Posts Tagged public health

Sending the Right Smoke Signals

By Emily Clarke

In 2001 Portugal abolished all criminal penalties for personal possession of drugs, from cannabis to heroin, in an attempt to reduce the number of drug related deaths and the spread of HIV/AIDS. After several years there was tentative discussion about the success of Portugal’s scheme (see for example the Economist’s article of August 2009) and although I don’t intend to add to the debate about the decriminalisation of drug use here, I do hope to discuss one particular element of Portugal’s policy that I find laudable.

smoking

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Nudge, nudge, Daddy Cameron’s coming

You can tell the Tories are being advised by Richard Thaler, the famed ‘nudge’ economist.  It’s now, apparently,  part of their life and blood.  Public health, after the latest health policy announcement yesterday, may just as well be called ‘nudge’ health.  Here’s the idea.  Point one.  Cash for public health initiatives will be separately identified (not necessarily a bad thing in itself).  Point two, local directors of public health, who will be joint appointments between the NHS and local authorities, will be ‘paid by results for achieving goals such as reducing teenage pregnancy, infant mortality, childhood obesity and alcohol-related hospital admissions’.

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