Health promotion programs are designed to work with a priority population (in the past called a target population)—a defined group of individuals who share some common characteristics related to the health concern being addressed. Programs are planned, implemented, and evaluated to influence the health of a priority population. The foundation of any successful program lies in gathering information about a priority population’s health concerns, needs, knowledge, attitudes, skills, and desires related to the disease focus. At the planning stage, it is also important to engage schools, workplaces, healthcare organizations, and communities where the priority population lives and interacts to seek their cooperation and collaboration,
Finally, health promotion programs are concerned with prevention of the root causes of poor health and lack of well-being resulting from discrimination, racism, or environmental assaults—in other words, the social determinants of health. Addressing root causes of health problems is often linked to the concept of social justice. Social justice and health equity are the belief that every individual and group is entitled to fair and equal rights and equal participation in social, educational, and economic opportunities. Health promotion programs have a role in increasing understanding of oppression and inequality and taking action to improve the quality of life for everyone.
Historical Context for Health Promotion
Kickbush and Payne (2003) identified three major revolutionary stages in the quest to promote healthy individuals and healthy communities. The first stage, which focused on addressing sanitary conditions and infectious diseases, occurred in the mid-19th century. The second stage was a shift in community health practices that occurred in 1974 with the release of the Lalonde report, which identified evidence that an unhealthy lifestyle contributed more to premature illness and death than lack of healthcare access (Lalonde, 1974). This report set the stage for health promotion efforts. In the third stage promoting health for everyone challenged us to identify the various combinations of forces that influence the health of a population and community now within the context and consequences of COVID-19.
Stage 1: Sanitation, Infectious Disease, and Spanish Flu Pandemic
In the mid-19th century, John Snow, a physician in London, traced the source of cholera in a community to the source of water for that community. By removing the pump handle on the community’s water supply, he prevented the agent (cholera bacteria) from invading community members (hosts). This discovery not only led to the development of the modern science of epidemiology but also helped governments recognize the need to combat infectious diseases. Initially, governmental efforts focused only on preventing the spread of infectious diseases across borders by implementing quarantine regulations (Fidler, 2003), but ultimately, additional ordinances and regulations governing sanitation and urban infrastructure were instituted at the community level. The Spanish flu pandemic of 1918 infected an estimated 500 million people worldwide—about one-third of the planet’s population—and killed an estimated 20 million to 50 million victims, including some 675,000 Americans. The 1918 flu was first observed in Europe, the United States, and parts of Asia before swiftly spreading around the world. At the time, there were no effective drugs or vaccines to treat this killer flu strain. Government officials to prevent the virus spread and promote and protect peoples’ health imposed quarantines, ordered citizens to wear masks and shut down public places, including schools, churches, and theaters. People were advised to avoid shaking hands and to stay indoors, libraries put a halt on lending books, and regulations were passed banning spitting. By the 1940s in the United States, water and sewer systems were constructed across the nation. The regulatory focus had expanded to include dairy and meat sanitation, control of venereal disease, and promotion of prenatal care and childhood vaccinations (Perdue et al., 2003).
Stage 2: Lifestyle Factors and Chronic Disease
As environmental supports for addressing infectious diseases were initiated (for example, potable water and vaccinations), deaths from infectious diseases were reduced. Compared with people who lived a century ago, most people in our nation and other developed nations are living longer and have a better quality of life—and better health. While new infectious diseases (e.g., HIV/AIDS, bird flu, MRSA, Ebola, COVID-19) have emerged since the end of the 20th century and continue to demand the attention of health workers, the emphasis of health promotion shifted in the last quarter of the 20th century to focus on the prevention and treatment of chronic diseases and injury, which are the leading causes of illness and death. This change was stimulated, in part, by the Lalonde report, which observed in 1974 that health was determined more by lifestyle than by human biology or genetics, environmental toxins, or access to appropriate healthcare. It was estimated that one’s lifestyle—specifically, those health risk behaviors practiced by individuals—could account for up to 50 percent of premature illness and death. Substituting healthy behaviors, such as avoiding tobacco use, choosing a diet that was not high in fat or calories, and engaging in regular physical activity, for high-risk behaviors (tobacco use, poor diet, and a sedentary lifestyle) could prevent the development of most chronic diseases, including heart disease, diabetes, and cancer (Breslow, 1999).
With recognition of the importance of one’s lifestyle in the ultimate manifestations of disease, a shift in the understanding of disease causation occurred, making health status the responsibility not only of the physician, who ensures health with curative treatments, but also of the individual, whose choice of lifestyle plays an important role in preventing disease.
The Lalonde report set the stage for the World Health Organization meeting in which the Ottawa Charter for Health Promotion (World Health Organization, 1986) was developed. This pivotal report was a milestone in international recognition of the value of health promotion. The report outlined five specific strategies (actions) for health promotion:
Develop healthy public policy.
Develop personal skills.
Strengthen community action.
Create supportive environments.
Reorient health services.
In the United States, the Lalonde report formed the foundation for Healthy People: The Surgeon General’s Report on Health Promotion and Disease Prevention (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 1979), which sets national goals for reducing premature deaths (Healthy People is discussed in the next section). In the subsequent 50 years since the first Healthy People report, the focus on the root causes of premature illness and death now include an understanding of the social determinants of health. Choices individuals make about individual health behaviors are determined not only by personal choice but by opportunities or lack thereof in the places that they live, work, and play.
In 1997, the Jakarta Declaration on Leading Health Promotion into the 21st Century (World Health Organization, 1997) added to and refined the strategies of the Ottawa Charter by articulating the following priorities:
Promote social responsibility for health.
Increase investment for health developments in all sectors.
Consolidate and expand partnerships for health.
Increase community capacity and empower individuals.
Secure an infrastructure for health promotion.
The Jakarta Declaration gave new prominence to the concept of the health setting as the place or social context in which people engage in daily activities in which environmental, organizational, and personal factors interact to affect health and well-being. No longer were health programs the sole province of the community or school. Various settings were to be used to promote health by reaching people who work in them, by allowing people to gain access to health services, and through the interaction of different settings. Most prominently, workplaces and healthcare organizations