Public Health Lecture Notes
Public Health Lecture Notes
Public Health Lecture Notes
Public Health
Interdisciplinary science and art of disease, disability, injury prevention and control in the human
population. -Holmes 2009
It refers to the health status of a defined group of people and the governmental actions and
conditions to promote, protect, and preserve their health. - McKenzie, Ringer, Kotecki 2002
Public Health
Is the science and art of 1) preventing disease, 2) prolonging life, and 3) promoting health and
efficiency through organized community effort for:
A. The sanitation of the environment
B. The control of communicable infections
C. The education of the individual in personal hygiene
D. The organization of health services for the early diagnosis and preventive treatment of disease
E. The development of social machinery to ensure everyone a standard of living adequate for the
maintenance of health,
So organizing these benefits as to enable every citizen to enjoy his birth right of health and longevity.
- Institute of Medicine, 1988
Public health is what we, as a society, do collectively ensure that people can be healthy.
Key Assumptions
1. Humans have a right to the resources necessary for health.
2. Humans are inherently social and independent.
3. The effectiveness of institutions depends heavily on the public’s trust.
4. Collaboration is the element to public health.
5. People and their physical environment are interdependent.
6. Each person in a community should have an opportunity to contribute.
Chinese
had latrines and sewers and used protective measures for drinking water and destruction of rats
and rabid animals.
Medical care emphasized diet, herbal medicine, hygiene, and massage and acupuncture.
Indians
Cities were planned with building codes, street paving and covered sewers.
Indian medicine originated in herbalism associated with mythical gods.
Used drugs and surgery and established schools and public hospitals as a part of state medicine.
Egyptians
Widespread parasitic disease
Drainage and hygiene was highly emphasized.
Developed surgical skills and organization of medical care. 4
Hebrews
Mosaic Law stressed the prevention of disease through regulation of personal and community
hygiene, reproductive and maternal health, isolation lepers and family and personal conduct as
part of religious practice.
Mandatory rest day, protection of water supplies, sanitation of communities, waste disposal,
and food protection.
Greeks
Much emphasis on the prevention of disease as on the treatment of those diseases
The rile of the physician began to take a more defined shape
Scientific view of medicine emerged
Preservation of health was seen as a balance of forces: exercise and rest, nutrition and excretion
etc.
*Hippocrates
Romans
Extremely skilled in engineering of water supply, sewage and drainage systems, public baths,
latrines, town planning, sanitation and medical care
Aqueducts
Marshlands were drained to reduce malarial threat
Dissected living humans to further their knowledge in anatomy.
Age of Enlightenment
Improvements in agriculture created greater productivity and nutrition
Higher birth rates and falling death rates
Urban areas suffered from crowding, poor housing, sanitation and nutrition
Harsh working conditions
Modern Times
Observation of microorganism
Germ theory
Artificial vaccine
Increase in average lifespan
Lowing infant mortality
Increase in obesity and diabetes
Terrorism and bioterrorism preparedness
Natural disaster preparedness
Excommunication