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CONCEPTS OF DISEASE
PRESENTED BY : Dr.Vineetha. K
Department of PUBLIC HEALTH DENTISTRY
SEMINAR NO : 3
CONTENTS
• INTRODUCTION
• CONCEPTS OF DISEASE
• CONCEPTS OF CAUSATION
• NATURAL HISTORY OF DISEASE
• CONCEPTS OF CONTROL
• CONCEPTS OF PREVENTION
• CHANGING PATTERN OF DISEASE
• DISEASE CLASSIFICATION
• CONCLUSION
2
INTRODUCTION
3
• The concept of disease has been the subject of a vast,
vivid and versatile debate.
• Disease is a central notion to modern health care, it
effects society and is important to the process of
discovering and identifying disease entities.
CONCEPTS OF DISEASE
4
DEFINITIONS
“A condition in which body function is impaired, departure from a state
of health, an alteration of the human body interrupting the
performance of the vital functions.”
“The condition of body or some part of organ of body
in which its functions are disrupted or deranged.”
“Disease is considered a social phenomenon, occuring in all
societies and defined and fought in terms of the particular
cultural forces prevalent in the society.”
‘a maladjustment of human organism to the environment’
TO KEEP IT SIMPLE
Simplest definition – OPPOSITE TO HEALTH .
5
Any deviation from normal functioning or state of
complete physical or mental well-being.
DISEASE ILLNESS SICKNESS
6
DISEASE is a physiological/
psychological dysfunction.
ILLNESS
is a subjective state
of the person who
feels aware of not
being well.
SICKNESS
is a state of social
dysfunction i.e. a
role that the
individual assumes
when ill (sickness
role).
Susser
CONCEPT OF CAUSATION
Discovery of microbiology - turningpoint
• GERM THEORY OF DISEASE
• Microbes as sole cause of disease
7
EARLIER THEORIES
• Supernatural theory
• Theory of Humors
• Concept of contagion
• Miasmatic theory
• Theory of spontaneous generation
EPIDEMIOLOGICAL TRIAD
• Factors relating host and environment
• Mission of epidemiology – break one of the legs of
triangle and disrupt the connection between these and
thereby stopping outbreak. 8
THE TETRAD OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
9
MULTIFACTORIAL CAUSATION
• CONCEPT- disease is due to multiple factors and not
a single one.
• PETTENKOFER OF MUNICH(1819-1901)-early
proponent of this concept. “Germ theory of disease
"or “single cause idea "in late 19 century
overshadowed the multiple cause theory.
10
11
Causative Factors
Groups or
populations and
their
characteristics
Environment
behaviour, culture
physiological
factors ecological
elements
TIME
ADVANCED MODEL OF THE TRIANGLE
OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
WEB OF CAUSATION
• Suggested by- Mac Mahon and Pugh
• Considers all the predisposing factors of any type and
their complex interaction with each other.
12
13
41
Changes in life style
Stress
Smoking
Lack of Physical exercise
Plenty of food intake
Obesity
HTN
Emotional stress
Aging
Changes in the walls
of arteries
Coronary Occlusion
Myocardial ischemia
Hyperlipidemia
Coronary
Atherosclerosis
Myocardial Ischemia
Fig: Web of causation of MI
NATURAL HISTORY OF DISEASE
14
It refers to the progress of a disease process in an
individual over time, in the absence of intervention.
• History of disease is a key concept in epidemiology.
15
PRE PATHOGENESIS PHASE
• Disease agent has not entered man, but factors
favouring disease exist in the environment.
• What required is an interaction of these factors to
initiate the disease process.
Agent Host
Environment
16
PATHOGENESIS PHASE
• Entry of disease agent in susceptible human host.
• Disease agent multiplies and induces tissue and
physiological changes.
• final outcome- recovery, disability or death.
• This phase may be modified by intervention measures
such as immunization, chemotherapy
17
AGENT FACTORS
18
Substance living or non living , or a force, tangible or
intangible, the excessive presence or relative lack of which
may initiate or perpetuate a disease process.
1. Biological Agents – Infectivity Pathogenicity Virulence
2. Nutrient
3. Physical
4. Chemical
5. Mechanical
6. Absence or insufficiency
of a factor
7. Social
HOST FACTORS
• Host - SOIL Disease agent –
SEED
Classified as
• Demographic
characteristics
• Biologic
• Social & Economic
• Lifestyle factors
19
ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS
• All that which is external to the individual
human host, living and non-living, and
with which he is in constant interaction.
-Macro-environment (external)
• Physical
• Biological
• Psycho social
20
RISK FACTORS
• Where the disease agent is not
firmly established, the
aetiology is generally
discussed in terms of risk
factors.
• The term risk factor is used
by different authors with at
least two meanings-
 An attribute or exposure that is
significantly associated with
development of disease.
 A determinant that can be modified
by intervention, thereby reducing
the possibility of occurrence of
disease or other specified outcomes.
21
RISK GROUPS
• Something for all but more for those in need- in
proportion to the need.
