Module 4 Flashcards

1
Q

why prioritise?

A
  • finite health services
  • .opportunity costs for each prioritisation
  • ethical and evidence based judgement required
  • difficult to compare health outcomes
  • individual vs. population needs.
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2
Q

aims of GBD?

A
  • to use a systematic approach in summarising the burden of disease and disability at a population level using population health principles and the best available evidence, for health research and health service prioritisation and to identify disadvantaged groups to target health interventions.
  • to take into account death and non-fatal outcomes/disability.
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3
Q

reasons for GBD

A
  • incomplete data from different countries
  • data focused on mortality and did not take into account disability (which is hard to measure)
  • lobby groups give a disproportionate view on the important health issues.
  • hard to compare strategies and conditions without the same approach.
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4
Q

underlying determinants of health?

WHO the right to health reading

A
  • safe drinking water & adequate sanitation
  • safe food/nutrition
  • adequate nutrition and environment
  • healthy working and environmental conditions
  • health related information and education
  • gender equality
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5
Q

key aspects of the right to health

WHO the right to health reading

A
  • inclusive
  • contains freedom
  • contains entitlements
  • health services provided without discrimination
  • all services/goods/facilities must be acceptable, available, accessible and of good quality
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6
Q

gains of DALY approach?

A
  • revealed the hidden burden of mental health burden/injury as a major public health problem
  • recognised ncd’s as a major problem for LMIC’s - not just a rich country problem
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7
Q

challenges of DALY approach?

A
  • disability is viewed as a burden
  • disability weights are considered the same as the disease burden, not taking into account setting/social position/physical or social environment
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8
Q

Medical model of disability

A
  • disability is an individual problem and they need to be cured. justifies their exclusion from society
  • disabled = defined by their illness
  • disabled = dependent
  • control = health professional’s
  • individual choice is limited
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9
Q

social model of disability

A
  • problem for society
  • caused by policies, practices, attitudes, environment
  • resolved by removing barriers
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10
Q

epidemiological transition

A

characteristic shift from perinatal/CD’s –> NCD’s as the common burden of disease/disability as we shift from low–> high income

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11
Q

risk transition

A

shift from RF’s for CD’s/PND’s –> RF’s for NCD’s. as we shift from Lower–> higher income countries

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12
Q

double burden of disease

A

common risks of PN/CD’s coexist with risks of NCD’s

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13
Q

NCD Truths

A
80%+ of NCD's are in LMIC's
preventable
double burden requires double response, not CD's first then NCD's
~50% in 30-69 yo's
concentrated among poor
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14
Q

feminisation of the HIV epidemic

A

the increasing proportions of new HIV infections are among women, primarily via heterosexual transmission

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15
Q

leading cause of death for women of reproductive age?

A

AIDS-related illness

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16
Q

HIV prevention and control

A
safer sex:
  - media
  - education
  - condoms
safer products
  - needle exchange
  - prevent against needle stick injuries
  - screening of blood products
improved access
  - testing and counselling
  - antenatal screening
  - treatment, support, counselling for HIV+ people
  - treatment of infections, family planning
17
Q

challenges for the future of HIV

A

global resources fall short of the needs
need to combat stigma and discrimination
need to address social determinants of health and human rights

18
Q

obesogenic environments

A

the sum of influences that the surroundings/opportunities/conditions of life have on promoting obesity in individuals or populations

19
Q

consequences of obesity

A

metabolic diseases
mechanical disorders
psychological problems
social consequences

20
Q

causes of obesity pandemic

A

food system
political and economic drivers
other changes - e.g. sedentary lifestyle

21
Q

local environments that shape obesity

A
economic
  - income and income disparity
physical
  - food and PA
socio-cultural
  - food, PA, body size
policy 
  - regulations of market
22
Q

policy inertia

A

food industry opposition
- direct opposition (court), self-regulatory pledges/codes
government reluctance to regulate or tax
- conflicts of interest, unwilling to battle food industry, belief in education and market solutions
lack of public demand
- more supporting of policy actions, not translated into pressure for change

23
Q

right to health instruments

A
  1. universal declaration of human rights
  2. international covenant on economic, social and cultural rights
    3, other international rights conventions
  3. indigenous rights (ToW, UN Dec of Rights of Ind. peoples)
  4. NZ Legislation and policies (human rights, NZPublic health and disabilities act, code of patient rights)
24
Q

respect (R2H)

A

no discrimination

25
Q

protect (R2H)

A

no 3rd party interference

26
Q

fulfill (R2H)

A

adopt measures to achieve equity

27
Q

R2H

A
  1. enshrined in intl law
  2. health care AND preconditions
  3. RPF
  4. freedoms and entitlements
  5. health + social justice + good govt.
28
Q

Haddon matrix 3rd dimension (7)

A
  1. cost
  2. effectiveness
  3. equity
  4. preferences
  5. stigmatisation
  6. feasibility
  7. freedom
29
Q

PAR

A

amount of extra disease attributable to RF in the POPULATION

30
Q

AR

A

amount of extra disease attributable to the RF in the EXPOSED GROUP