Applying the health capability profile: an analytical study of leading causes of death in the USA and of pressing public health issues.

Publication date: Jan 02, 2025

Public health problems are complex; investigating them requires a framework that both accounts for multiple interactions among individuals and their intermediate and broader environment and also integrates equity concerns. Incorporating internal and external influences at the individual level, the health capability profile (HCP)’s 15 different health capabilities address this need. Using a systematic three-step deductive content analysis process, we examine hypothetical case studies representing leading causes of death in the USA (eg, heart disease, cancer and diabetes) as well as pressing public health issues such as COVID-19, alcohol use disorder, stigma and discrimination, intimate partner violence and firearm violence. After reviewing the profile (1), each case study is analysed through the framework of the HCP and developed into a flow diagram, through which we identify shortfalls between the observed and optimal levels of each health capability, as well as detrimental or enabling interactions among capabilities (2). We then determine factors and interventions that could help improve overall health capability (3). The HCP harnesses the multitude of unique individual profiles, and through aggregation and analysis, reveals common vulnerabilities (eg, discriminatory social norms and non-evidence-based information), and strengths. It recommends cross-cutting structural policy and programme reforms for institutions, schools, community resources and for individuals to develop a positive set of norms, knowledge, goals, attitudes and habits to chart the path towards health and well-being for all.

Concepts Keywords
Broader Health inequalities
Covid HEALTH PROMOTION
Death PUBLIC HEALTH
Diabetes SOCIAL SCIENCES
Firearm

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH causes of death
disease IDO process
disease MESH heart disease
disease MESH cancer
disease MESH COVID-19
disease MESH alcohol use disorder
disease MESH violence
disease MESH overall health
disease MESH Health inequalities

Original Article

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