Public Health Flashcards
What is health?
A state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease
3 areas of public health and 1 example of each
Health protection - environmental disasters
Health improvement - lifestyle e.g. change for life
Improving services - audit and evaluation
What is primary disease prevention? give 1 example
Aims to prevent a disease before it ever happens. Changes peoples exposure to a risk Immunisation, fluoridation of water
What is secondary disease prevention? give 1 example
Aims to detect disease early to alter the course/slow progression Screening, aspirin after an MI
What is tertiary disease prevention? give 1 example
Aims to reduce disability and minimise complications stroke rehab
What is the prevention paradox?
If something brings a lot of benefit to a population it likely provides little benefit to the individual
10 screening criteria
The disease: important problem, early stage, natural history known
The test: suitable, acceptable, able to diagnose and treat
The management: agreed policy on who to treat, acceptable, continuous process
Cost effective
What 3 things form the triple assessment for breast cancer screening?
Imaging - USS & mammography
Clinical assessment
Biopsy
When does breast cancer screening take place?
Every 3 years between the ages of 50 and 70
When does cervical cancer screening take place?
ages 25-50 every 3 years ages 50-64 every 5 years
9 things on the newborn heel prick test
MCADD, sickle cell, CF, congenital hypothyroid, maple syrup disease, PKU, Glutamic acidaemia, isovaleric acidaemia, homocysteine uria
What are the 2 ways of monitoring prevalence?
Active and passive
Describe the difference between active and passive prevalence monitoring
Active - seeking out people with the disease Passive - data taken from sentinel GP practices
Define sensitivity
The proportion of people with the disease who are correctly identified by the screening
less false -ve
disease present = +ve test
Define specificity
The proportion of people who do not have the disease who are correctly excluded by the screening
less false +ve
+ve test = disease present
Define PPV
Proportion of people who have a positive screening result who actually have the disease
Define NPV
Proportion of people who have a negative screening result who do not have the disease
3 biases associated with screening
Selection bias
Length time bias
Lead time bias
Define length time bias
Screening is more likely to pick up long lived slow growing tumours than short lived aggressive ones due to the timings
Define lead time bias
Overestimation of survival duration due to earlier detection by screening than clinical presentation
What is epidemiology?
Study of frequency, distribution and determinants of disease in populations in order to prevent and control disease
Define prevalence
Number of existing cases in a defined population at a defined point in time divided by the number of people in a population
Prevalence ratio
Prevalence in exposed divided by prevalence in unexposed
5 reasons for association between 2 variables
True association
reverse causality,
chance,
bias,
confounding