• Another approach developed and promoted by
WHO is to identify precisely the risk groups or
target groups in population by certain defined
criteria and direct appropriate action to them
first- risk approach.
22
SPECTRUM OF DISEASE
• Graphic representation of variations in the
manifestations of disease.
• Infectious disease – gradient of infection
23
ICEBERG OF DISEASE
• Disease in a community is compared to an
iceberg.
24
CONCEPTS OF
CONTROL
The term disease control refers ongoing operation
aimed at reducing:
o The incidence of disease.
o The duration of disease and the consequently the
risk of transmission.
o The effect of infection including physical and
psychological complication.
o The financial burden to the community.
25
•DISEASE ELIMINATION: Reduction of case transmission to a
predetermined very low level or interruption in transmission.
E.g. measles, polio, leprosy from the large geographic region or
area.
• DISEASE ERADICATION: Termination of all transmission of
infection by extermination of the infectious agent through
surveillance and containment. “All or none phenomenon”. E.g.
Small pox.
26
• DISEASE MONITORING:
• Defined as “the performance and analysis of routine
measurement aimed at detecting changes in the environment
or health status of population.” e.g. growth monitoring of
child, Monitoring of air pollution, monitoring of water quality
etc.
• DISEASE SURVEILLANCE:
• Defined as “the continuous scrutiny of the factors that
determine the occurrence and distribution of disease and
other conditions of ill health.” E.g. Poliomyelitis surveillance
programme of WHO.
27
CONCEPTS OF
PREVENTION
The goals of medicine are to
• Promote health,
• To preserve health,
• To restore health when it is
impaired
• And to minimize suffering and
distress.
28
These goals are embodied in the word "prevention"
• Actions aimed at eradicating, eliminating or
minimizing the impact of disease and disability,
or if none of these are feasible, retarding the
progress of the disease and disability.
• The concept of prevention is best defined in the
context of levels, traditionally called primary,
secondary and tertiary prevention. A fourth
level, called primordial prevention, was later
added.
29
Leavell’s Levels of Prevention
30
Stage of disease Level of prevention Type of response
Pre-disease Primary Prevention Health promotion and
Specific protection
Latent Disease Secondary prevention Pre-symptomatic
Diagnosis and treatment
Symptomatic Disease Tertiary prevention •Disability limitation for
early symptomatic disease
•Rehabilitation for late
Symptomatic disease
PRIMORDIAL PREVENTION
• DEFINITION
31
“It is the prevention of the emergence or
development of risk factors in countries or population
groups in which they have not yet appeared.”
• INTERVENTION
The main intervention in primordial prevention is
through individual and mass health education.
PRIMARY PREVENTION
• Goal:
• Reduce number of new cases
• Rationale:
• By reducing exposure rates and increasing resistance, can reduce number
of new cases
• Target population:
• Those who are most likely to be exposed and/or could increase their
resistance
• Typical activities:
• Remove or reduce source of the risk
• Educate and make aware of disease risk
o Include behavioral changes to reduce exposure
• Improve general health
• Outcome measure: incidence of exposure; incidence of
disease
32
Primary prevention can be defined as the action
taken prior to the onset of disease, which removes
the possibility that the disease will ever occur.
SECONDARY PREVENTION
• Goal:
• Reduce number of new cases; reduce number of severe cases
• Rationale:
• By reducing number of exposures and early disease that progress to more
severe disease, mortality and morbidity can be reduced
• Target population:
• Those who have been exposed to the disease-causing agent or have early
symptoms of the disease
• Typical activities:
• Screening for exposure and/or disease
• Post-exposure prophylaxis
• Early treatment to reduce impact of disease/reverse course
• Outcome measure: incidence of disease
33
Secondary prevention can be defined as the action
which halts the progress of a disease at its incipient
stage and prevents complications.
TERTIARY PREVENTION
• Goal:
• Reduce number of complications, deaths
• Rationale:
• By reducing disease severity and increasing recovery, can reduce number of
premature deaths or complications
• Target population:
• Those who have disease and need treatment
• Typical activities:
• Treatment tailored to the patient
• Rehabilitation to promote recovery
• Outcome measure: incidence of death and long-
term disability
34
Tertiary prevention can be defined as all measures
available to reduce or limit impairments and
disabilities, minimize suffering caused by existing
departures from good health and to promote the
patients adjustment to irremediable conditions.
MODES OF INTERVENTION
• Intervention is any attempt to intervene or interrupt the usual
sequence in the development of disease.
