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APHA Scientific Session and Event Listing

Leadership, Environmental Scanning, and the Future of Public Health: The Case of Peak Oil

Gerald D. Bednarz, PhD, Consultant, 832 E. Hutchinson Ave., Pittsburgh, PA 15218, 412-241-2763, danbpgh@verizon.net

Leadership, Environmental Scanning and the Future of Public Health Policy: The Case of Peak Oil

The Institute of Medicine's report on the future of public health implies that leadership scans public health's macro-environment as part of the strategic management process. However, there is no guidance in the Institute's report �or most public health policy-making books-- on how to search for new knowledge of the environment. As long as the macro-environment remains more-or-less stable and predictable, the costs of not surveying it are minor and even a way to conserve precious time and money. Unfortunately, collectives of people are typified by what anthropologist Mary Douglas calls �institutional thinking,� a process that operates with inherently boundary-setting, change-denying and fact interpreting principles that maintain the status quo. This explains why public health's leadership has in the main not recognized the threat posed by �Peak Oil,� the idiom used to describe the plateau and then decline of worldwide oil production. There are four logical outcomes of the peaking and then decline of oil for public health:  No Crisis: Technology and the market will supply a substitute(s) energy source.  Short-term Crisis: A one to two decade severe economic and social transition to new energy sources; a virtually unavoidable outcome.  Long-term Crisis: A long-term transition that stabilizes society at a significantly lower level standard of living.  Social Collapse: In this scenario society as we now know it no longer works.

A survey conducted by the author shows that a handful of SPH deans are aware of these problems, Peak Oil itself and the discipline's reaction to it.

Learning Objectives:

Keywords: Public Health Infrastructure, Leadership

Presenting author's disclosure statement:

Not Answered

Managing Health and Leading Improvement: New Directions in Health Administration

The 134th Annual Meeting & Exposition (November 4-8, 2006) of APHA