Lecture 1 Cpms16-Introduction To CPM Instructor S
Lecture 1 Cpms16-Introduction To CPM Instructor S
Lecture 1 Cpms16-Introduction To CPM Instructor S
Introduction to
Community and Preventive Medicine
Learning Objectives
Describe the relevance of community and preventive
medicine to clinical practice
Describe the contribution of public health and curative
medicine to the decline in mortality in the 20th
century
Give three examples of the interaction of practicing
physicians and public health agencies
Describe the goals of preventive medicine
Define primary, secondary, and tertiary prevention,
and give an example of each
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Definition of Heath
A state of complete physical, mental and
social well-being and not merely the
absence of disease or infirmity (WHO,
1947)
Life Expectancy
Life expectancy = average number of years of
life remaining to a person at a particular age,
based on age-specific mortality rates
80
77 yrs.
60
47 yrs.
40
20
0
1900
2000
80
77 yrs.
60
47 yrs.
40
20
0
1900
2000
Ref: Bunker JP, Frazier HS, Mosteller F. Improving health: measuring effects of medical care.
Milbank Q 1994;72:225-258.
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80
60
77 yrs.
Clinical medicine ~ 5 yrs.
Public health ~ 25 yrs.
40
20
0
1900
2000
Ref: Bunker JP, Frazier HS, Mosteller F. Improving health: measuring effects of medical care.
Milbank Q 1994;72:225-258.
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Laboratory testing
Public health surveillance results
Health alerts, e.g., anthrax, influenza
Selected vaccines, antitoxins, etc.
Prevention materials
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Preventive Medicine
The specialty of medical practice that focuses on
the health of individuals and defined populations in
order to protect, promote, and maintain health and
well-being and prevent disease, disability, and
premature death (American Board of Preventive
Medicine)
In Board certification, three subspecialties
Public health and general preventive medicine
Occupational medicine
Aerospace medicine
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Levels of Prevention
Primary prevention prevention of disease
or injury, e.g., by eliminating causes of
disease or by increasing resistance to
disease
Secondary prevention early detection and
prompt treatment of disease before it
becomes symptomatic
Tertiary prevention limitation of the impact
(e.g., disability) from disease
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Levels of Prevention
Stage of Disease
Level of
Prevention
Predisease
Primary
Health promotion
Specific protection
Latent disease
Secondary
Appropriate Response
Jekel et al.
PUBH501 Intro to C&PM
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Primary Prevention
Primary prevention prevention of disease or
injury
Two approaches
Health promotion efforts to prevent disease and enhance health in
general
Specific protection efforts aimed at specific diseases, deficiencies,
injuries, toxic exposures
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Health Promotion
Social marketing
Counseling
Environmental modification
Other structural changes
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Social Marketing
= application of commercial marketing
principles to the analysis, planning, execution,
and evaluation of programs designed to
influence the voluntary behavior of target
audiences in order to improve personal and
societal welfare (Andreason, 1995)
Examples
MADD
Know Your Numbers
A.B.C.
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Specific Protection
Prevention of
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Chain of Infection /
Prevention Opportunities
Route of
Transmission
Reservoir
Susceptible Host
(via portal of entry)
Agent
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Protection Against
Specific Infectious Diseases
Eliminate agent
Control / eliminate reservoir
Control transmission
Prevent exposure
Improve host resistance
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Non-infectious Concerns
Injuries (both unintentional and intentional)
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Protection Against
Specific Deficiency States
Food fortification
Iodine in salt
Vitamin D in milk
Fluoride in water
Folic acid in cereal grain products
iodine-deficiency goiter
rickets
dental caries
neural tube defects
Supplementation
Iron
Adequate nutrition
e.g., in refugee camps
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Protection Against
Iatrogenic Diseases and Injuries
Medication errors
computer entry instead of handwritten orders
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Secondary Prevention
Secondary prevention early detection and
prompt treatment of disease before it
becomes symptomatic
Screening programs used to detect diseases in early preclinical
stages
Case finding, e.g., periodic health exam
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Tertiary Prevention
Tertiary prevention limitation of the impact
(e.g., disability) from disease
Treatment
Disability limitation, esp. risk factor modification
Monitoring for long-term sequelae
Rehabilitation
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Summary
Goal of preventive medicine to promote health,
minimize disease, injury, sequelae
Primary = avoid, secondary = screen / identify
asymptomatics, tertiary = minimize impact
Many strategies and approaches
think both individual and community
Consider health promotion, specific protection, legislation / regulation,
environmental modification, etc.
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