After the Cure
Managing AIDS and Other Public Health Crises
Martin A. Levin and Mary Bryna Sanger
May 2000
256 pages, 6 x 9
Studies in Government and Public Policy
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-1023-5, $16.95
As alarming stories about new
pathogens like the Ebola virus or Mad Cow Disease fill today's
headlines, scientists face a test of their abilities to contain
them. But public health officials face a crisis of their own,
because even when effective treatments become available, efforts
to control disease often fall short.
After the Cure was written to improve the prospects
for effective management of AIDS and other public health crises.
Martin Levin and Mary Bryna Sanger draw on cases of previous
large-scale public health initiatives to show how management
effectiveness can meet threats to public health.
Focusing on AIDS as the most compelling contemporary example
of the need for change, the authors advocate a commonsense approach
that seeks to minimize the chances of failure.
They encourage health officials to exercise "strategic skepticism"
by developing plans that anticipate potential problems--such
as scientific controversy over a vaccine's effectiveness
or media sensationalism--which could arise from flaws in program
design and implementation.
Case studies involving polio, swine flu, childhood immunization,
reemergent TB, and the early AIDS experiences demonstrate the
variety of managerial problems that can confront such initiatives.
By reviewing the lessons of these cases, the authors suggest
how their approach can be applied to the management of AIDS and
future public health threats. They then present both a critique
of the early mismanagement of the AIDS crisis and a scenario
for "the day after an AIDS vaccine is discovered."
Because epidemics are likely to increase, After the Cure
clearly demonstrates the importance of anticipating obstacles
to their management through skillful scenario writing. Combining
careful analysis with practical advice, it shows that in the
public health arena, management matters as much as medicine.
"This enlightening book will significantly advance the
ongoing scholarly and public debate about what management can
and cannot achieve in public health. It is a timely addition
to a growing literature on which political scientists, public
management specialists, and practitioners can draw for good counsel."--Christopher
Foreman, author of Plagues, Products, and Politics: Emergent
Public Health Hazards and National Policymaking
MARTIN A. LEVIN is professor of political science
at the Gordon Public Policy Center at Brandeis University. MARY
BRYNA SANGER is professor of urban policy analysis and management
and former dean of the Milano Graduate School at New School University.
They are the coauthors of Making Government Work: How Entrepreneurial
Executives Turn Bright Ideas into Real Results.
|