2. INTRODUCTION
DEFINITION
CHANGING CONCEPT OF HEALTH
SPECTRUM OF HEALTH
CONCEPT OF CAUSATION
CHANGING CONCEPTS IN PUBLIC HEALTH
MILLENIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS
3. PRIMARY HEALTH CARE
PUBLIC HEALTH IN INDIA
CONCEPT OF PREVENTION
CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
4. HEALTH IS COMMON THEME IN MOST
CULTURES.
IN SOME CULTURE HEALTH AND
HARMONY ARE CONCIDERED
EQUIVALENT.
HEALTH- ABSENCE OF DISEASE
HARMONY- BEING AT PIECE WITH THE
SELF, THE COMMUNITY, GOD AND
COSMOS.
5. “HEALTH IS A STATE OF COMPLETE
PHYSICAL, MENTAL AND SOCIAL
WELLBEING AND NOT MERELY THE
ABSENCE OF DISEASE OR INFIRMITY”
WHO 1948
8. 1. Biomedical concept
absence of disease
inadequate to solve major health
problems (malnutrition, chronic
diseases, accidents)
9. 2. Ecological concepts
dynamic equilibrium between man
and his environment.
disease : maladjustment of the
human organism to environment.
10. 3. Psychosocial concept
health is influenced by social ,
psychological, cultural, economic and
political factors.
11. 4. Holistic concept
all sectors of society have an
effect on health.
health implies a sound mind, in a
sound body, in a sound family, in a
sound environment.
13. EPIDEMIOLOGICAL TRIAD
MULTIFACTORIAL CAUSATION
NATURAL HISTORY OF DISEASE
WEB OF CAUSATION
RISK FACTOR & RISK GROUP
SPECTRUM OF DISEASE
ICEBERG OF DISEASE
15. As an element or substance, animate or
inanimate, the presence (or absence)
of it may initiate or perpetuate a disease
process.
Nutritional agent: carbohydrate, vitamin,
fat, protein, mineral, water
Chemical agent: polutan , drugs, Hg, Pb,
Ag, arsenicum.
Physical agent: collision, traffic accident,
falling down, dust, climate (frost bite, heat
stroke)
17. A person or other living animal, that
affords subsistence or lodgment to an
infectious agent under natural condition
Intrinsic factors that influence an
individual’s exposure, susceptibility, or
response to a causative agent
18. As the aggregate of all the external
conditions and influence affecting the life
and development of an organism
1. Physical environment: geographic,
geology, climate
2. Biological environment: people, flora,
fauna, food population density
3. Socioeconomic: income, education,
culture, urbanization, economic growth,
poverty, fertility, etc.
19. Given by pettenkofer of munich
Modern disease could not be explained
by ‘single cause idea’
Concept offers multiple approaches for
prevention of disease
E.g.- coronary heart disease is caused by
excess fat intake, smoking, lack of
physical exercise and obesity.
20. It is the way in which a disease evolves
over time from the earliest stage of its
pre-pathogenesis phase to its
termination as recovery, disability or
death, in the absence of treatment or
prevention.
21. PRE-PATHOGENIC PHASE OR
SUSCEPTIBILITY STAGE: PROCESS IN THE
ENVIRONMENT
PATHOGENIC PHASE: PROCESS IN MAN
22. Model Suggested by Macmahon and
Pugh.
Applicable on chronic disease where
agent is unknown but is outcome of
interaction of multiple factors
Removal of just 1 link is sufficient to
control disease
23.
24. Disease in a community may be compared with an
iceberg.
Tip of iceberg what the physician sees in the
community [clinical cases]
The vast submerged Hidden mass of disease portion of
iceberg
- latent
- Inapparent
- Presymptomatic
- undiagnosed
- carriers
The water line demarcation between apparent and
in apparent disease.
25. Disease control phase
Health promotion phase
Social Engineering phase
Health for all phase
26. Disease control phase [1880-1920]
aimed at the control of man’s
physical environment
eg: Water supply ,sewage disposal,
etc
improved the health of people due to
disease and death control
27. Health promotion phase [1920-1960]
mother and child health services
school health services
industrial health services
mental health & rehabilitation services
28. 2 movements were initiated
A. Basic health services – primary health
centers, sub-centers
B. Community development programme
29. Social Engineering phase [1960 – 1980]
Social and behavioral aspects of
disease and health given priority
acute illness problems were solved
”risk factors” as determinants of
diseases came into existence
public health moved in to the
preventive and rehabilitation aspect.
30. Health for all phase [1981 – 2000]
Members of WHO pledged “Health
for all by the year 2000”
The organized application of local,
state, national and international
resources permit all people to lead a
socially and economically productive
life
31. Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger
Achieve universal primary eduation
Promote gender equality and empower
women
Reduce child mortality
Improve maternal health
Combact HIV, Malaria and other disease.
Ensure environmental sustainability
Develop a global partnership for
development
32. Primary health care is essential health care based
on practical, scientifically sound and socially
acceptable methods and technology made
universally accessible to individuals and families
in the community through their full participation
and at a cost that the community and country
can afford to maintain at every stage of their
development in the spirit of self reliance and self-
determination.” (Alma Ata Declaration, 1978)
35. Health services must be shared
equally by all people
irrespective of their ability to
pay.
