Leider Jonathon P, Castrucci Brian C, Russo Pamela, Hearne Shelley
de Beaumont Foundation, Bethesda, Maryland (Dr Leider and Mr Castrucci); National Association of County and City Health Officials, Washington, DC (Dr Hearne), Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Princeton, NJ (Dr Russo).
J Public Health Manag Pract. 2015 Jan-Feb;21 Suppl 1(Suppl 1):S66-75. doi: 10.1097/PHH.0000000000000145.
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) is changing the landscape of health systems across the United States, as well as the functioning of governmental public health departments. As a result, local health departments are reevaluating their roles, objectives, and the services they provide.
We gathered perspectives on the current and future impact of the ACA on governmental public health departments from leaders of local health departments in the Big Cities Health Coalition, which represents some of the largest local health departments in the country.
We conducted interviews with 45 public health officials in 16 participating Big Cities Health Coalition departments. We analyzed data reflecting participants' perspectives on potential changes in programs and services, as well as on challenges and opportunities created by the ACA.
Respondents uniformly indicated that they expected ACA to have a positive impact on population health. Most participants expected to conduct more population-oriented activities because of the ACA, but there was no consensus about how the ACA would impact the clinical services that their departments could offer. Local health department leaders suggested that the ACA might create a broad range of opportunities that would support public health as a whole, including expanded insurance coverage for the community, greater opportunity to collaborate with Accountable Care Organizations, increased focus on core public health issues, and increased integration with health care and social services.
Leaders of some of the largest health departments in the United States uniformly acknowledged that realignments in funding prompted by the ACA are changing the roles that their offices can play in controlling infectious diseases, providing robust maternal and child health services, and more generally providing a social safety net for health care services in their communities. Health departments will continue to need strong leaders to strengthen and maintain their critical role in protecting and promoting the health of the public they serve.
《患者保护与平价医疗法案》(ACA)正在改变美国各地卫生系统的格局以及政府公共卫生部门的运作方式。因此,地方卫生部门正在重新评估其角色、目标以及所提供的服务。
我们从大城市卫生联盟中地方卫生部门的领导人那里收集了关于ACA对政府公共卫生部门当前和未来影响的观点,该联盟代表了美国一些最大的地方卫生部门。
我们对16个参与的大城市卫生联盟部门中的45名公共卫生官员进行了访谈。我们分析了反映参与者对项目和服务潜在变化以及ACA所带来的挑战和机遇观点的数据。
受访者一致表示,他们预计ACA会对人群健康产生积极影响。大多数参与者预计由于ACA将开展更多以人群为导向的活动,但对于ACA将如何影响其部门能够提供的临床服务,没有达成共识。地方卫生部门领导人表示,ACA可能会创造一系列广泛的机会来支持整体公共卫生,包括扩大社区保险覆盖范围、与责任医疗组织合作的更多机会、对核心公共卫生问题的更多关注以及与医疗保健和社会服务的更多整合。
美国一些最大卫生部门的领导人一致承认,由ACA引发的资金调整正在改变其部门在控制传染病、提供强有力的母婴健康服务以及更广泛地为其社区的医疗保健服务提供社会安全网方面所能发挥的作用。卫生部门将继续需要强有力的领导人来加强和维持其在保护和促进所服务公众健康方面的关键作用。