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Home NEWS Science News Health

Rethinking the Public Health Workforce: New Study Advocates for a Broader, More Inclusive Approach

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
May 15, 2025
in Health
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As the United States grapples with increasingly complex public health crises, from pandemic threats to chronic disease burdens, a transformative approach to understanding the public health workforce is urgently needed. In a groundbreaking study published in the American Journal of Public Health, Dr. Heather Krasna of Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health challenges conventional definitions of the public health workforce. Her research advocates for a paradigm shift that transcends the traditional confines of government employment, recognizing the mosaic of professionals contributing to public health outcomes across multiple sectors.

The current traditional conception of the public health workforce is largely centered on government-operated agencies and departments at various administrative levels—federal, state, local, tribal, and territorial. This conventional framework inadequately captures the breadth of the workforce actively engaged in public health functions. Counting all healthcare professionals such as nurses or epidemiologists regardless of their role or sector fails to differentiate those working directly on public health services from those practicing clinical or other forms of individual care. This limitation presents a significant challenge to accurately assessing workforce capacities and addressing gaps.

Dr. Krasna proposes an innovative intersectional model which redefines the public health workforce by separating it into two distinct yet interrelated tiers. The “core” public health workforce remains composed of individuals employed within government health departments, reflecting the traditional backbone of public health service delivery. However, the “wider” public health workforce is newly conceptualized to include professionals who may be employed outside government agencies yet whose work directly involves at least half of their time in delivering services consonant with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) 10 Essential Public Health Services or the Foundational Public Health Services framework. This broader workforce encompasses a vast array of individuals working in hospitals, academia, non-profit organizations, and even private sector entities, all contributing to the public health mission.

The framework of the 10 Essential Public Health Services, first developed in the 1990s and periodically updated, delineates the core functions necessary to protect and promote community health. These services include monitoring health status, diagnosing health problems, informing and educating the public, mobilizing community partnerships, developing policies, enforcing laws, linking individuals to needed services, ensuring a competent workforce, evaluating health services, and conducting research. The Foundational Public Health Services, by contrast, specify the baseline capacities necessary at the governmental level to ensure equitable and effective public health infrastructure, setting a minimum standard that no jurisdiction should fall below.

What is particularly compelling in Krasna’s model is the shift in defining the workforce through an outcome-oriented lens. Rather than classifying workers by job titles or organizational affiliations, this method “reverse engineers” workforce identification by starting with the essential public health services themselves. By mapping who delivers these services regardless of their official role or employer, policymakers and researchers can gain a more accurate and impactful understanding of workforce composition and dynamics. This approach aligns closely with systems thinking in public health, where the ecosystem of actors and relationships is appreciated in its full complexity.

The implications of this redefinition are far-reaching. It empowers public health systems to better identify workforce gaps, including areas where essential services might be outsourced to sectors that may not maintain the same cost-effectiveness or public accountability as government agencies. Additionally, such delineation can sharpen the focus on workforce development, guiding more tailored training programs that prepare a wider spectrum of professionals to meet evolving public health needs. The ability to capture the contributions of this expansive workforce helps ensure more resilient public health infrastructures capable of responding to emergent crises such as pandemics.

Moreover, Dr. Krasna’s framework encourages a more equitable valuation of public health practitioners working outside traditional roles. Many of these professionals provide critical surveillance, education, policy advocacy, and clinical preventive services that directly support population health. Their inclusion broadens the workforce narrative and highlights collaborative, cross-sectoral efforts essential in today’s interconnected public health environment where challenges like climate change, health disparities, and global infectious diseases call for multi-dimensional responses.

This expanded concept of the public health workforce also intersects with pressing policy concerns. Understanding the composition and capacity of both the core governmental and wider non-governmental workforce aids in the strategic allocation of resources. It informs funding decisions, workforce planning, and emergency preparedness strategies, ensuring that jurisdictions can maintain essential services during disruptions. Without such clarity, there is a risk that critical public health functions may be left understaffed or uncoordinated, undermining population health outcomes during both routine and crisis periods.

The importance of accurate workforce surveillance is further underscored by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic which unveiled stark deficiencies in public health infrastructure, especially in staffing capacities. Many jurisdictions struggled to mobilize sufficient and appropriately trained personnel swiftly. By adopting Krasna’s model, health departments and allied organizations can systematically map and mobilize an inclusive workforce capable of robust response, effectively leveraging untapped potential across sectors such as academia, healthcare delivery, emergency management, and community organizations.

Furthermore, this framework aligns well with contemporary trends toward interdisciplinary collaboration and integration in health. It fosters recognition of how sectors traditionally deemed outside public health—such as education, social services, and private enterprises—play vital roles in the public health mission. This holistic vision supports not only preparedness but also sustained promotion of health equity and the social determinants of health, acknowledging the complex web of influences on population well-being.

Dr. Krasna’s research emerges from the Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, an institution known for its leadership in advancing public health knowledge and workforce development. Founded in 1922, the school boasts a dynamic global faculty and student body engaged in a spectrum of critical health challenges, from infectious disease control to climate change impacts. The school’s contribution to this discourse exemplifies its commitment to aligning research with real-world public health transformation.

The proposed workforce model serves as a clarion call for researchers, policymakers, and public health practitioners to reconsider entrenched assumptions and adopt more nuanced, service-driven frameworks. By doing so, it promises to catalyze stronger collaborations, more comprehensive workforce assessments, and the development of innovative training initiatives that prepare the full spectrum of public health professionals to meet contemporary and future challenges. This shift also enhances transparency and accountability in how public health resources are utilized across sectors.

Ultimately, embracing this redefined public health workforce model allows for a more precise and functional approach to workforce planning and evaluation. It holds potential not only to fortify response capacities in emergencies but also to advance routine public health functions that improve community health outcomes. As public health continues to evolve in complexity and scale, frameworks like these provide the conceptual infrastructure required to ensure its workforce is robust, diverse, and aligned with the imperative to safeguard the health of all populations.

Subject of Research: Public health workforce redefinition and capacity assessment beyond government health departments
Article Title: The Public Health Workforce Beyond Government Health Departments: Proposing a New Definition
News Publication Date: Not specified in the source
Web References: Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health
Keywords: Public health, health workforce, government health departments, 10 Essential Public Health Services, Foundational Public Health Services, workforce assessment, health policy, health systems, pandemic preparedness, health equity

Tags: chronic disease burden responsesColumbia University public health researchgovernment vs non-government public health roleshealthcare professionals roles in public healthinclusive public health strategiesinterdisciplinary public health collaborationintersectional public health modelpandemic preparedness workforcepublic health outcomes contributorspublic health workforce redefinitiontransformative public health approachesworkforce capacity assessment

Tags: core and wider public health workforceEssential Public Health Services frameworkpandemic preparedness strategiespublic health workforce redefinitionworkforce capacity assessment
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