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Volume 30, Issue 6: December, 2003
Abstract
Keeping the Focus on Public Health: The Struggles
of a Tobacco Prevention Task Force
Jacquie A. Shillis, MEd, Beverly A. Hall, PhD, FAAN,
Gail G. Sneden, MA, and Nell H. Gottlieb, PhD
This case study examines a nonlegislative task force
as it struggled to reach internal consensus despite
external political constraints. The study highlights
the convergence of politics and science, revealing complex
issues likely to be confronted by advocates and public
health officials. Three themes capture participants’
experiences: context, sizing up the opportunities and
constraints; task force process, tacit strategy to operate
outside the political context and play the science card;
and aftermath, a glass half full. The task force took
advantage of ambiguous parameters, crafting a comprehensive
statewide plan to reduce tobacco use and breaking out
of the common public health paradigm of allowing budget
considerations to drive program design. These internal
victories could not sustain a policy success in the
legislature. However, the group’s product sets science-based
standards for future program development, and the task
force’s process provides valuable insights to other
states developing tobacco prevention and control policies.
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