A dangerous distortion of priorities seems to be currently
apparent in the dominant approaches to major public
health problems, including cardiovascular disease,
diabetes, obesity, cancer and some infectious diseases.
Relevant examples suggest an apparently inappropriate
tendency to prioritise technocratic, partial solutions
rather than confronting their true behavioural and
structural determinants. Technically oriented preventive
medicine often takes excessive precedence over simpler,
more sensible approaches to modify lifestyles, the
environment and the social structure. Structural factors
(social, cultural, financial, familiar, educational, political
or ideological factors) that act as determinants of
individual behaviours should be effectively addressed to
confront the essential causes of the most prevalent and
important health problems. Some consumer-directed
commercial forces seem to be increasingly driving many
aspects of the current sociocultural environment, and
may eventually compromise the main pursuits of public
health. Population-wide strategies are needed to create a
healthy sociocultural environment and to empower
individuals and make themselves resistant to these
adverse environmental and structural pressures.
Otherwise most public health interventions will most
likely end in failures
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