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The following eight criteria should be taken into consideration when commenting
on the proposed or suggesting additional objectives.
- The result to be achieved should be important and understandable to a broad audience
and support the Healthy People 2020 goals.
- Objectives should be prevention oriented and/or should address health improvements
that can be achieved through population-based as well as individual actions, systems-based,
environmental, health-service, or policy interventions.
- Objectives should drive actions that will work toward the achievement of the proposed
targets (defined as quantitative values to be achieved by the year 2020).
- Objectives should be useful and reflect issues of national importance. Federal agencies,
states, localities, non-governmental organizations, and the public and private sectors
should be able to use objectives to target efforts in schools, communities, work
sites, health practices, and other environments.
- Objectives should be measurable and should address a range of issues, such as: behavior
and health outcomes; availability of, access to, and content of behavioral and health
service interventions; socio-environmental conditions; and community capacity –
directed toward improving health outcomes and quality of life across the life span.
(Community capacity is defined as the ability of a community to plan, implement,
and evaluate health strategies.)
- Continuity and comparability of measured phenomena from year to year are important,
thus, when appropriate, retention of objectives from previous Healthy People iterations
is encouraged. However, in instances where objectives and/or measures have proven
illsuited to the purpose or are inadequate, new improved objectives and/or new measures
should be developed. Whether or not an objective has met its target in a previous
Healthy People iteration should not be the sole basis for retaining or deleting
an objective.
- The objectives should be supported by the best available scientific evidence. The
objective selection and review processes should be flexible enough to allow revisions
to objectives in order to reflect major updates or new knowledge.
- Objectives should address population disparities. These include populations categorized
by race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status, gender, disability status, sexual orientation,
and geographic location. For particular health issues, additional special populations
should be addressed, based on an examination of the available evidence on vulnerability,
health status, and disparate care. Data sources are not necessarily a prerequisite
for inclusion of a special population in an objective.
- Healthy People 2020, like past versions, will be heavily data driven. Valid, reliable, nationally representative data and data systems should be used for Healthy People 2020 objectives. Each objective will have 1) a data source, or potential data source, identified, 2) baseline data and 3) assurance of at least one additional data point throughout the decade.
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Content for this site is maintained by the Office
of Disease Prevention & Health Promotion,
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Last revised:
October 30, 2009
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