• Five modes of intervention corresponding to the natural
history of any disease are:
o Health Promotion
o Specific Protection
o Early Diagnosis and Adequate Treatment
o Disability Limitation
o Rehabilitation
35
HEALTH PROMOTION
• It is the process of enabling people to increase control over
diseases, and to improve their health. It is not directed against
any particular disease but is intended to strengthen the host
through a variety of approaches(interventions):
o Health Education
o Environmental Modifications
o Nutritional Interventions
o Lifestyle and Behavioral Change
36
SPECIFIC PROTECTION
• Some of the currently available interventions aimed at specific
protection are:
 immunization,
 use of specific nutrients,
 chemoprophylaxis,
 protection against accidents,
 protection from carcinogens,
 avoidance of allergens,
 control of specific hazards in general environment .eg air
pollution , noise control
 Control of consumer product quality and safety of foods,drugs
etc
37
EARLY DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT
•A WHO defined early detection of health impairment as “the
detection of disturbances of homeostatic and compensatory
mechanism while biochemical, morphological, and functional
changes are still reversible.”
•Early detection and treatment are the main interventions of
disease control.
• Earlier a disease is diagnosed and treated the better it is from
the point of view of prognosis and preventing the occurrence of
further cases or any long-term disability.
•Ex – essential hypertension, cancer of cervix and Breast cancer
38
DISABILITY LIMITATION
• Objective- is to prevent or halt the transition of the disease
process from impairment to handicap.
Sequence of events leading to disability & handicap:
• Disease → Impairment → Disability→ Handicap.
WHO defined these terms-
• Impairment: Loss or abnormality of psychological,
physiological/anatomical structure or function.
• Disability: Any restriction or lack of ability to perform an
activity in a manner considered normal for one’s age, sex, etc.
• Handicap: Any disadvantage that prevents one from fulfilling
his role considered normal. 39
REHABILITATION
“combined and coordinated use of medical, social,
educational and vocational measures for training and
retraining the individual to the highest possible level of
functional ability”.
• Areas of concern in rehabilitation:
 Medical rehabilitation (restoration of function),
 Vocational rehabilitation (restoration of the capacity to earn a livelihood),
 Social rehabilitation ( restoration of family and social relationships),
 Psychological rehabilitation (restoration of personal dignity and
confidence).
40
CHANGING PATTERN OF
DISEASE
• Although diseases have not changed significantly
through human history, their patterns have.
• Every decade produces its own patterns of disease.
41
42
Spanish flu
EPIDEMIOLOGICAL
TRANSITION.
• A characteristic shift in the disease pattern of a
population as mortality falls during the
demographic transition: acute, infectious
diseases are reduced, while chronic,
degenerative diseases increase in prominence,
causing a gradual shift in the age pattern of
mortality from younger to older ages. (Omran
1970)
43
DEVELOPED COUNTRIES
• Causes of diseases and deaths
have shifted from infectious to
chronic diseases.
Common disease- HEART DISEASE - 23.81%
CANCER-22.95%
CVS- 5.16% .
These 3 together- constitutes about 51.92% of deaths in
US.
OTHERS- Alzheimer's disease, lung cancer, environmental
health problems, and microbial diseases
44
• DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
45
• Nation with a low level of material well-being.
• In a typical developing country about 40%of
death are from infectious ,parasite, and
respiratory diseases compared with about
8%in developed countries.
• In India ,as in other developing countries ,most
death result from infectious and parasite
disease, abetted by malnutrition.
46
47
DISEASE CLASSIFICATION
• A system of classification was needed whereby diseases could
be grouped according to certain common characteristics ,
that would facilitate the statistical study of disease
phenomena.
• JOHN GRAUNT in 17th century- in his study of Bills of mortality
– arranged diseases in an alphabetic order.
48
ICD CLASSIFICATION
• International classification of disease (ICD)by WHO -
accepted for national and international use.
• Revised once in 10 years.
• The ICD is a classification system developed collaboratively
between the World Health Organization WHO) and 10
international centers so that the medical terms reported by
physicians, medical examiners, and coroners on death
certificates can be grouped together for statistical purposes
49
ICD-10 ARRANGED IN 21 DIFFERENT CHAPTERS
50
Why we need disease???
• HAEMOCHROMATOSIS - BUBONIC PLAGUE
• DIABETES - YOUNGER DRYAS
• FAVISM - MALARIA
51
Natural selection is maintaining this
genetic defect because it had conferred
some benefit in the past.
CONCLUSION
• Understanding disease pathology is the
first step towards formulating preventive
measures.
• As a dentist or public health worker it is
our primary responsibility for the
prevention of diseases in community as
well as individual.
52
REFERENCES
• Park, Park’s Textbook of Preventive &Social Medicine, 22nd
Edition, Jabalpur: Banarsidas Bhanot,2013.
• Soben Peter. Essentials of Public Health Dentistry. 4th ed.
New Delhi: Arya Publising House; 2013.
• Epidemiology, L. Gordis, Fourth ed, 2009, Saunders
• Moalem, S., & Prince, J. (2007). Survival of the sickest: A
medical maverick discovers why we need disease. New York:
William Morrow.
53
Thank You !

