L15 - public health and promotion Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 domains of public health?

A

Health promotion/improvement, health protection, health services and care

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2
Q

What are quality of life indices?

A

Life expectancy at birth

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3
Q

What are causes behind risk factors?

A

Socio-economic status, gender, age, employment, education, deprivation, income, geography (north/south divide), sexual behaviour, politics, wars, movements, drugs

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4
Q

Define health promotion

A

The process of enabling people to increase control over and improve their health (Ottawa charter 1986)

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5
Q

What does health promotion involve?

A

knowledge transfer - campaigns; clinical interventions - screening/immunisation; health public policy - legal, fiscal and societal measures, infrastructure, politics; community development - groups set their own agenda and liase with organisations to create sustainable action

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6
Q

Describe difference in gender gonorrhoea diagnoses in England and wales

A

Double the number of diagnoses in males than females from 1925-2010

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7
Q

What are the upstream and downstream determinants for health?

A

upstream: life conditions
downstream: risk factors

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8
Q

What is the Tannahill model?

A

Health promotion model. Venn diagram showing overlap between prevention (medical intervention to reduce risk), protection (legislative, fiscal and social) and education (influencing knowledge and attitudes).

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9
Q

What are the levels of prevention set by WHO?

A

Primordial, primary, secondary, tertiary

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10
Q

Define primordial prevention

A

prevention of unhealthy lifestyle behaviours from birth

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11
Q

Define primary prevention

A

health promotion, specific protection, screening, immunisation, vitamins

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12
Q

Define secondary prevention

A

clinical diagnoses and treatment

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13
Q

Define tertiary prevention

A

disability rehab, intensive care

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14
Q

What are the approaches to disease prevention?

A

High risk and Population

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15
Q

What are the strengths of a high risk approach?

A

Efficient, effective, appropriate, easy to evaluate, high patient and clinician motivation

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16
Q

What are the strengths of a population approach?

A

equitable, radical, large potential, behaviourally appropriate

17
Q

What are the weaknesses of a high risk approach?

A

May be palliative and temporary, risk prediction may not be accurate, may be limited, high cost of screening, difficult ot identify screening borderlines, hard to change individual behaviours

18
Q

What are the weaknesses of a population approach?

A

small advantage to individual, poor motivation of patient and clinician, low benefit/risk ratio

19
Q

Order the interventions from high to low cost and individual effort

A

Counselling and education, clinical intervention, protective intervention, changing individual mindset, socioeconomic factors

20
Q

What did the Wanless 1,2,3 report identify?

A

Health priorities: smoking, alcohol, obesity, sexual health, teenage pregnancy, mental health

21
Q

What did the Marmot review set out?

A

6 key policy objectives addressing the determinants of health in response to the WHO publication in 2008 ‘closing the gap of the generation’
Related to life-course

22
Q

What does the PHOF do?

A

sets out a vision for public health outcomes and indicators that will help to understand how public health is improving and being protected

23
Q

How many admissions are caused by smoking?

A

Males: 6%
Females: 3%

24
Q

What were the subjects addressed to promote smoking cessation in the UK?

A

Policy, legislation, taxation, media, school, workplace, support 1-2-1, smoking cessation clinics, group sessions

25
Q

How does CQUIN work?

A

Incentivises hospitals to make some intervention to reduce alcohol and smoking by offering cash reward

26
Q

How does NAS work?

A

Ends cheap alcohol sales and restricts marketing

27
Q

What are the key public health programmes

A

Smoking cessation, alcohol harm reduction, sexual health chlamydia, teenage pregnancy, obesity, immunisation