How Health Should Be Defined
How Health Should Be Defined
How Health Should Be Defined
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Analysis
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ANALYSIS
How should we define health?
The WHO definition of health as complete wellbeing is no longer fit for purpose given the rise of chronic disease. Machteld Huber and colleagues propose changing the emphasis towards the ability to adapt and self manage in the face of social, physical, and emotional challenges Machteld Huber senior researcher 1, J Andr Knottnerus president, Scientific Council for Government Policy 2, Lawrence Green editor in chief, Oxford Bibliographies Onlinepublic health 3, Henritte van der Horst head 4, Alejandro R Jadad professor 5, Daan Kromhout vice president, Health Council of the Netherlands 6, Brian Leonard professor 7, Kate Lorig professor 8, Maria Isabel Loureiro coordinator for health promotion and protection 9, Jos W M van der Meer professor 10, Paul Schnabel director 11, Richard Smith director 12, Chris van Weel head 13, Henk Smid director 14
1
Louis Bolk Institute, Department of Healthcare and Nutrition, Hoofdstraat 24, NL-3972 LA Driebergen, Netherlands; 2Department of General Practice,
Maastricht University, Scientific Council for Government Policy, Postbus 20004, NL-2500 EA The Hague, Netherlands; 3Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Medicine, University of California at San Francisco, USA; 4Department of General Practice, VU Medical Center, Amsterdam, Netherlands; 5Centre for Global eHealth Innovation, Toronto General Hospital, Toronto, Canada; 6Department of Public Health Research, Wageningen University, The Hague, Netherlands; 7Pharmacology Department, National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland; 8Stanford Patient Education Research Center, Palo Alto, CA, USA; 9National School of Public Health/New University of Lisbon, Portugal; 10General Internal Medicine, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Nijmegen, Netherlands; 11Netherlands Institute for Social Research, The Hague, Netherlands;
12
UnitedHealth Chronic Disease Initiative, London, UK; 13Department of Primary and Community Care, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical
Centre; 14Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development, The Hague, Netherlands
The current WHO definition of health, formulated in 1948, describes health as a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity.1 At that time this formulation was groundbreaking because of its breadth and ambition. It overcame the negative definition of health as absence of disease and included the physical, mental, and social domains. Although the definition has been criticised over the past 60 years, it has never been adapted. Criticism is now intensifying,2-5 and as populations age and the pattern of illnesses changes the definition may even be counterproductive. The paper summarises the limitations of the WHO definition and describes the proposals for making it more useful that were developed at a conference of international health experts held in the Netherlands.6
system. New screening technologies detect abnormalities at levels that might never cause illness and pharmaceutical companies produce drugs for conditions not previously defined as health problems. Thresholds for intervention tend to be loweredfor example, with blood pressure, lipids, and sugar. The persistent emphasis on complete physical wellbeing could lead to large groups of people becoming eligible for screening or for expensive interventions even when only one person might benefit, and it might result in higher levels of medical dependency and risk.
Most criticism of the WHO definition concerns the absoluteness of the word complete in relation to wellbeing. The first problem is that it unintentionally contributes to the medicalisation of society. The requirement for complete health would leave most of us unhealthy most of the time.4 It therefore supports the tendencies of the medical technology and drug industries, in association with professional organisations, to redefine diseases, expanding the scope of the healthcare
The second problem is that since 1948 the demography of populations and the nature of disease have changed considerably. In 1948 acute diseases presented the main burden of illness and chronic diseases led to early death. In that context WHO articulated a helpful ambition. Disease patterns have changed, with public health measures such as improved nutrition, hygiene, and sanitation and more powerful healthcare interventions. The number of people living with chronic diseases for decades is increasing worldwide; even in the slums of India the mortality pattern is increasingly burdened by chronic diseases.7 Ageing with chronic illnesses has become the norm, and chronic diseases account for most of the expenditures of the healthcare system, putting pressure on its sustainability. In this context the
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ANALYSIS
WHO definition becomes counterproductive as it declares people with chronic diseases and disabilities definitively ill. It minimises the role of the human capacity to cope autonomously with lifes ever changing physical, emotional, and social challenges and to function with fulfilment and a feeling of wellbeing with a chronic disease or disability. The third problem is the operationalisation of the definition. WHO has developed several systems to classify diseases and describe aspects of health, disability, functioning, and quality of life. Yet because of the reference to a complete state, the definition remains impracticable, because complete is neither operational nor measurable.3 4
post-traumatic stress disorders.12 13 The sense of coherence includes the subjective faculties enhancing the comprehensibility, manageability, and meaningfulness of a difficult situation. A strengthened capability to adapt and to manage yourself often improves subjective wellbeing and may result in a positive interaction between mind and bodyfor example, patients with chronic fatigue syndrome treated with cognitive behavioural therapy reported positive effects on symptoms and wellbeing. This was accompanied by an increase in brain grey matter volume, although the causal relation and direction of this association are still unclear.14
Social health
Several dimensions of health can be identified in the social domain, including peoples capacity to fulfil their potential and obligations, the ability to manage their life with some degree of independence despite a medical condition, and the ability to participate in social activities including work. Health in this domain can be regarded as a dynamic balance between opportunities and limitations, shifting through life and affected by external conditions such as social and environmental challenges. By successfully adapting to an illness, people are able to work or to participate in social activities and feel healthy despite limitations. This is shown in evaluations of the Stanford chronic disease self management programme: extensively monitored patients with chronic illnesses, who learnt to manage their life better and to cope with their disease, reported improved self rated health, less distress, less fatigue, more energy, and fewer perceived disabilities and limitations in social activities after the training. Healthcare costs also fell.15 16 If people are able to develop successful strategies for coping, (age related) impaired functioning does not strongly change the perceived quality of life, a phenomenon known as the disability paradox.17
Nevertheless, the limitations of the current definition are increasingly affecting health policy. For example, in prevention programmes and healthcare the definition of health determines the outcome measures: health gain in survival years may be less relevant than societal participation, and an increase in coping capacity may be more relevant and realistic than complete recovery. Redefining health is an ambitious and complex goal; many aspects need to be considered, many stakeholders consulted, and many cultures reflected, and it must also take into account future scientific and technological advances. The discussion of experts at the Dutch conference, however, led to broad support for moving from the present static formulation towards a more dynamic one based on the resilience or capacity to cope and maintain and restore ones integrity, equilibrium, and sense of wellbeing.6 The preferred view on health was the ability to adapt and to self manage.
