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The Health Race:
Can Public Health Promotion Beat Disease?
SDSU Public Health Professor Melbourne
F. Hovell Presents 14th Annual
Albert W. Johnson Research Lecture April 28
CONTACT: Jason Foster
SDSU Marketing & Communications
Phone (619) 594-2585 Pager (619) 620-1184
foster@mail.sdsu.edu
SAN DIEGO, Tuesday, April 20, 2004 - Huge efforts are under way
to address health problems such as SARS, HIV, diabetes and many
other illnesses by developing vaccines or therapeutic drugs. However,
understanding culture and behavioral ecology to create sensible
public policy may hold as much potential for fighting infectious
and chronic diseases worldwide, says Melbourne F. Hovell, Ph.D.,
a professor in San Diego State University's Graduate School of Public
Health. He will discuss this topic at the university's 14th annual
Albert W. Johnson Research Lecture on April 28.
"We need to emphasize disease prevention,
and not just treatment," said Hovell, who will deliver his
free public lecture at 4 p.m. at SDSU's Little Theatre. "This
is important because despite our best efforts to eradicate disease,
nature continues to throw new problems our way, and all signs indicate
that many diseases we're fighting today will continue to be with
us, and may increase in rate and severity."
Hovell is an internationally recognized scholar
in the field of health promotion and a founder of SDSU's Center
for Behavioral Epidemiology and Community Health (CBEACH). He will
discuss the application of his research to global public health
concerns and suggest prevention efforts to address catastrophic
pandemic risks. His work has been instrumental in fostering a better
understanding of medical concerns such as cystic fibrosis, asthma,
arthritis, diabetes, tuberculosis, cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis,
sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), breast cancer and hepatitis.
Analyzing how a community or individual's
behavior affects health and disease will become even more important
in coming decades, Hovell said, because in addition to the constant
threat of infectious disease, chronic diseases typically found in
wealthy nations - obesity, diabetes, heart disease, cancer, etc.
- are becoming more widespread worldwide. These diseases can be
fought through health promotion, although it's often a complicated
process.
"A lot of health promotion programs
put the burden of making healthy choices on the individual. But
the prevalence of tobacco in China, or fat-heavy fast food here
in the U.S., has to be considered," Hovell said. "No one
plans to become a smoker at age 11 or obese by their teenage years.
They're living in a world built for them, not by them. So we must
address their community or culture as well to affect change."
There is proof this approach can work, Hovell
said, citing the success of California's Tobacco Control program
as an example of reducing smoking rates in the state to among the
lowest in the world.
Hovell's multidisciplinary clinical research
has received grant support of nearly $30 million. He has produced
over 300 articles, letters, published abstracts, and paper presentations,
and has mentored more than 200 students during his tenure.
The Albert W. Johnson University Research
Lecture was created to recognize SDSU faculty members for outstanding
achievement in research and scholarship, and to foster continuation
of such accomplishments. This lecture series was named in 1991 to
recognize the contributions of Albert W. Johnson, longtime faculty
member, dean and provost at SDSU whose leadership was instrumental
in transforming SDSU into an institution that celebrates scholarly
accomplishment as an essential ingredient of teaching excellence.
The series is sponsored by Graduate and Research Affairs and the
University Research Council and is supported in part through Instructionally
Related Activities funds.
SDSU is the
oldest and largest institution of higher education in the San Diego
region. Founded in 1897, SDSU offers bachelor's degrees in 79 areas,
master's degrees in 67 and doctorates in 14. SDSU's more than 33,000
students participate in academic curricula distinguished by direct
contact with faculty and an increasing international emphasis that
prepares them for a global future. For more information log on to
www.sdsu.edu.
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