PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Academies make recommendations for improving public health

2015-06-16
(Press-News.org) In recent decades, enormous successes have been achieved in the field of public health. Three examples of these are the fight against HIV, the reduction in cardiovascular disease, and protection for non-smokers. For Germany to make even better use of the potential of public health, it needs more political support, improved research structures, and stronger international involvement. The German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina, acatech - the National Academy of Science and Engineering, and the Union of the German Academies of Sciences and Humanities point this out in a joint statement entitled "Public Health in Germany - Structures, Developments and Global Challenges", published today.

Public health is the science and practice of preventing disease, prolonging life, and improving quality of life across an entire population. The concept covers the general promotion of health via comprehensive, organised measures at all levels of society. Research questions and measures related to public health affect all sectors of the healthcare system, the education and social systems, and parts of the economy. Germany is doing outstanding research on various aspects of public health. However, the structures in research, teaching and practice are not yet optimally developed - especially considering the major international challenges that exist. In their "Public Health in Germany" statement, the academies make recommendations on how the field can be improved in Germany.

(1) The academies' recommendations for education and further training include: improving collaboration between public health researchers, the public healthcare service, public health practitioners, and the public; coordinating professional education goals at national level; establishing interdisciplinary training schemes; opening up new career paths in public health; and incorporating elements of public health into the curricula of all medical professions. Public health professions should be made more attractive and more respected career options.

(2) The quality and interdisciplinarity of research must improve. The academies also recommend a research agenda to develop political measures and programmes for improving health, and to strengthen the healthcare system. The currently underused potential of cohort and randomised studies should be exploited, in particular to investigate the impact of public health measures. The academies recommend examining legislative proposals on data protection in Germany and the EU to establish whether they might place new and avoidable hurdles in the way of health research.

(3) With regard to implementing research findings in practice, the academies recommend public dialogue and, in particular, building strategic links between science, the public healthcare service, policymakers, the healthcare sector and civil society. These activities should also extend to EU level and to global cooperation in the field of global health.

(4) The academies list four options for structural reforms that will strengthen public health in Germany: a network with competitive financing; a virtual coordinating body; a public health institute; and a centre for public and global health that would steer all activities in this field.

The "Public Health in Germany" statement was produced by an interdisciplinary working group made up of scientists from Germany, Switzerland, France, the Netherlands and the UK. The experts come from all fields of public health, including economics, the social sciences, medical fields such as infection research and genetics, health services research, and research into global health issues.

INFORMATION:

"Public Health in Germany - Structures, Developments and Global Challenges" - A statement by the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina, acatech - the National Academy of Science and Engineering, and the Union of the German Academies of Sciences and Humanities, 82 pages, ISBN: 978-3-8047-3345-9

The statement, additional material and a bibliometric study commissioned for the statement is available to the public under the following links:
http://www.leopoldina.org/en/public-health
http://www.akademienunion.de
http://www.acatech.de

The German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina, acatech - National Academy of Science and Engineering, and the Union of the German Academies of Sciences and Humanities provide policymakers and society with independent, science-based advice on issues of crucial importance for our future. The Academies' members are outstanding researchers from Germany and abroad. Working in interdisciplinary working groups, they draft statements that are published in the series of papers Schriftenreihe zur Wissenschaftsbasierten Politikberatung (Monograph Series on Science-based Policy Advice) after being externally reviewed and subsequently approved by the Standing Committee of the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina.

http://www.leopoldina.org
http://www.acatech.de
http://www.akademienunion.de

Contact:
Caroline Wichmann, Head of Press and Public Relations
German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina
Tel.: +49 (0)345 472 39-800
presse@leopoldina.org

Additional contact:
Dr Katrin Simhandl, Head of Communications
acatech - the National Academy of Science and Engineering
Tel.: +49 (0)30 206 3 096-40
simhandl@acatech.de

Dr Annette Schaefgen, Head of Press and Public Relations
Union of the German Academies of Sciences and Humanities
Tel.: +49 (0)30 3259 873-70
schaefgen@akademienunion-berlin.de



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Starfish have a surprising talent for squeezing foreign bodies out through the skin

Starfish have a surprising talent for squeezing foreign bodies out through the skin
2015-06-16
Starfish have strange talents. Two biology students from University of Southern Denmark have revealed that starfish are able to squeeze foreign bodies along the length of their body cavities and out through their arm tips. This newly discovered talent gives insight into how certain animals are able to quickly heal themselves. The two biology students, Frederik Ekholm Gaardsted Christensen and Trine Bottos Olsen have discovered a starfish behaviour that has never previously been described in the scientific literature. As part of their studies they were asked to tag some ...