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Concepts of disease

  • 1. 1 CONCEPTS OF DISEASE PRESENTED BY : Dr.Vineetha. K Department of PUBLIC HEALTH DENTISTRY SEMINAR NO : 3
  • 2. CONTENTS • INTRODUCTION • CONCEPTS OF DISEASE • CONCEPTS OF CAUSATION • NATURAL HISTORY OF DISEASE • CONCEPTS OF CONTROL • CONCEPTS OF PREVENTION • CHANGING PATTERN OF DISEASE • DISEASE CLASSIFICATION • CONCLUSION 2
  • 3. INTRODUCTION 3 • The concept of disease has been the subject of a vast, vivid and versatile debate. • Disease is a central notion to modern health care, it effects society and is important to the process of discovering and identifying disease entities.
  • 4. CONCEPTS OF DISEASE 4 DEFINITIONS “A condition in which body function is impaired, departure from a state of health, an alteration of the human body interrupting the performance of the vital functions.” “The condition of body or some part of organ of body in which its functions are disrupted or deranged.” “Disease is considered a social phenomenon, occuring in all societies and defined and fought in terms of the particular cultural forces prevalent in the society.” ‘a maladjustment of human organism to the environment’
  • 5. TO KEEP IT SIMPLE Simplest definition – OPPOSITE TO HEALTH . 5 Any deviation from normal functioning or state of complete physical or mental well-being.
  • 6. DISEASE ILLNESS SICKNESS 6 DISEASE is a physiological/ psychological dysfunction. ILLNESS is a subjective state of the person who feels aware of not being well. SICKNESS is a state of social dysfunction i.e. a role that the individual assumes when ill (sickness role). Susser
  • 7. CONCEPT OF CAUSATION Discovery of microbiology - turningpoint • GERM THEORY OF DISEASE • Microbes as sole cause of disease 7 EARLIER THEORIES • Supernatural theory • Theory of Humors • Concept of contagion • Miasmatic theory • Theory of spontaneous generation
  • 8. EPIDEMIOLOGICAL TRIAD • Factors relating host and environment • Mission of epidemiology – break one of the legs of triangle and disrupt the connection between these and thereby stopping outbreak. 8
  • 9. THE TETRAD OF EPIDEMIOLOGY 9
  • 10. MULTIFACTORIAL CAUSATION • CONCEPT- disease is due to multiple factors and not a single one. • PETTENKOFER OF MUNICH(1819-1901)-early proponent of this concept. “Germ theory of disease "or “single cause idea "in late 19 century overshadowed the multiple cause theory. 10
  • 11. 11 Causative Factors Groups or populations and their characteristics Environment behaviour, culture physiological factors ecological elements TIME ADVANCED MODEL OF THE TRIANGLE OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
  • 12. WEB OF CAUSATION • Suggested by- Mac Mahon and Pugh • Considers all the predisposing factors of any type and their complex interaction with each other. 12
  • 13. 13 41 Changes in life style Stress Smoking Lack of Physical exercise Plenty of food intake Obesity HTN Emotional stress Aging Changes in the walls of arteries Coronary Occlusion Myocardial ischemia Hyperlipidemia Coronary Atherosclerosis Myocardial Ischemia Fig: Web of causation of MI
  • 14. NATURAL HISTORY OF DISEASE 14 It refers to the progress of a disease process in an individual over time, in the absence of intervention. • History of disease is a key concept in epidemiology.
  • 15. 15
  • 16. PRE PATHOGENESIS PHASE • Disease agent has not entered man, but factors favouring disease exist in the environment. • What required is an interaction of these factors to initiate the disease process. Agent Host Environment 16
  • 17. PATHOGENESIS PHASE • Entry of disease agent in susceptible human host. • Disease agent multiplies and induces tissue and physiological changes. • final outcome- recovery, disability or death. • This phase may be modified by intervention measures such as immunization, chemotherapy 17
  • 18. AGENT FACTORS 18 Substance living or non living , or a force, tangible or intangible, the excessive presence or relative lack of which may initiate or perpetuate a disease process. 1. Biological Agents – Infectivity Pathogenicity Virulence 2. Nutrient 3. Physical 4. Chemical 5. Mechanical 6. Absence or insufficiency of a factor 7. Social
  • 19. HOST FACTORS • Host - SOIL Disease agent – SEED Classified as • Demographic characteristics • Biologic • Social & Economic • Lifestyle factors 19
  • 20. ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS • All that which is external to the individual human host, living and non-living, and with which he is in constant interaction. -Macro-environment (external) • Physical • Biological • Psycho social 20
  • 21. RISK FACTORS • Where the disease agent is not firmly established, the aetiology is generally discussed in terms of risk factors. • The term risk factor is used by different authors with at least two meanings-  An attribute or exposure that is significantly associated with development of disease.  A determinant that can be modified by intervention, thereby reducing the possibility of occurrence of disease or other specified outcomes. 21
