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Commentaries

Operationalizing the ‘population health’ approach to permit consideration and minimization of unintended harms of public health interventions: a malaria control example

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Pages 244-257 | Received 17 Sep 2014, Accepted 09 Oct 2014, Published online: 11 Nov 2014
 

Abstract

To achieve elimination of malaria, both ‘populations at risk’ strategies and ‘population health’ approaches to intervention are required. While the ‘populations at risk’ vs. ‘population health’ debate is not new to public health, here we advance the discussion by identifying how the ‘population health approach’, coupled with concepts from theories of unintended harms, could be used to identify and guide efforts to minimize unintended harm associated with ‘populations at risk’ strategies, using malaria as an example. We begin by reviewing unintended harm and present the presumptive diagnosis and treatment of malaria clinical practice guideline (PDTM-CPG) as an example of a ‘populations at risk’ strategy for malaria control. We then consider the value of the ‘population health’ approach for identifying and minimizing cultural and economic unintended harms associated with the PDTM-CPG. We outline several concepts that are helpful in terms of the identification and mitigation of unintended harm. Specifically, the ‘population health approach’ emphasizes structural determinants of health that are key to enhancing intervention impact and reducing inequities, while theories of unintended harms emphasize factors that play into the selection and impact of interventions; namely, the breadth and depth of the knowledge base, contextual considerations, basic values, and the perceived need for immediate action. Finally, based on these key concepts, we identify practical discussion questions for district, national, and international public health planners and policy-makers to reflect upon when engaging in intervention design or adaptation. These questions are intended to maximize efforts to achieve malaria elimination while minimizing unintended harms.

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