Tool use is 'innate' in chimpanzees but not bonobos, their closest evolutionary relative

Tool use is innate in chimpanzees but not bonobos, their closest evolutionary relative
2015-06-16
Chimpanzees and bonobos are the two closest living relatives of the human species - the ultimate tool-using ape. Yet, despite being so closely related on the evolutionary tree, wild chimpanzees and bonobos differ hugely in the way they use tools. Chimpanzees show the most diverse range of tool use outside of humans. For example, chimpanzees use sticks to 'fish' for ants and termites, stones to crack nuts, as well as tools for grooming and communication. Bonobos rarely use tools and never to forage for food. The question of 'what makes a tool user?' is a key one in ...

Meeting global air quality guidelines could prevent 2.1 million deaths per year

2015-06-16
AUSTIN, Texas -- Improving air quality -- in clean and dirty places -- could reduce pollution-related deaths worldwide by millions of people each year. That finding comes from a team of environmental engineering and public health researchers who developed a global model of how changes in outdoor air pollution could lead to changes in the rates of health problems such as heart attack, stroke and lung cancer. Outdoor particulate air pollution results in 3.2 million premature deaths annually, more than the combined impact of HIV-AIDS and malaria. The researchers found that ...

Couples needing sperm donation favor the same donor for all conceptions

2015-06-16
Lisbon, 16 June 2015: Despite a prevalence of anonymous sperm donation in European countries, the use of the same sperm donor for subsequent conceptions is of paramount importance to those couples needing sperm donation to have children. "We found a marked tendency to favour full genetic bonds where possible," said midwife Sara Somers presenting study results today at the Annual Meeting of ESHRE. The study, performed by Ms Somers and colleagues at the Ghent University Hospital and Ghent University in Belgium, included 34 lesbian and heterosexual couples using sperm donation ...

Minor surgical procedure common in O&G associated with increased risk of preterm delivery

2015-06-16
Lisbon, 16 June 2015: Dilatation and curettage (D&C) is one of the most common minor surgical procedures in obstetrics and gynaecology, used mainly for miscarriage or terminations.(1) Today, use of the 15-minute procedure is declining in favour of less invasive medical methods, but it still remains common in O&G. Although D&C is generally considered safe and easy to perform, it is associated with some serious (if rare) side effects, including perforations to the cervix and uterus, infection, and bleeding. Now, an analysis 21 cohort studies which included almost 2 million ...

IVF in women over 38: The doctor's dilemma

2015-06-16
Lisbon, 16 June 2015: It is a biological fact that female fertility declines with age - in assisted conception as in natural. Indeed, findings from a 12-year study reported today at the Annual Meeting of ESHRE by Dr Marta Devesa from the Hospital Universitaro Quiron-Dexeus in Barcelona, Spain, showed that in her own clinic cumulative live birth rates following IVF declined from 23.6% in women aged 38-39 years to 1.3% in those aged 44 and over.(1) Such declines in success rate have been seen in many studies, but are not evident in older patients having egg donation to ...

Rate of ectopic pregnancy following IVF has almost halved in past 12 years

2015-06-16
Lisbon, 16 June 2015: The risk of ectopic pregnancy following fertility treatment with assisted reproduction (ART) is small but significantly higher than found in natural conceptions. Now, a nationwide population-based analysis of all ART pregnancies achieved in the UK between 2000 and 2012 has found that the rate of ectopic pregnancy following IVF and ICSI progressively decreased throughout these 12 years, almost halving from an overall rate of 20 to 12 cases per thousand. The results of the study are presented today at the Annual Meeting of ESHRE in Lisbon by Professor ...

