DECEMBER 15, 2014 I S S U E F O C U S What It Is and What It Means for Health Grantmaking ELIZABETH DOCTEUR, Grantmakers In Health H ealth in All Policies (HiAP) is an emerging approach to public policymaking, grounded in recognition that FIVE KEY ELEMENTS OF HiAP the most important determinants of health are out- side the reach of the formal health care system. This Issue 1. Promote health, equity, and sustainability. Focus describes the HiAP concept, its history and evolution, 2. Support intersectoral collaboration. and explores how this approach is poised to influence priorities 3. Benefit multiple partners. and programs in the field of health philanthropy. 4. Engage stakeholders. ORIGINS OF THE HiAP APPROACH 5. Create structural or procedural change. The term “Health in All Policies” was originally coined by the Sources: Rudolph et al. 2013 World Health Organization (WHO) as a label for a set of ideas and proposed actions gaining traction in public health and health policy discussions. The term has come into usage HiAP approach first took hold in the context of European since about 2006, taking root first in European policy discus- health systems, where national health service programs and sions and more recently in the United States. social insurance schemes have yielded universal access to health Experts have long appreciated that population health services, but where, nonetheless, persistent disparities in health depends not only—not even mostly—on medical care, but between economically advantaged and disadvantaged popula- also on environmental, behavioral, social, and genetic factors, tion groups are viewed as fundamentally unfair and a risk to and on the complex interactions of these health determinants social solidarity (Docteur and Berenson 2014). through channels such as stress (Gottlieb et al. 2012). Chronic WHO has advocated the adoption of HiAP by government conditions, such as asthma; health risks, like obesity; and a decisionmakers (WHO 2006, 2013, 2014). In 2013 it con- range of diseases and disabling conditions are affected by the vened a meeting in Helsinki, Finland, to develop and flesh out circumstances in which people live, work, learn, and play. an action plan. Meeting participants called for government Reflecting an understanding that the policies that affect our authorities to adopt an approach to public policymaking across social environment and living conditions also affect health, the sectors that systematically takes into account the health impli- HiAP approach calls for decisionmakers in all relevant policy cations of decisions, avoids harmful health impacts, and seeks sectors and at all levels of government to cooperate in address- synergies in actions to improve population health and health ing complex health challenges and to consider the prospective equity. Noting that governments have a range of priorities in impact of their decisions on health-related outcomes, benefits, harms, and costs. In other words, HiAP entails looking at prospective policies and HiAP entails looking at prospective policies and programs in fields such as programs in fields such as education, environment, agriculture, employment, social support, transportation, education, environment, and trade through the lens of likely health impact, and breaking down traditional agriculture, employment, social silos to develop and implement the policies and programs that support and promote support, transportation, and health. trade through the lens of likely health impact, and breaking down traditional silos to develop and implement the policies which health and health equity do not have automatic prece- and programs that support and promote health. dence, the statement prescribed use of transparent processes for Advocates of the HiAP approach see it not only as key to considering health impact. The statement further called for making strides in improvement of public health, but also as governments to include communities, social movements, and instrumental in reducing inequities in health status between civil society in the development, implementation, and advantaged and disadvantaged population groups. In fact, the monitoring of HiAP. I S S U E F O C U S GIH BULLETIN EMERGENCE OF HiAP IN THE UNITED STATES experience of the California Health in All Policies Task Force—an entity whose work was supported by health grant- In the United States, authorities of several federal, state, and makers, including The California Endowment and Kaiser local governments are taking steps to implement HiAP. Cities Permanente Community Benefit, as well as the Centers for including Houston, Baltimore, and San Diego have adopted Disease Control and Prevention through its Community the HiAP approach. In Baltimore, for example, promotion of Transformation Grants program—and draws upon expert physical activity was adopted as a citywide goal, and each city interviews, as well as information from other published works government agency was charged with identifying ways in which on the subject. the built and social environments could be adapted to support Health grantmakers are also lending support to developmen- increased activity. At the federal level, the Action Plan to Reduce Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities, issued by the tal work on the use of health impact assessments, which are U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) in instrumental in implementing HiAP. The Health Impact 2011, explicitly called for adoption of HiAP as a means to Project, a joint effort of The Pew Charitable Trusts and the address health disparities. In the action plan, HHS proposed to Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, is a national initiative engage other federal departments, the private sector, and com- designed to promote the use of health impact assessments as a munity organizations in cross-sectoral