alcholic liver disease epidemiology Flashcards

1
Q

what are the symptoms of alcoholic liver disease

A
vague
nausea
weight loss 
jaundice
confusion 
blood in vomit/ stools
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2
Q

how is alcoholic liver disease diagnosed

A
blood tests
LFTs
serum albumin 
Imagining
Biopsy
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3
Q

how is alcoholic liver disease treated

A

stop drinking

transplant

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4
Q

what are the complications of it

A
ascites 
encephalopathy
portal hypertension
varices
cancer
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5
Q

what is the first stage of the disease

A

build up of fat in the liver
reversible
alcoholic fatty liver

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6
Q

what is the second stage of the disease

A

if mild can be reversible

alcoholic hepatitis

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7
Q

what is the third stage

A

significant scarring
not reversible
50% mortality if continue to drink
liver cirrhosis

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8
Q

describe the 3 considerations of epidemiology

A

time
person
place

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9
Q

describe the epidemiology of alcoholic liver disease in Scotland

A

commonest cause of liver disease death
approx. 80%
has increased over time
mostly males

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10
Q

what age is most commonly affected

A

55-65 years

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11
Q

what social class is most commonly affected

A

SIMD1 - most deprived

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12
Q

what are the wider impacts of excess alcohol intake

A
violence
crime
domestic violence
economic productivity
family and social
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13
Q

what are the determinants of health

A
age, sex, genetic
lifestyle
social and community
living and working conditions
general socioeconomic, cultural and environmental condition
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14
Q

what are the barriers to reducing alcoholic liver disease

A
6% of people employed in alcohol related industry
ingrained in our society 
part of way of life
social lubricant 
stigma to not drinking
political barriers
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15
Q

what organisations are involved in reducing alcohol consumption

A
  • Scottish Government
  • Alcohol Industry
  • Retailers
  • NHS
  • Police
  • Local Authorities
  • Voluntary Sector Agencies
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16
Q

what are the elements of health promotion from the otowa charter

A

tackling the determinants of health
working in partnership with a range of agencies and sectors
adopt a strategic approach to promote the health of the population

17
Q

what are the features of health promotion

A
develop personal skills
strengthen community action
reorientate health services
building healthy public policy 
create supportive environments
18
Q

what are the three features of the tannahill model of health promotion

A

health education
prevention
health protection and policy

19
Q

what are the three approaches to health promotion

A

population approach in which the aim is to lower the average level of risk
high risk approach to identify people with high risk
targeted population approach involves identifying communities at greater risk

20
Q

when is the population approach useful

A

–The disease/risk factor is distributed among large proportions of the population
–The results of not intervening to prevent the disease even in one person are very severe

21
Q

what are some examples of population approach

A

adding folic acid to flour

fluoridating water

22
Q

when is the high risk approach useful

A
  • It may be difficult to change behaviour at population level
  • Where there is concentrated risk within the population
23
Q

what are some examples of high risk approach

A

bowel cancer screening kits

surgery for high risk of breast cancer

24
Q

how has Scotland tried to change its relationship with alcohol

A

prevent sale of alcohol as a loss leader
introduces a minimum price

increase education in schools
improve labelling

screening tools
training programme
interventions 
youth commission
reduce violence