Lack of sleep affects long-term health

2015-06-16
New research from the University of Copenhagen has found that maintaining a good night's sleep is important for our future health, partly because of how it affects lifestyle factors. Previous population based studies have not provided sufficient information on the timing of changes in both sleep and lifestyle to tease out cause and effect relations of this highly intertwined relationship. "This study shows that sleep affects our ability to maintain a healthy lifestyle, and when sleep deteriorates we are more likely to make unhealthy lifestyle changes," says Postdoc Alice ...

Brain injury patterns linked to post-concussion depression and anxiety

Brain injury patterns linked to post-concussion depression and anxiety
2015-06-16
OAK BROOK, Ill. - A new MRI study has found distinct injury patterns in the brains of people with concussion-related depression and anxiety, according to a new study published online in the journal Radiology. The findings may lead the way to improved treatment and understanding of these common disorders, researchers said. Post-concussion psychiatric disorders like depression, anxiety and irritability can be extremely disabling for those among the nearly 3.8 million people in the United States who suffer concussions every year. The mechanisms underlying these changes after ...

Hyperlipidemia, caused by a high-fat diet, aggressively accelerates organ rejection

2015-06-16
BOSTON (June 16, 2015, 12:01 a.m. EDT)--In two studies published online today in the American Journal of Transplantation, researchers determined that hyperlipidemia accelerates heart-transplant rejection in mice. By using models that mimic the health conditions found in human transplant recipients, the researchers from Tufts determined that transplant rejection was accelerated whether the hyperlipidemia (high cholesterol and high triglycerides in the blood) was caused by genetics or solely by a high-fat diet. "Our work fundamentally changes how we view transplant rejection. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

McDonald’s thwarts council efforts to stop new branches by claiming it promotes ‘healthier lifestyles’

Is CBD use during pregnancy as safe as people think? New study uncovers potential risks to babies

Drying and rewetting cycles substantially increased soil CO2 release

Hybrid job training improves participation for women in Nepal, study finds

Understanding aging requires more than counting birthdays

AI tool helps find life-saving medicine for rare disease

A new tool could exponentially expand our understanding of bacteria

Apply for the Davie Postdoctoral Fellowship in Artificial Intelligence for Astronomy

New study finds students' attitudes towards computer science impacts final grades

Clot-buster meds & mechanical retrieval equally reduce disability from some strokes

ISHLT relaunches Global IMACS Registry to advance MCS therapy and patient outcomes

Childhood trauma may increase the risk of endometriosis

Black, Hispanic kids less likely to get migraine diagnosis in ER

Global social media engagement trends revealed for election year of 2024

Zoom fatigue is linked to dissatisfaction with one’s facial appearance

Students around the world find ChatGPT useful, but also express concerns

Labor market immigrants moving to Germany are less likely to make their first choice of residence in regions where xenophobic attitudes, measured by right-wing party support and xenophobic violence, a

Lots of screentime in toddlers is linked with worse language skills, but educational content and screen use accompanied by adults might help, per study across 19 Latin American countries

The early roots of carnival? Research reveals evidence of seasonal celebrations in pre-colonial Brazil

Meteorite discovery challenges long-held theories on Earth’s missing elements

Clean air policies having unintended impact driving up wetland methane emissions by up to 34 million tonnes

Scientists simulate asteroid collision effects on climate and plants

The Wistar Institute scientists discover new weapon to fight treatment-resistant melanoma

Fool yourself: People unknowingly cheat on tasks to feel smarter, healthier

Rapid increase in early-onset type 2 diabetes in China highlights urgent public health challenges

Researchers discover the brain cells that tell you to stop eating

Salt substitution and recurrent stroke and death

Firearm type and number of people killed in publicly targeted fatal mass shooting events

Recent drug overdose mortality decline compared with pre–COVID-19 trend

University of Cincinnati experts present research at International Stroke Conference 2025

[Press-News.org] Academies make recommendations for improving public health