  • 22. RISK GROUPS • Something for all but more for those in need- in proportion to the need. • Another approach developed and promoted by WHO is to identify precisely the risk groups or target groups in population by certain defined criteria and direct appropriate action to them first- risk approach. 22
  • 23. SPECTRUM OF DISEASE • Graphic representation of variations in the manifestations of disease. • Infectious disease – gradient of infection 23
  • 24. ICEBERG OF DISEASE • Disease in a community is compared to an iceberg. 24
  • 25. CONCEPTS OF CONTROL The term disease control refers ongoing operation aimed at reducing: o The incidence of disease. o The duration of disease and the consequently the risk of transmission. o The effect of infection including physical and psychological complication. o The financial burden to the community. 25
  • 26. •DISEASE ELIMINATION: Reduction of case transmission to a predetermined very low level or interruption in transmission. E.g. measles, polio, leprosy from the large geographic region or area. • DISEASE ERADICATION: Termination of all transmission of infection by extermination of the infectious agent through surveillance and containment. “All or none phenomenon”. E.g. Small pox. 26
  • 27. • DISEASE MONITORING: • Defined as “the performance and analysis of routine measurement aimed at detecting changes in the environment or health status of population.” e.g. growth monitoring of child, Monitoring of air pollution, monitoring of water quality etc. • DISEASE SURVEILLANCE: • Defined as “the continuous scrutiny of the factors that determine the occurrence and distribution of disease and other conditions of ill health.” E.g. Poliomyelitis surveillance programme of WHO. 27
  • 28. CONCEPTS OF PREVENTION The goals of medicine are to • Promote health, • To preserve health, • To restore health when it is impaired • And to minimize suffering and distress. 28 These goals are embodied in the word "prevention"
  • 29. • Actions aimed at eradicating, eliminating or minimizing the impact of disease and disability, or if none of these are feasible, retarding the progress of the disease and disability. • The concept of prevention is best defined in the context of levels, traditionally called primary, secondary and tertiary prevention. A fourth level, called primordial prevention, was later added. 29
  • 30. Leavell’s Levels of Prevention 30 Stage of disease Level of prevention Type of response Pre-disease Primary Prevention Health promotion and Specific protection Latent Disease Secondary prevention Pre-symptomatic Diagnosis and treatment Symptomatic Disease Tertiary prevention •Disability limitation for early symptomatic disease •Rehabilitation for late Symptomatic disease
  • 31. PRIMORDIAL PREVENTION • DEFINITION 31 “It is the prevention of the emergence or development of risk factors in countries or population groups in which they have not yet appeared.” • INTERVENTION The main intervention in primordial prevention is through individual and mass health education.
  • 32. PRIMARY PREVENTION • Goal: • Reduce number of new cases • Rationale: • By reducing exposure rates and increasing resistance, can reduce number of new cases • Target population: • Those who are most likely to be exposed and/or could increase their resistance • Typical activities: • Remove or reduce source of the risk • Educate and make aware of disease risk o Include behavioral changes to reduce exposure • Improve general health • Outcome measure: incidence of exposure; incidence of disease 32 Primary prevention can be defined as the action taken prior to the onset of disease, which removes the possibility that the disease will ever occur.
  • 33. SECONDARY PREVENTION • Goal: • Reduce number of new cases; reduce number of severe cases • Rationale: • By reducing number of exposures and early disease that progress to more severe disease, mortality and morbidity can be reduced • Target population: • Those who have been exposed to the disease-causing agent or have early symptoms of the disease • Typical activities: • Screening for exposure and/or disease • Post-exposure prophylaxis • Early treatment to reduce impact of disease/reverse course • Outcome measure: incidence of disease 33 Secondary prevention can be defined as the action which halts the progress of a disease at its incipient stage and prevents complications.
  • 34. TERTIARY PREVENTION • Goal: • Reduce number of complications, deaths • Rationale: • By reducing disease severity and increasing recovery, can reduce number of premature deaths or complications • Target population: • Those who have disease and need treatment • Typical activities: • Treatment tailored to the patient • Rehabilitation to promote recovery • Outcome measure: incidence of death and long- term disability 34 Tertiary prevention can be defined as all measures available to reduce or limit impairments and disabilities, minimize suffering caused by existing departures from good health and to promote the patients adjustment to irremediable conditions.
