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9781421433653 Add to Cart Academic Inspection Copy

Prevention First:

Policymaking for a Healthier America
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In Prevention First, Dr. Anand K. Parekh, chief medical advisor of the Bipartisan Policy Center, argues that disease prevention must be our nation's top health policy priority. Building a personal culture of prevention, he writes, is not enough; elected officials and policymakers must play a greater role in reducing preventable deaths. Drawing on his experiences as a clinician, public servant, and policy advisor, Dr. Parekh provides examples of prevention in action from across the country, giving readers a view into why prevention-first policies are important and how they can be accomplished. Throughout the book, he demonstrates that, in order to optimize health in America, we must leverage public health insurance programs to promote disease prevention, expand primary care, attend to the social determinants of health, support making the healthier choice the easy choice for individuals, and increase public health investments.
Describing the areas of common ground to be found in public health and prevention, even between the entrenched sides in the healthcare policy debate, Dr. Parekh establishes a foundation on which healthcare policy makers and advocates can build. Providing concrete steps that federal policymakers should take to promote prevention both within and outside our healthcare sector, Prevention First not only sounds the alarm about the terrible consequences of preventable disease but serves as a rallying cry that we can and must do better in this country to reduce preventable deaths.
 
Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The State of Disease Prevention
Part I: Prevention within the Healthcare Setting
1. How do you Insert Prevention into Healthcare's Value Equation?
2. Why is Strengthening Primary Care So Important for Prevention?
3. Where Should Healthcare Look Outside the Walls of the Clinical Setting?
4. Social Determinants & Healthcare: Is it Time to Go Upstream?
Part II: Prevention outside the Healthcare Setting
5. Personal Responsibility or Policy, Systems, and Environmental Change?
6. Why Do We Take Public Health for Granted?
7. Public Health Emergency Preparedness: The Great Uniter?
8. Is Global Health U.S. Health?
Part III: Road Ahead & Conclusions
9. 21st Century Urgent Challenges & Promising Opportunities
Epilogue
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