Home
Learn More About CoH
Visit CoH Library
Explore CoH Communities
Contribute to CoH Blog
Get Involved

Archive for November, 2009

Build or buy health?

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

Neighborhoods matter to health. Here are two very different approaches to make sure where you live is healthy…

Move to a Healthy Neighborhood: “You’re planning to move, and you’re sure you’ve thought of everything: a good school system, affordable property taxes, a manageable commute. But what about your health? A study published this month in Archives of Internal Medicine found that living in a healthy neighborhood—defined as one that encourages you to ditch the car keys, get moving, and eat more healthfully—may lower the risk of developing type 2 diabetes by 38 percent… Here are some specific things to look for to make your next neighborhood a healthy one.” — full story in U.S. News & World Report, October 28, 2009

Or, Get Your Neighborhood Moving: “Exercise more. Avoid junk food. Such common-sense health advice has proved no match against the temptations of modern life, which have sent obesity rates around the world soaring. Now, government officials in a number of countries are pursing an aggressive new strategy: enlisting entire communities to insulate people from these temptations and make healthier choices easier…. [A] community-based approach to fighting obesity is probably the most promising policy available, experts say. ‘What works is durable, long-lasting changes in habits,’ says Monique Romon, a professor of medicine at Université Lille 2 and the lead researcher of the study on Fleurbaix and Laventie. ‘That’s why community action is so important.’” — full story in The Wall Street Journal, November 10, 2009

Seeing below the surface

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

San Francisco’s health department is using medical records and epidemiological tools to map AIDS “hot spots,” areas of the city that have the highest intensity of H.I.V. viral loads and are therefore most susceptible to spread of the disease. The effort is groundbreaking in a number of ways.

 

First, while many communities count the number of H.I.V./AIDS cases in a geographical area, San Francisco uses viral load data – the number of viral particles in patients’ bloodstreams – to track not just where the virus exists but where infection levels are highest and most likely to circulate.

 

This shift is significant, according to a story in last week’s The New York Times, because it might help officials stop transmission of the disease by focusing on “the deepest reservoirs of H.I.V.” It is like moving from the surface of the water to the water’s depths.

 

“We’re taking an individual marker and making it a marker for community health,” said Dr. Grant Colfax, director of H.I.V. prevention and research in the city’s Department of Public Health.

 

Second, the maps provide a credible and actionable fact set that confirms what some had long suspected: In a city with more than 15,000 reported cases of H.I.V./AIDS, the new findings show that the highest viral loads are among African-American, homeless and transgender individuals.

 

“This scientific evidence supports the community’s notion,” said James Loyce, executive director of Black Coalition on AIDS in San Francisco. He noted that some areas of the city have felt “benign neglect,” suspecting that services were geared to the Castro, where more H.I.V.-infected people live.

 

“These hot spots are perpetuating themselves, increasing infection in marginalized communities,” said Dr. Julio Montaner, president of the International AIDS Society and head of the division of AIDS at the University of British Columbia. “As long as we don’t deal with that problem, the reservoir of H.I.V. will ensure that we’re promoting the continued spread of H.I.V. in perpetuity.”

 

Finally, the maps provide something less concrete, though perhaps most valuable: they force us to think beyond previous assumptions and consider completely new possibilities. As noted in the Times’ article, “The city’s decisions on how to act on the new information will be controversial. Officials must decide whether to shift services, create pocketed marketing campaigns or go directly to the individuals with the highest viral load and offer them appropriate care.”

 

“I think we’re asking the right questions,” said Dr. Colfax. “Now the issue is, What are the answers?” Sometimes the best answer to new questions is more new questions.