Furthermore, advocacy can allow us to establish a sustainable background upon which our own medical interventions can work off of. For instance, it is hard to control someone’s asthma if a housing unit allows indoor smoking. It will be difficult to manage someone’s risk of lung cancer if there are not adequate occupational reforms set in place in old buildings with significant asbestosis. Medical advancements are amazing, and we can provide much to improve the health and well-being of our patients; however, these interventions can be attenuated if there are social factors in place that are unjust and unfair.
Advocacy also means to advocating on the behalf of science for the purpose of preserving science. Many scientists and clinicians alike are funded by federal funds, for instance. Assuring that the community beyond the academic boundaries knows of our work and understands its benefit is vital to assuring that they will vote to continue funding it. Advocacy promotes the ability to improve patients and health outcomes, as well as the medical breakthroughs destined to further those improvements.
In this edition, I have invited friends and colleagues to contribute work that centers on their own versions of advocacy. In the feature article, Silvi Rouskin, PhD, discusses how her work as a scientist requires her to advocate for funding to continue critical scientific research. Ajanta Patel, MD, MPH, shares how she used her clinical expertise while at the Chicago Department of Public Health to provide improved housing conditions without asthma hazards. Natalia Linos, ScD, explains how her background as an epidemiologist inspired her to run for political office. And Colleen Christmas, MD, a former program director, details how clinicians can make a difference through participation in medical societies. (Admittedly, there’s a bit of a bias here, as Dr. Christmas was my own program director, leading me to co-create Medicine for the Greater Good, an organization through which I can advocate for the local Baltimore City community that I was born and raised in.)