The U.S. presidential election is days away, and the polls show the candidates are in a statistical dead heat. The outcome is unknown — even to the experts, who say it could be the tightest race “in a generation.”
For public health, the election matters deeply.
Whoever wins, the next president will confront serious public health issues affecting millions of Americans. And unless he or she can rebuild trust and regain public confidence in our nation’s health system, president 47 will face significant challenges addressing them.
Patient trust in physicians and hospitals has plunged. Over 70 percent of Americans believe the American health system has failed them. Another study found a mere one-third of U.S. adults trust the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, only a quarter trust their state and local health departments and 10 percent place no trust whatsoever in health agencies.
Reversing these trends demands our next president lead by example. It will require POTUS 47 to make public health a national priority.
We need someone willing to put his or her trust in our nation’s public health experts; someone who values the knowledge and experience of the health community; someone able to accept science-based guidance and recommendations to lead our nation’s health forward.
Because trust can only be earned if trust is given. It’s part of the bedrock of every healthy relationship. And if our next president has the fortitude to trust America’s health agencies, it will encourage Americans to respect them again, too.
Leadership will be critical in making this happen. And it must happen, as the stakes are too high to ignore. Among them:
The one who takes the oath of office will have to contend with these and other critical health issues. But she or he won’t be able to do it alone.
As Steve Jobs famously said, “It doesn’t make sense to hire smart people and tell them what to do; we hire smart people so they can tell us what to do.”
Our next president must adopt this same approach; hire the brightest minds to lead on health policy and respect the advice of health experts who’ve dedicated their lives to serving humanity.
Because when America sees its president lead by trusting the public health community, Americans will do the same.
Lyndon Haviland, DrPH, MPH, is a distinguished scholar at the CUNY School of Public Health and Health Policy.