Top Banner
Public Health Policy in New York City Zachary Adler Christina Cho Charles Maniego Bonnie Rose Jonathan Tepp QUEENS COLLEGE, SPRING 2013
13

Public Health Policy in New York City Zachary Adler Christina Cho Charles Maniego Bonnie Rose Jonathan Tepp QUEENS COLLEGE, SPRING 2013.

Dec 13, 2015

Download

Documents

Pearl Briggs
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Public Health Policy in New York City Zachary Adler Christina Cho Charles Maniego Bonnie Rose Jonathan Tepp QUEENS COLLEGE, SPRING 2013.

Public Health Policyin New York City

Zachary AdlerChristina ChoCharles ManiegoBonnie RoseJonathan Tepp

QUEENS COLLEGE, SPRING 2013

Page 2: Public Health Policy in New York City Zachary Adler Christina Cho Charles Maniego Bonnie Rose Jonathan Tepp QUEENS COLLEGE, SPRING 2013.

Taking Care of New YorkA shift in focus: From contagious disease to

chronic

Protecting the public from adverse effects of health problems: Health care expenditures, second hand smoke

Caring for those who may not be able to care for themselves

The natural consequence: A focus on tobacco and obesity

Page 3: Public Health Policy in New York City Zachary Adler Christina Cho Charles Maniego Bonnie Rose Jonathan Tepp QUEENS COLLEGE, SPRING 2013.

Taking Care of New YorkThe criticism: “Nanny-in-chief” who is babying

voting-aged adults

The praise: It’s worked! Obesity has been reduced by 31% while only 14% of New York City residents smoked in 2010 (lowest percentage in history)

The bottom line: Bloomberg’s policies can lay a promising road for New York City’s future if he will attempt to mollify the public and drum up support

Page 4: Public Health Policy in New York City Zachary Adler Christina Cho Charles Maniego Bonnie Rose Jonathan Tepp QUEENS COLLEGE, SPRING 2013.

Calorie Labeling Law (2008)Bloomberg’s fight against obesity

Fast food and caloric intake

Opposition?

The law

Page 5: Public Health Policy in New York City Zachary Adler Christina Cho Charles Maniego Bonnie Rose Jonathan Tepp QUEENS COLLEGE, SPRING 2013.

Source:nyc.gov

Page 6: Public Health Policy in New York City Zachary Adler Christina Cho Charles Maniego Bonnie Rose Jonathan Tepp QUEENS COLLEGE, SPRING 2013.

ResultsConflicting data

Awareness of the public and restaurant industry

The Calorie Labeling Law – a success? Plans for the future

Page 7: Public Health Policy in New York City Zachary Adler Christina Cho Charles Maniego Bonnie Rose Jonathan Tepp QUEENS COLLEGE, SPRING 2013.

Sugary Drinks

“Mike Bloomberg: Combating Obesity.” Mikebloomberg.com

Page 8: Public Health Policy in New York City Zachary Adler Christina Cho Charles Maniego Bonnie Rose Jonathan Tepp QUEENS COLLEGE, SPRING 2013.

Sugary Drinks PoliciesSoda tax (2010)

Food Stamps Soda Ban (2010)

Soda ban (2013)

Page 9: Public Health Policy in New York City Zachary Adler Christina Cho Charles Maniego Bonnie Rose Jonathan Tepp QUEENS COLLEGE, SPRING 2013.

Sugary Drinks Policies: Any Other Ideas? ALTERNATIVES:

Individual Counseling (limited resources, too expensive)

Social Pressure (immoral, ineffective)

OPINIONS:

Sugary drinks policies mostly efficient and effective

Would be better if reasoning was explained to avoid accusations of autocracy

Page 10: Public Health Policy in New York City Zachary Adler Christina Cho Charles Maniego Bonnie Rose Jonathan Tepp QUEENS COLLEGE, SPRING 2013.

Trans Fats Ban in NYCHistory

Success

Shortcomings

Page 11: Public Health Policy in New York City Zachary Adler Christina Cho Charles Maniego Bonnie Rose Jonathan Tepp QUEENS COLLEGE, SPRING 2013.

Decrease in trans fat content in fast food meal purchases, NYC

Source: Angell, S., Cobb, L. K., Curtis, C. J., Konty, K. J., & Silver, L. D. (2012). Change in Trans Fatty Acid Content of Fast-Food Purchases Associated With New York City’s Restaurant Regulation. Annals of Internal Medicine, 157(2), 81-86.

Page 12: Public Health Policy in New York City Zachary Adler Christina Cho Charles Maniego Bonnie Rose Jonathan Tepp QUEENS COLLEGE, SPRING 2013.

Increase in Other Unhealthy Ingredients?

Source: Angell, S., Cobb, L. K., Curtis, C. J., Konty, K. J., & Silver, L. D. (2012). Change in Trans Fatty Acid Content of Fast-Food Purchases Associated With New York City’s Restaurant Regulation. Annals of Internal Medicine, 157(2), 81-86.

Page 13: Public Health Policy in New York City Zachary Adler Christina Cho Charles Maniego Bonnie Rose Jonathan Tepp QUEENS COLLEGE, SPRING 2013.

Some Concluding IdeasModify rhetoric

Offer incentives to companies

Actual bans should be on chemicals, not products, with a focus on discouraging use of already-made products

Get the people involved!