  • 35. MODES OF INTERVENTION • Intervention is any attempt to intervene or interrupt the usual sequence in the development of disease. • Five modes of intervention corresponding to the natural history of any disease are: o Health Promotion o Specific Protection o Early Diagnosis and Adequate Treatment o Disability Limitation o Rehabilitation 35
  • 36. HEALTH PROMOTION • It is the process of enabling people to increase control over diseases, and to improve their health. It is not directed against any particular disease but is intended to strengthen the host through a variety of approaches(interventions): o Health Education o Environmental Modifications o Nutritional Interventions o Lifestyle and Behavioral Change 36
  • 37. SPECIFIC PROTECTION • Some of the currently available interventions aimed at specific protection are:  immunization,  use of specific nutrients,  chemoprophylaxis,  protection against accidents,  protection from carcinogens,  avoidance of allergens,  control of specific hazards in general environment .eg air pollution , noise control  Control of consumer product quality and safety of foods,drugs etc 37
  • 38. EARLY DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT •A WHO defined early detection of health impairment as “the detection of disturbances of homeostatic and compensatory mechanism while biochemical, morphological, and functional changes are still reversible.” •Early detection and treatment are the main interventions of disease control. • Earlier a disease is diagnosed and treated the better it is from the point of view of prognosis and preventing the occurrence of further cases or any long-term disability. •Ex – essential hypertension, cancer of cervix and Breast cancer 38
  • 39. DISABILITY LIMITATION • Objective- is to prevent or halt the transition of the disease process from impairment to handicap. Sequence of events leading to disability & handicap: • Disease → Impairment → Disability→ Handicap. WHO defined these terms- • Impairment: Loss or abnormality of psychological, physiological/anatomical structure or function. • Disability: Any restriction or lack of ability to perform an activity in a manner considered normal for one’s age, sex, etc. • Handicap: Any disadvantage that prevents one from fulfilling his role considered normal. 39
  • 40. REHABILITATION “combined and coordinated use of medical, social, educational and vocational measures for training and retraining the individual to the highest possible level of functional ability”. • Areas of concern in rehabilitation:  Medical rehabilitation (restoration of function),  Vocational rehabilitation (restoration of the capacity to earn a livelihood),  Social rehabilitation ( restoration of family and social relationships),  Psychological rehabilitation (restoration of personal dignity and confidence). 40
  • 41. CHANGING PATTERN OF DISEASE • Although diseases have not changed significantly through human history, their patterns have. • Every decade produces its own patterns of disease. 41
  • 43. EPIDEMIOLOGICAL TRANSITION. • A characteristic shift in the disease pattern of a population as mortality falls during the demographic transition: acute, infectious diseases are reduced, while chronic, degenerative diseases increase in prominence, causing a gradual shift in the age pattern of mortality from younger to older ages. (Omran 1970) 43
  • 44. DEVELOPED COUNTRIES • Causes of diseases and deaths have shifted from infectious to chronic diseases. Common disease- HEART DISEASE - 23.81% CANCER-22.95% CVS- 5.16% . These 3 together- constitutes about 51.92% of deaths in US. OTHERS- Alzheimer's disease, lung cancer, environmental health problems, and microbial diseases 44
  • 45. • DEVELOPING COUNTRIES 45 • Nation with a low level of material well-being. • In a typical developing country about 40%of death are from infectious ,parasite, and respiratory diseases compared with about 8%in developed countries. • In India ,as in other developing countries ,most death result from infectious and parasite disease, abetted by malnutrition.
  • 46. 46
  • 47. 47
  • 48. DISEASE CLASSIFICATION • A system of classification was needed whereby diseases could be grouped according to certain common characteristics , that would facilitate the statistical study of disease phenomena. • JOHN GRAUNT in 17th century- in his study of Bills of mortality – arranged diseases in an alphabetic order. 48
  • 49. ICD CLASSIFICATION • International classification of disease (ICD)by WHO - accepted for national and international use. • Revised once in 10 years. • The ICD is a classification system developed collaboratively between the World Health Organization WHO) and 10 international centers so that the medical terms reported by physicians, medical examiners, and coroners on death certificates can be grouped together for statistical purposes 49
  • 50. ICD-10 ARRANGED IN 21 DIFFERENT CHAPTERS 50
  • 51. Why we need disease??? • HAEMOCHROMATOSIS - BUBONIC PLAGUE • DIABETES - YOUNGER DRYAS • FAVISM - MALARIA 51 Natural selection is maintaining this genetic defect because it had conferred some benefit in the past.
  • 52. CONCLUSION • Understanding disease pathology is the first step towards formulating preventive measures. • As a dentist or public health worker it is our primary responsibility for the prevention of diseases in community as well as individual. 52
  • 53. REFERENCES • Park, Park’s Textbook of Preventive &Social Medicine, 22nd Edition, Jabalpur: Banarsidas Bhanot,2013. • Soben Peter. Essentials of Public Health Dentistry. 4th ed. New Delhi: Arya Publising House; 2013. • Epidemiology, L. Gordis, Fourth ed, 2009, Saunders • Moalem, S., & Prince, J. (2007). Survival of the sickest: A medical maverick discovers why we need disease. New York: William Morrow. 53

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. Spontaneous generation or anomalous generation is an obsolete body of thought on the ordinary formation of living organisms without descent from similar organisms. Typically, the idea was that certain forms such as fleas could arise from inanimate matter such as dust, or that maggots could arise from dead flesh. The miasma theory (also called the miasmatic theory) held that diseases such as cholera, chlamydia, or the Black Death were caused by a miasma (μίασμα, ancient Greek: "pollution"), a noxious form of "bad air", also known as "night air". Simple Definition of contagion. : the process by which a disease is passed from one person or animal to another by touching. : a disease that can be passed from one person or animal to another by touching : a contagious disease. Upon the time of louis pasteur concepts of disease causation - supernatural theory, theory of humors, concept of contagion, miasmatic theory Turning point discovery of microbiology. Drawback of germ theory – not every one exposed to tb develops tb.disease is rarely caused by a single agent rather depends on no of factors.
