A trailblazer is someone who ventures into uncharted territory, clears a path where none exists, and makes it possible for others to follow. By that definition, Lloyd Novick was nothing less than a public health trailblazer. But Lloyd did more than blaze the path ahead. He doubled back, extended his hand, and helped others walk it. He was not content with discovery alone; he cared about who would benefit from it, and whether they had the tools and confidence to take the next step. Bridging Public Health Research and Practice If there is a bridge between research and public health practice, Lloyd Novick brought the bricks and mortar. For too long, academic publishing was treated as the province of scholars, while practitioners were told their role was to do, not to document. That mindset left practice and research stranded on opposite shores. Lloyd rejected this. He built the Journal of Public Health Management and Practice (JPHMP) as the bridge that connected those worlds, on a premise that was radical for its time but deceptively simple: public health practice generates knowledge, and that knowledge deserves to be shared. Without it, we risk reinventing the wheel in every jurisdiction, repeating mistakes instead of building on successes. JPHMP became the proving ground for that belief. What had once been dismissed as "gray literature" or "local context" was elevated into peer-reviewed contributions that shaped national policy and practice. Each article was another plank in the span, allowing ideas to travel in both directions—from practice to research, and from research back to practice. Thirty years on, the journal stands as both a monument to vision and a living bridge between research and practice. Lloyd didn't just say practice-based evidence mattered—he built the platform that continues to prove it, issue after issue, generation after generation. A Champion of the Workforce Of all Lloyd's insights, perhaps none was more prescient than his belief in the centrality of the workforce. In 2003, he wrote: "The public health workforce is the most essential element in our collective efforts in assuring the public's health."1 Those words should be carved into stone above the entryway of every health department in America and hang in every school of public health. They capture a truth that is as simple as it is profound: nothing happens without the workforce. Policies don't implement themselves. Vaccines don't deliver themselves. Data don't interpret itself. It takes people—committed, trained, often underappreciated people—showing up day after day to turn ideas into protection, programs into prevention, and science into saved lives. Long before the pandemic jolted the nation into remembering that public health workers exist, Lloyd was already warning us. He saw the cracks forming, the strain on the workforce, the danger of neglecting the very people on whom the system depends. He knew that without sustained investment in people, every innovation was fragile, every policy was brittle, and every program was temporary. This wasn't just a rhetorical flourish. It was a call to reorder our priorities. To stop treating the workforce as interchangeable labor and start treating it as the heart, strength, and future of public health. Consider the "Ten Great Public Health Achievements" listed in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report: vaccination, safer workplaces, healthier mothers and babies, fluoridation, motor vehicle safety, reductions in tobacco use ("Ten Great").2 These are remarkable accomplishments, credited with adding 25 years to American life expectancy. Yet in celebrating the outcomes, we often overlook the people who made them possible—the epidemiologists, nurses, health educators, sanitarians, data analysts, and frontline workers whose daily grind translates policy into protection. Lloyd never overlooked them. He saw what too many in our field have missed: without investment in people, public health cannot succeed. His conviction reshaped how many of us think about building capacity. And it remains unfinished work. The Coaching Tree In sports, coaches are often judged not just by their own records but by their "coaching trees"—the assistants and protégés who go on to become successful coaches. By that measure, Lloyd's coaching tree is vast. He nurtured generations of practitioners, scholars, and leaders. He published their first papers. He offered advice without judgment, guidance without fanfare. He modeled a quiet passion and relentless commitment to service. He taught that being tough on the outside could coexist with deep generosity on the inside. His influence is visible across today's public health leadership. You see it in leaders who once doubted their voices but found confidence after he gave them a platform. You see it in practitioners who thought publishing was beyond their reach but saw their first article in print because Lloyd believed otherwise. You see it in the countless mentees who learned from his example that mentorship is not extra—it is the job. That is the real legacy of leadership: not what you build, but who you build up. A Generational Shift Lloyd's passing is part of a larger moment for our field. We are experiencing a generational shift. In recent years, we lost Kristine Gebbie, the nation's first AIDS czar and a pioneer in enumerating the public health workforce. We lost Douglas Scutchfield, whose scholarship defined public health systems research. We lost Mary Selecky, whose leadership in Washington State embodied courage and pragmatism in equal measure. Now we have lost Lloyd Novick. Together, these leaders were giants. They were fearless in their pursuit of better health for all. They cleared paths in the wilderness, often without a map, often without resources, but always with conviction. Their passing marks the end of an era—and with it, a responsibility for us to take up their unfinished work. We cannot simply admire their work. We must continue it. Lessons for Today What, then, are the lessons Lloyd leaves us? Three stand out. First, be one of "those people." Mentors, champions, encouragers. The greatest tribute we can pay Lloyd is not in words, but in the actions we take to lift others as he lifted us. Second, defend and elevate the workforce. Behind every life saved and every policy advanced are public health workers. If we neglect them, we neglect the future of health itself. Lloyd understood this long before most of us did. Together, we must carry that truth forward. Third, publish our practice. Practitioners' data, voices, and lived experiences belong in the literature. By writing, sharing, and shaping the field, we extend Lloyd's vision and ensure knowledge born of practice continues to guide practice. Walking Further A trailblazer's true legacy is not the path they walked, but the paths they made possible for others. Lloyd Novick blazed trails in publishing, in workforce advocacy, and in mentorship. He cleared the way for practitioners to become scholars, for workforce to be seen as central, for mentorship to be valued as leadership. The question for all of us is whether we will walk further. Will we continue to clear new paths for those who follow us? Lloyd's influence lives on in the people he lifted. His coaching tree is still growing. His lessons are still guiding. His words are still reminding us of what matters most. The real measure of our work isn't what we build, but who we build up. Lloyd knew that. He lived it. And he left it to us as both gift and challenge. Thank you, Lloyd.
Brian C. Castrucci (Tue,) studied this question.