Participants questioned whether a new formulation should be called a definition, because this implied set boundaries and trying to arrive at a precise meaning. They preferred that the definition should be replaced by a concept or conceptual framework of health. A general concept, according to sociologist Blumer,9 represents a characterisation of a generally agreed direction in which to look, as reference. But operational definitions are also needed for practical life such as measurement purposes. The first step towards using the concept of health, as the ability to adapt and to self manage is to identify and characterise it for the three domains of health: physical, mental, and social. The following examples attempt to illustrate this.
Measuring health
The general concept of health is useful for management and policies, and it can also support doctors in their daily communication with patients because it focuses on empowerment of the patient (for example, by changing a lifestyle), which the doctor can explain instead of just removing symptoms by a drug. However, operational definitions are needed for measurement purposes, research, and evaluating interventions.
Physical health
In the physical domain a healthy organism is capable of allostasisthe maintenance of physiological homoeostasis through changing circumstances.10 When confronted with physiological stress, a healthy organism is able to mount a protective response, to reduce the potential for harm, and restore an (adapted) equilibrium. If this physiological coping strategy is not successful, damage (or allostatic load) remains, which may finally result in illness.11
Measurement might be helped by constructing health frames that systematise different operational needsfor example, differentiating between the health status of individuals and populations and between objective and subjective indicators of health. The measurement instruments should relate to health as the ability to adapt and to self manage. Good first operational tools include the existing methods for assessing functional status and measuring quality of life and sense of wellbeing. WHO has developed several classification systems measuring gradations of health.18 These assess aspects like disability, functioning, and perceived quality of life and wellbeing. In primary care, the Dartmouth Cooperative Group (COOP)/Wonca (the world organisation of family doctors) assessment of functional status, validated for different social and cultural settings, has been developed to obtain insight into the perceived health of individuals. The COOP/Wonca Functional Health Assessment Charts present six different dimensions of health, each supported by cartoon-like drawings.19 20 Each measures the ability to perform daily life activities on a 1 to 5 scale.
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Mental health
In the mental domain Antonovsky describes the sense of coherence as a factor that contributes to a successful capacity to cope, recover from strong psychological stress, and prevent
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ANALYSIS
Such instruments offer valuable information about a variety of aspects, from functioning to the experienced quality of life. Yet there are few instruments for measuring aspects of health like the individuals capacity to cope and to adapt, or to measure the strength of a persons physiological resilience. A new formulation about health could stimulate research on this.
Conclusion
Just as environmental scientists describe the health of the earth as the capacity of a complex system to maintain a stable environment within a relatively narrow range,21 we propose the formulation of health as the ability to adapt and to self manage. This could be a starting point for a similarly fresh, 21st century way of conceptualising human health with a set of dynamic features and dimensions that can be measured. Discussion about this should continue and involve other stakeholders, including patients and lay members of the public.
We thank Jennie Popay, Atie Schipaanboord, Eert Schoten, and Rudy Westendorp for their thoughts. Contributors and sources: This paper builds on a two day invitational conference in the Netherlands on defining health, organised by the Health Council of the Netherlands (Gezondheidsraad) and the Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development (ZonMw). At the conference a multidisciplinary group of 38 international experts discussed the topic and were guided by a review of the literature. MH organised the conference and drafted the report and this article. LG, HvdH, ARJ, DK, BL, KL, MIL, JvdM, PS, RS, and CvW contributed as speakers. HS hosted the conference with JAK, who chaired it. All authors contributed to the article. JAK is guarantor. Competing interests: All authors have completed the ICJME unified disclosure form at www.icmje.org/coi_disclosure.pdf (available on request from the corresponding author) and declare no support from any organisation for the submitted work; no financial relationships with any organisation that might have an interest in the submitted work in the previous three years; and no other relationships or activities that could appear to have influenced the submitted work.
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