  2. This demanded a broader concept of disease causation that synthesized the basic factors of agent, host and environment.
  3. host- man or animal in which agent harbours Agent- cause of disease Environment- surroundings which allow disease transmission Time- incubation period, life expectancy of host, duration of illness.
  4. Tuberculosis is not merely due to tubercle bacilli; factors such as poverty, overcrowding & malnutrition contribute to its occurrence.
  5. This model is ideally suited for the study of chronic diseases where disease agent is often not known, but is the outcome of interaction of multiple factors.
  6. Predisposing factors of any type and their complex interrelationship with each other.
  7. Each disease has its own unique natural history which is not necessarily same for in all individuals. What the physician sees in his clinic is just an episode .how disease evolves over time assesed by cohort studies. Helps the epidemiologists to fill the gaps.
  8. Preliminary to onset of disease. Man in the midst of disease.
  9. Biological agents- living agents ex virus fungi bacteria Infectivity – the ability of an infectious agent to invade and multiply in a host. Nutritive – proteins fats carbohydrates Pathogenicity – ability to induce clinically apparent illness Virulence- proportion of clinical cases resulting in severe clinical manifestations. (case fatality rate)
  10. Demographic characteristics - age, sex, ethnicity Biologic- genetic factors, biochemical levels of the blood enzymes Socioeconomis – socio economic status, education, occupation, stress, marital status Lifestyle –personality traits, living habits, nutrition, exercise alcohol, drugs etc
  11. Diseases where agent is not identified- coronary heart disease, cancer , peptic ulcer, mental illness.
  12. Modern epidemiology is concerned with the identification of risk factors nd high risk groups in population. Define prioritis and point to those most in need of attention.
  13. Spectrum of leprosy…. Infectious diseases its called gradient of infection.
  14. The Iceberg Theory of Disease is metaphor portraying the idea that clinicians only see a minority of cases of any given disease (tip of the iceberg); for every case that comes to a clinician, there are likely to be many more people with pre-clinical disease in the community (vast submerged part)
  15. Prevention is to stop disease from happening. While control is to stop something that has already happened.
  16. Primary prevention can be defined as the action taken prior to the onset of disease, which removes the possibility that the disease will ever occur. Of the three levels, the target population that will be the focus of primary prevention will be relatively larger than the populations in other levels. Note that many of these activities will overlap with health promotion activities. GOAL: Preventing new cases of a disease (reducing incidence of disease) is the ultimate goal of primary prevention. RATIONALE: Reducing exposure risk will reduce incidence of disease. This may involve removing the exposure risk so it is not encountered. EXAMPLE: Chlorinating the city water supply to reduce the number of enteric pathogens present in the drinking water; spraying for mosquitoes to reduce risk of exposure to malarial plasmodia; using netting over bed to reduce nocturnal mosquito bites. May involve removing population so it is not in contact with risk. EXAMPLE: Forbidding public access to sewage treatment water and area; restricting travel to areas where malaria is endemic. OTHER PART OF RATIONALE: Increasing resistance to disease if exposed will also reduce incidence of disease If exposure risk cannot be entirely eliminated, may seek ways to strengthen natural defenses. EXAMPLE: Vaccination to promote the development of antibodies so body can prevent the development of disease if it is exposed. TARGET POPULATION: This will change depending on disease. TYPICAL ACTIVITIES: Keeping the two rationales in mind, activities will focus on efforts to remove or reduce source of risk as well as prepare the target population to avoid and resist its effects. Remove source of risk – for malaria, which is transmitted via a mosquito vector, this may include draining standing water where mosquitoes may breed. Educate about risk/change behaviors – provide exposure risk information along with tips for how to reduce exposures. Netting for bedding, staying indoors during morning and evening hours when mosquitoes are most active, and using a DEET mosquito repellant when outdoors. Other general tips for contagious diseases include handwashing and keeping hands away from eyes or mouth. Improve general health – this is where disease prevention and health promotion overlap. In general, a healthier person is better able to mount an immune response and avoid disease. Should the person become exposed and sick, they will often have a better chance of recovering. OUTCOME MEASURE: Number of exposures to a causative agent or risk factor Final outcome would be number of new cases of disease (incidence) Be sure students understand what incidence (incidence rate) means. Incidence = the number of new cases in a given time period Incidence rate = ratio of new cases to total population at risk for a given period of time. Allows comparison of incidence to other diseases or other populations.
