For Immediate Release
April 16, 2007
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Contact:
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Paul Bonta
pbonta@acpm.org
202.466.2044 x110 |
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US Senate introduces bill to
train more
preventive medicine doctors
Preventive medicine
physicians are on the
frontlines of America's emerging health threats
Washington, D.C., April
16, 2007 – U.S. Senators Tom Harkin (D-IA), Johnny Isakson
(R-GA), Jeff Bingaman (D-NM), and Joe Lieberman (I-CT)
joined together today to take a major step toward stemming
the tide of America's eroding preventive medicine and
public health workforce. Their landmark bill, the
Preventive Medicine and Public Health Training Act,
introduced in Congress today, will ensure the nation has a
continuous supply of highly trained preventive medicine
and public health physicians to lead the efforts to
promote health and protect all Americans from today's ever
growing public health threats.
This is an especially
critical measure as baby boomers approach retirement in
greater numbers than ever before, obesity plagues young
and old alike, emerging and re-emerging infections become
harder to treat, and Americans face imminent threats to
their health and well-being from around the globe.
The bill will provide the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) the
necessary funds to train highly specialized public health
physicians in the skills necessary to lead pandemic flu
planning, bio-terrorism surveillance, chronic disease
prevention, quality improvement and safety in the health
care system, and health promotion at both the patient and
population levels.
"Preventive medicine
physicians – the only U.S. physicians trained in both
clinical medicine and public health – are uniquely
equipped to address the health needs of individuals and
populations alike," said Dr. Michael Parkinson, president
of the American College of Preventive Medicine. "We
applaud this bi-partisan group of health care leaders for
their foresight in protecting the nation's health."
A TROUBLESOME TREND
Preventive medicine's
mission is to protect, promote, and maintain health and
well-being while preventing disease, disability, and
premature death. This is becoming increasingly more
difficult as the number of preventive medicine physicians
decreases.
"Preventive medicine
physicians represent an underutilized and increasingly
threatened resource to meet the nation's health and health
care needs," said Dr. Parkinson.
In 1998, there were 90
preventive medicine training programs in the U.S. training
420 physicians. Today, there are only 76 programs training
an all time low of 364 physicians. At the same time as
this decrease, the Health Resources and Services
Administration estimates that between the years 2000 and
2010 the demand for public health professionals will grow
at twice the rate of all other occupations in the U.S.
"This decrease in the
number of preventive medicine physicians represents a
perfect storm of an aging public health workforce,
decreased funds for training, fewer training programs, and
fewer medical residents choosing to specialize in
preventive medicine," said Dr. Parkinson.
"Inadequate funding means
that many who choose this specialty must dig into their
own pockets to receive the specialty training the federal
government assures at no cost to all other medical
residents," he said. "The current system has built-in
disincentives to dedicating one's career to public health.
This bill will change that."
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ABOUT THE AMERICAN
COLLEGE OF PREVENTIVE MEDICINE
The American College of
Preventive Medicine (ACPM) is the national medical
specialty society representing physicians committed to
health promotion and disease prevention. Founded in 1954,
ACPM provides leadership in research, professional
education, development of public policy, and enhancement
of standards of preventive medicine. ACPM members include
physicians board-certified in preventive medicine and in
other medical specialties who have a strong interest in
health promotion and disease prevention. For more
information about ACPM, visit
www.acpm.org.
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