As an associate medical officer of health, I was initially excited to see the title of the article in the June issue by B-Lajoie and Chartier,1 but as I read on, I had mounting concerns about the content. My initial concern was a lack of clarity on what additional public health training was being suggested for family physicians. This was compounded by a lack of understanding of what public health physicians do, and a very broad definition of the term public health that seemed to be work by a physician involving data, advocacy, or administration, irrespective of where it is conducted.
My first concern was exemplified in the following statement: “Family medicine programs [already] attempt to put some emphasis on public health training.”1 The authors fail to recognize the importance of terminology. While one can agree that family medicine training programs are increasingly emphasizing public health concepts in patient care, such as advocacy, health equity, and the social determinants of health, suggesting that this is equivalent to “public health training” discounts the specialized training of public health physicians.
The authors’ thought process is not unique; the term public health work has been increasingly used as a catch-all to mean anything that is “not clinical,” such as “working with data,” administration, advocacy efforts, or pet research projects.2 This is seen in the authors’ conflation of health care administration (a separate field) with public health practice, through their article’s references to the “complexity of the health care environment”1 and the “effectiveness of health care organizations [and] allocation of finite health care resources.”1 This creates confusion between the work of public health and preventive medicine specialists, and the work of other physicians, notably family doctors who, although not their primary focus, might employ public health concepts or engage with certain public health issues in their practices.
Public health practice commonly involves balancing conflicting agendas, evidence, and resources to determine optimal population health programming and policy. This work is often separate from the health care system, because health is typically influenced by factors beyond the walls of hospitals and consultation rooms. The suggestion by the authors that family doctors had a “primary” role in driving the 12 public health advancements of the past century further demonstrates a fundamental misunderstanding of the prevention continuum and the work done by public health agencies.3
For example, concerning motor vehicle safety, what role did clinicians play in pushing seat-belt legislation, stricter drunk-driving legislation, graduated licensing, or improvements to road design?4 Similarly, around tobacco control, besides providing counseling and tertiary cessation care, what role did clinicians play in creating smoke-free spaces, plain-package labeling, or tobacco taxes?5 History records these achievements as being those of public health physicians working in concert with multidisciplinary teams at all levels of government, in partnership with non–health care stakeholders (politicians, school boards, civil society, private sector, etc). This work created the societal contexts that resulted in improved community health.
The authors also contend that the Canadian public health sector “needs to better engage physicians”1 in becoming advocates. In promoting the health of the community, to what extent should public health focus on engaging primary care versus other sectors?6 Indeed, public health already has robust interactions with primary care around screening and vaccination. If anything, save for surveillance and preventive services, public health agencies and family physicians often have different goals. The work of public health is to keep people out of the health care system, while family doctors represent the first point of entry to the health care system.7
The authors also continually state that public health physicians do not practise clinically, as though this is a bad thing. This leads to 2 additional points. First, just because some public health doctors do not practise clinically does not mean they do not have clinical knowledge. The Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada expects public health physicians to bridge their knowledge of biomedical sciences and diseases with a public health skill set to promote and protect health at a population level.8 Second, evidence on what makes Canadians sick means that much of the work undertaken by public health physicians to protect and promote community health is necessarily nonclinical.9
One can readily agree with the authors that public health physicians and family physicians must be partners on certain issues. However, their roles and the extent of the relationship need to be clear; we must recognize that each specialty serves a different purpose.10 Certainly, linkages exist that warrant careful attention (eg, around vaccinations, screening, reportable diseases, and using population data in diagnosis). However, suggesting that family doctors should lead on broader population health planning ignores the training and primary work of their public health physician colleagues.11
To that end, I want to believe that the authors intended to call for better exposure to public health concepts in family medicine training, with the goal of improving the existing partnerships between public health and family medicine. Indeed, while I am grateful for the authors’ interest, I cannot help but feel that a better understanding of the real work of public health would have helped to clarify many of the concepts as presented in the original article.
Footnotes
Competing interests
None declared
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