous contact tracing and quarantine when necessary. Mitigating and slowing the spread of the disease demands community interventions and education to implement preventive measures such as hand washing and social distancing. So as not to overwhelm the health care system, we need to create guidelines and standards, educate people, and provide planning for and distribution of supplies such as diagnostic tests, respirators, and personal protective equipment. As we see during the current crisis, public health and government efforts are also required to augment and support health professionals. It is sometimes necessary to license additional personnel and expeditiously approve and introduce new diagnostic tests and treatments. A strong alliance between the two fields is also required to inform the steps necessary to control the epidemic. The development of diagnostic tests and evaluating their accuracy can only be accomplished when studied in those with and without the disease in a representative overall population. Such population-based studies are also the most valid way to observe and document the characteristics of patients versus normal controls and the clinical course of patients with the disease so that the most discriminatory symptoms and signs, and prognostic features can be identified. This information then becomes the evidence foundation for timely diagnosis and prognosis, and the basis to inform the public about when to seek medical care. Community-based epidemiologic studies using validated tests can then quantify the true disease incidence and prevalence, and the presence of antibodies against the virus in both symptomatic and asymptomatic individuals. With this information, individuals can be informed about the average overall risk of disease, the risk in people like them, and the impact of the disease on society can be estimated. In order to target preventive interventions effectively, case-control studies are needed to understand those at most risk, including demographic, clinical and immunological characteristics, as well as behavioral, environmental, and community factors. So far, these data have been scarce in this epidemic. Thus, although an understanding of the biology of the virus and the disease is, of course, critically needed, the generation of knowledge outlined in the previous paragraph through these types of “shoe leather epidemiology” studies to identify the causes of the virus’s emergence and spread, and to inform and develop clinical and preventive strategies, is the linchpin for controlling the epidemic and for preventing its recurrence. If this integration had been accomplished before Covid-19 struck, and a balanced agenda for action and research had emerged as a result, it would have been possible to contain this epidemic early on. At the least, it would have been less threatening than it has become. The control of the epidemic in Germany and New Zealand was largely because of such integration. The spread of the virus and its consequences in major cities such as Seoul and Hong Kong were likely spared because of it. Narrowing the divide between public health and medicine is needed now more than ever before.

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          Most cited references3

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          Protecting the medical commons: who is responsible?

          H Hiatt (1975)
          The resources for medical care are clearly finite, but demands on those resources are growing rapidly. Of particular concern are the demands on those resources for medical practices of three kinds: those that pose conflicts between the interests of the individual and those of society; those of no value or of undetermined value; and those for potentially preventable conditions. Such practices must be evaluated in terms of social and medical priorities, and this requirement will become more urgent with the establishment of national health insurance. Who will make decisions is less clear, but it is not likely to be physicians alone. It is imperative that physicians and other health providers work closely with professionals from many fields, and with consumers, to ensure the availability and dissemination of information that will permit decisions that are in the best interests of society.
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            Public health and medicine where: the twain shall meet.

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              The Medicine and Public Health Initiative

              Abstract The Medicine and Public Health Initiative (MPHI) was created jointly 10 years ago by the American Medical Association and the American Public Health Association to bridge the nearly century-wide gulf between the respective disciplines. We review the history of MPHI and its growing significance in light of recent terrorism events. We report on current MPHI activities by examining three bellwether states—California, Florida, and Texas—as well as international sites. Upon its inception, MPHI was rapidly embraced and nationally disseminated. Sustainability 10 years later in the post-911 world requires renewed commitment by all collaborators. In order to meet the numerous health challenges facing our nation, from terrorism to chronic disease, and for MPHI to be successful, medicine and public health must work in tandem.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                aim2001@med.cornell.edu
                Journal
                J Gen Intern Med
                J Gen Intern Med
                Journal of General Internal Medicine
                Springer International Publishing (Cham )
                0884-8734
                1525-1497
                3 June 2020
                : 1-2
                Affiliations
                GRID grid.5386.8, ISNI 000000041936877X, Departments of Population Health Sciences and Medicine, , Weill Cornell Medicine, ; New York, NY USA
                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9298-9084
                Article
                5932
                10.1007/s11606-020-05932-w
                7269618
                6cf00296-c30e-42e3-b7e7-7a20b16c718f
                © Society of General Internal Medicine 2020

                This article is made available via the PMC Open Access Subset for unrestricted research re-use and secondary analysis in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for the duration of the World Health Organization (WHO) declaration of COVID-19 as a global pandemic.

                History
                : 24 April 2020
                : 18 May 2020
                Categories
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                Internal medicine
                Internal medicine

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