actions to close health decisionmaking tool for policymakers. Studies funded by the gaps, and to investigate the use project include one that is examining the health impact of New of impact assessments that would evaluate the potential effects of certain policies and A recent landmark study by the U.S. National Research Council and Institute of programs on health disparities. Medicine (2013) reported that countries with the best health outcomes were At the same time, increasing characterized by significantly higher levels of spending on social programs and awareness of the sizeable short- services (like early childhood education and parental leave) than is seen in the fall in U.S. health status as United States, although all of the countries had significantly lower per capita compared to that of interna- health spending. tional peers has spurred the appetite for understanding which health determinants are most critical, and which are Jersey policy decisions relating to rebuilding in the wake of most amenable to being addressed through policy intervention Hurricane Sandy. and other channels. Health spending itself does not appear to Health grantmakers are supporting the HiAP approach both be among the most important drivers of outcomes. In fact, a directly and indirectly through the programs they fund and the recent landmark study by the U.S. National Research Council priorities they establish. Through its “Culture of Health” and Institute of Medicine (2013) reported that countries with approach to grantmaking, the Robert Wood Johnson the best health outcomes were characterized by significantly Foundation has put nonmedical determinants of health in the higher levels of spending on social programs and services (like spotlight, reinforcing the notion that improving health requires early childhood education and parental leave) than is seen in a holistic and cross-sectoral approach. Many other health grant- the United States, although all of the countries had signifi- makers are funding work that focuses on nonmedical health cantly lower per capita health spending. determinants and community-oriented health improvement. For example, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina HEALTH GRANTMAKERS SUPPORT HiAP Foundation is funding work to support collaboration by local A core component of HiAP is the emphasis on collaborative actors to promote healthy communities through its community- approaches across government and nongovernment organiza- centered health home initiative, which seeks to manage and tions in efforts to safeguard and improve population health. prevent chronic health conditions. Many other funders provide This focus on collaboration means that the role of health grant- support for social services and other investments in nonclinical makers as conveners and organizers will be more important primary prevention. than ever in a changing policy landscape. Looking to the future, health grantmakers are uniquely Already, health philanthropy is assisting the adoption of the positioned to implement the principles of HiAP by seeking HiAP approach by government authorities. In 2013 the opportunities to work with nontraditional partners, including American Public Health Association, the Public Health other grantmakers working to achieve social goals that are Institute, and the California Department of Public Health col- not directly health-related. By ensuring that the health laborated to produce Health in All Policies: A Guide for State perspective is taken into account at all levels of social and and Local Governments, with funding support from the U.S. public decisionmaking, health grantmakers can and are helping Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and The empower and support individuals to achieve their fullest health California Endowment. The guide distills lessons from the potential. I S S U E F O C U S GIH BULLETIN SOURCES Docteur, E. and R. Berenson. “In Pursuit of Health Equity: A Comparison of E.U. and U.S. Policy Approaches,” Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and Urban Institute Timely Analysis of Health Policy Issues Series. 2014. http://www.rwjf.org/content/dam/farm/reports/issue_briefs/2014/ rwjf414060. Gottlieb, L. M., J.E. Fielding, and P. Braveman. “Health Impact Assessment: Necessary but not Sufficient for Healthy Public Policy,” Public Health Reports, March-April 127(2):156-162, 2012. National Research Council, and the Institute of Medicine. U.S. Health in International Perspective: Shorter Lives, Poorer Health. Washington, DC: 2013. http://www.iom.edu/Reports/2013/ US-Health-in-International-Perspective-Shorter-Lives-Poorer-Health.aspx. Rudolph, L., J. Caplan, K. Ben-Moshe, and L. Dillon. Health in All Policies: A Guide for State and Local Governments. Washington, DC and Oakland, CA: American Public Health Association and Public Health Institute, 2012. http://www.phi.org/resources/?resource=hiapguide. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The Action Plan to Reduce Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities. Washington, DC: 2011. http://minorityhealth.hhs.gov/npa/files/Plans/HHS/ HHS_Plan_complete.pdf. World Health Organization (WHO). Health in All Policies: Prospects and Potentials. Geneva Switzerland: 2006. http://www.euro.who.int/en/health-topics/health-determinants/social- determinants/publications/pre-2007/health-in-all-policies-prospects-and-potentials. World Health Organization (WHO). The Helsinki Statement on Health in All Policies. The Eighth Global Conference on Health Promotion, Helsinki, Finland, June 10-14, 2013. http://www.who.int/healthpromotion/conferences/8gchp/statement_2013/en/index1.html. World Health Organization (WHO). Health in All Policies (HiAP): A Framework for Country Action. Geneva, Switzerland: January 2014. http://www.who.int/cardiovascular_diseases/ 140120HPRHiAPFramework.pdf?ua=1&ua=.