Rich or poor / rural or urban
must have access to health
services.
36. 80% percentage of people live
in rural areas & only 20% live in
the urban areas, but the
proportion of the health
services is grossly inversely
propotionate.ie, 80% of people
are catered by only 20% &
20% are catered by 80% of
health services.
37. This has been termed as social
injustice.
Primary Health Care aims to
readdress this imbalance by
shifting the centre of gravity of
the health care system from
cities to the rural areas, & bring
these services as near people’s
home as possible.
38. Involvement of the individuals
& community in promotion of
their own health & welfare, is
an essential ingredient of
primary health care.
39. There must be a continuing
effort to secure meaningful
involvement of the community
in planning, implementing &
maintenance of health
services, besides maximum
reliance on local resources
such as manpower, money &
materials.
40. One approach – the VHG &
Trained Dais has been
successfully tried in India.
They are selected by the local
community & trained locally in
the delivery of primary health
care to the community they
belong.
41. By overcoming cultural &
communication barriers, they
provide primary health care in
ways that are acceptable to the
community.
It is now considered that “Health
Guides” & “Trained Dais” are an
essential feature of primary
health care in India.
42. These concepts are revolutionary.
They have been greatly influenced
by the experience in China where
community participation in the from
of “bare foot doctors” took place on
an unprecedented scale.
43. There is an increasing
realization that HFA cannot be
provided by the health sector
alone.
44. The declaration of Alma Ata
states that primary health care
involves in addition to health
sector, all related sectors &
aspects of national & community
development, in particular
agriculture, animal husbandry,
food, industry, education,
housing, public works,
communication & other sectors.
45. To achieve such cooperation,
countries may have to review
their administrative system,
reallocate their resources &
introduce suitable legislation to
ensure that coordination can
take place.
This requires a strong political will
to translate values into action.
47. Appropriate technology has been defined
as “technology that is scientifically sound,
adaptable to local needs, & acceptable to
those who apply it & for those whom it is
used & that cab be maintained by the
people themselves in keeping with the
principles of self reliance with the resources
the community & country can afford”.
48. The term appropriate is
emphasized because in some
countries luxurious hospitals
that are totally inappropriate to
the local needs, are built, which
absorb a major part of the
national health budget,
effectively blocking many
improvement in general health
services.
49. This also implies use of costly
equipments, procedures &
techniques when cheaper,
scientifically valid &
acceptable ones are
available. (ORS packets over
house to house sand pipe
connections)
55. An adequate supply of safe water and
basic sanitation.
“Sanitation generally refers to the
provision of facilities and services for the
safe disposal of human urine and feces.”
(WHO)
56. Maternal and child health care,
including family planning.
57. Maternal death is the death of a woman while
pregnant or within 42 days of termination of
pregnancy, irrespective of the duration and
site of the pregnancy, from any cause related
to or aggravated by the pregnancy or its
management but not from accidental or
incidental causes.
The infant mortality rate (IMR) is the ratio of the
number of deaths among children less than
one year old during a given year to the
number of live births during the same year.
63. The goal of medicine is to promote, to
preserve, to restore health when it is
impaired & to minimize suffering &
distress.
These goals are embodied in the word
“prevention”.
64. The objective of preventive medicine
is to intercept or oppose the “cause”
& thereby the disease process.
67. This primary prevention is purest in its
sense.
It implies prevention of the
emergence or development of risk
factors in population groups in which
they have not yet appeared.
68. This primary prevention is purest in
its sense.
It implies prevention of the
emergence or development of risk
factors in population groups in
which they have not yet
appeared.
69. Primary prevention can be
defined as “action taken
prior to the onset of
disease, which removes the
possibility that a disease will
occur”.
70. It signifies intervention in the
pre pathogenesis phase of a
disease or health problem.
Primary prevention may be
accomplished by measures
designed to promote general
health & well being, & quality
of life of people or by specific
protective measures.
71. Secondary prevention can
be defined as “action which
halts the progress of a
disease at its incipient stage
& prevents complications”.
72. The specific interventions are
early diagnosis & prompt
treatment.
Secondary prevention attempts
to arrest the disease process,
restore health by seeking out
unrecognized disease & treating
it before irreversible pathological
changes have taken place &
reverse communicability of
infectious diseases.
73. When disease process has
advanced beyond its early
stages, it is still possible to
accomplish prevention by
what might be called
“tertiary prevention”.
74. It signifies intervention in the
late pathogenesis phase.
Tertiary prevention can be
defined as “all measures
available to reduce or limit
impairments & disabilities,
minimize suffering caused by
existing departures from good
health & to promote the
75. The main interventions
include disability limitation
& rehabilitation.
Tertiary prevention extends
the concept of prevention
into fields of rehabilitation.
76. “So many people spend their health
gaining wealth, and then have to
spend their wealth to regain their
health.”
-Materi
77. “It is health that is real wealth, and
not pieces of gold and silver.”
-Gandhi
78. 1) SOBEN PETER: BOOK OF PREVENTIVE
AND COMMUNITY DENTISTRY
2) S. S. HIREMATH: BOOK OF PUBLIC
HEALTH DENTISTRY
3) K. PARK: PREVENTIVE AND SOCIAL
MEDICINE