  17. GOAL: Reducing the severity of a disease (reducing morbidity) and new cases (incidence) are the ultimate goals of secondary prevention. This may apply to the individual case (reduce severity of symptoms or duration of illness) and the community (reduce severity of outbreak – or said another way – reduce the spread of the disease and shorten the length of time the outbreak exists). RATIONALE: Early detection of a disease-causing exposure or identifying a disease in its early stages can lead to early treatment to either stop the progression of the disease or reduce its severity which will reduce complications. Identifying those who are sick can also aid in reducing the spread of the disease to others in the community. EXAMPLE: Detecting exposure to lead through blood tests can lead to the removal of the lead source. Screening interviews can be used to identify who has been in close contact with a person diagnosed with an infectious disease and the timely use of post-exposure prophylaxis to “nip” the possible infection in the bud. For chronic diseases like diabetes, early detection via A1c levels can lead to earlier control of blood sugar and a reduction in both short and long term complications of the disease. TARGET POPULATION: This now becomes the individuals who were in the “risk of exposure” or “risk of disease” group who have been exposed or have early disease. So it is a subset of the primary prevention population for that specific disease. TYPICAL ACTIVITIES: Like primary prevention, secondary prevention has two key types of activities that help you identify it. SCREENING to detect exposure or early disease is one; the other is EARLY TREATMENT to either prevent or reverse the disease process entirely or reduce the severity of the illness. Another type of early interventions at the population level would be quarantining those who have been exposed so they are not in contact with others; for those with early symptoms of the illness, isolation would be used to minimize contact with healthy folks. EXAMPLES: For exposure to a toxic chemical, secondary prevention would use decontamination to remove exposure before it caused harm and/or an antidote to counteract the effects of the toxin. An exposure to an organophosphate pesticide would be treated in both of these ways. If decontamination and the administration of atropine did not completely counteract the effects of the poisoning, then the severity would probably be reduced. At the population level, interventions may involve preventing people from entering a contaminated area and offering methods for removing contaminants. For an infectious disease like Varicella (chickenpox), screening interviews can be used to determine if a person has likely been exposed. Questions like did they share a drinking glass or kiss? Were they close together for four or more hours? Did they care for someone who had chickenpox, or did they already have immunity to chickenpox through a vaccine or prior illness can be used to identify good candidates for vaccination? Another group would be those who are just beginning to show symptoms – they may be a good candidate for early treatment with an antiviral. At the population level, would encourage sick folks to stay home (self-imposed isolation) and their caregivers to seek vaccination if not already immune. OUTCOME MEASURE: Number of cases of disease (compare to number of exposures in primary level) Be sure students understand what incidence (incidence rate) means. Incidence = the number of new cases in a given time period Incidence rate = ratio of new cases to total population at risk for a given period of time. Allows comparison of incidence to other diseases or other populations.
  18. GOAL: Reducing the risk of disease-related premature mortality or long-term morbidity and increasing likelihood of returning to a state of health. RATIONALE: Once disease occurs, need to work to cure patient and avoid long-term illness or complications. Doing so will reduce mortality and morbidity rates and reduce prevalence rates. EXAMPLE: Lead poisoning that has resulted in symptoms now requires treatment to address lead toxicity illness and end organ complications. For chronic diseases like diabetes, tertiary prevention will focus on controlling the disease so premature death and complications are avoided. For an infectious disease, the tertiary levels of prevention will use antibiotics or anti-microorganism (viral, protozoan, fungal, etc) medications if available to directly treat infection causing disease and supportive care to allow the disease to run its course while reducing risks of complications created by the infective agent or its by-products (e.g., shock due to toxins released during a gram negative infection). TARGET POPULATION: This now becomes the individuals who develop the illness. It is a subset of the population identified for secondary prevention. TYPICAL ACTIVITIES: For individuals, these activities are best described as clinical or THERAPEUTIC interventions – something that should be/will be very familiar to pharmacy students. In addition to treatment, there are REHABILITATION activities that are used for individuals who have permanent or long-term disabilities due to the disease. The goal of rehabilitation is to resume as normal a lifestyle as the person had prior to the disease. At the population level, tertiary activities may include ensuring individuals has access to care sites or professionals, research to find more effective treatments, and support groups for recovering individuals. EXAMPLES: Using the toxic exposure example, tertiary prevention would concentrate on supportive care if antidotes were not available or not effective. If the exposure were a venomous snake bite that was not promptly treated with anti-venom, it is possible that the injured person may have surgical intervention to reduce pressure building up in the muscle bundles (fasciitis) or even amputation if damage to a limb is too extensive. Post surgical rehabilitation would be used to help the person resume many of their usual activities. At the population level, ensuring access to anti-venom may be important – because it is so expensive, hospitals For an infectious disease like varicella (chickenpox), the goal of tertiary prevention will be recovery from the immediate infection without the development of complications. One long-term complication of a varicella infection called shingles would best be addressed through primary prevent efforts involving vaccination of older adults who are at risk of shingles. If this is confusing, consider the development of shingles as a separate disease from chicken pox and it may be easier to think about primary prevention. OUTCOME MEASURE: Prevalence rates for disease (cures should lower it) Mortality rates Morbidity rates
  19. Essential hypertension, cancer cervix
  20. Table- comparison of leading causes of death worldwide over past decade
  21. A char
  22. Wide variation among countries in criteria and standars adopted for diagnosis of diseases making it difficult to compare national statistics.
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