MPH Test
MPH Test
MPH Test
1. Epidemiology
Epidemiology is the study of the frequency, distribution, and determinants of
health-related states or events in specified populations, and the application of
this study to the control of health problems.
Incidence
Prevalence
Crude rates apply to the total population of a given area. Specific rates apply to
specific subgroups in the population (such as by age, sex, or occupation) or
specific diseases. Adjusted rates and age-specific rates are often used to permit
comparison of mortality rates in populations which differ in age structure.
Mortality rates computed with adjustment techniques are called age-adjusted or
age-standardized mortality rates.
Case fatality rate. Case fatality rate (CFR) is the measure of severity of illness.
* CFR = Number of deaths from a disease
Number of clinical cases of that disease
Screening
Laboratory tests for screening are used in people who are asymptomatic
(apparently healthy individuals) to classify their likelihood of having a particular
disease. A test is anything that produces evidence from a patient at any stage in
the clinical process, based on which a different clinical course will be taken
depending on the different possible test outcomes
(positive or negative, normal or abnormal, present or absent, high or low, ...).
a b
c d
Validity is the extent to which data collected actually reflect the truth. The
concepts of sensitivity (ability to detect true positive) and specificity (ability to
detect true negatives) can be used to characterize the validity of a measure
("measurement validity"). Study results are also described as "valid" when there
is no systematic misrepresentation of effect or "bias" ("validity in the estimation
of effect"). Validity is often described as internal or external. Internal validity
concerns the validity of inferences that do not\proceed beyond the target
population for the study. Internal
validity is threatened when the investigator does not have sufficient data to
control or rule out competing explanations for the results.
External validity, on the other hand, concerns generalizeability, or inferences to
populations beyond the study's restricted interest. External validity is
threatened, for example, when the investigator attempts to apply the findings of
the study to a population which is not comparable to the population in which the
research was completed. Internal validity should be the primary objective in
study design, however, since efforts to
P value it is the result of observation after the study is completed and is based
on the observed data. it shows the statistical significance of the result. The cut
of point is 0.05 conventionally.
Confidence interval
Changes in disease frequency could be due to two main reasons. The first reason
is that changes are real (natural), and the second reason is that changes are due to
mistakes/errors committed during diagnosing and counting (artefactual). As
demonstration of disease variation is the basis for establishing epidemiological
association it critical to examine whether variations are real or artefact.
Functions of management
7. Management Functions
Function is defined as a broad area of responsibility composed of many
activities aimed at achieving a predetermined objective.
Clinic
Health station
Health center
Regional hosptals
Specialized referral hospitals
Motivation factor
Motivation is an inner impulse that induces a person to act in a certain way. It is
a series of internal drives within a person at different levels.
Level 1. To obtain the necessities of life — food, shelter, clothing, rest and
safety.
Level 2. To satisfy social needs such as those for companionship, love, and a
position of respect.
Level 3. To ensure some degree of personal satisfaction and to pursue ideals.
People need to feel reasonably satisfied with themselves, with what they make of
their lives and with their talents and abilities.
A team leader should understand what encourages people to apply their ability
and energy to work, and what makes people dissatisfied at work. These two
groups of factors may be called motivators and dissatisfies, respectively.
SWOT analysis
It is a tool to diagnose the organizational system and to define what best
standing merit and opportunities that the organization has to excel and what
are the weaknesses to be improved and what are the threats to be aware of
and are basically challenging from the external or an out side force
SWOT Analysis
SWOT (strengths and weakness, opportunities and threats) is a strategic
planning tool that matches internal organizational strengths and weakness with
external opportunities and threats. By reviewing strengths, weaknesses,
opportunities and threats a useful strategy for achieving objectives will become
evident.
Since 1980 PHC has been the main strategy on which the health policy has been
based. The 1985 review of PHC implementation attempts in Ethiopia revealed
the following achievements.
o Expansion of health services to the broad masses especially by
establishing new health station and health posts.
o Expansion of Immunization programmes against six major communicable
disease.
o Increasing number of medical and paramedical personnel.
o Increased health propaganda attempts to improve health consciousness of
the population.
o Established PHC committees at the lowest local administrative level.
The health policy which was established in 1976 by the ministry of health
includes
o Emphasis on disease prevention
o Priority to rural health service
o Promotion of self reliance and community involvement
The health policy has been further consolidated by the adoption of PHC as a
strategy. Failures to implement these policies can be traced to several factors of
which low government attention and support to the health sector is not the least.
If you were working as health manager
1. what problems do you face and contraceptive utilization rate
2. how did you manage it training HEW net working outreach services
health education
Define
o community diagnosis disease identification with in a given
community ????
o clinical diagnosis institution base clinical investigation laboratory
x-ray …..
The managerial roles are categorized into three major areas with further
classification:
Interpersonal role: this role shows the interpersonal contact that a manager does
which is vital in his/her daily activities. The interpersonal roles are designated
by
Figurehead: this role symbolizes the legal authority of the manager such as:
attending ceremonies, signing documents, etc.
Leader: as a leader a manager is accountable, responsible, and motivator of the
staff he is working with.
Liaison: a manager creates links in horizontal as well as vertical chain of
communications that facilitate communication in and out side the organization.
Informational role: this role is related to communication and information
channelling
Monitor: serving as a focal person for all types of communications
Disseminator: communicating selected information to subordinates
Spokesperson: communicating selected information to outsiders
Decision-making role: a manger has a legal authority to decide on matters that
are assigned to him based on his job description.
Entrepreneur: designing and initiating changes within the organization
Disturbance handler: taking corrective action and handling conflicts
Resource allocator: decides on resources and their distribution
Negotiator: negotiating with other parties representing organizational interests
what was the primry health care coverage in 1997 EC in Ethiopia Health
indicator 1998 75%
how would the above coverage change if the privet sector were included?
What are the calculation made in question 1 and 2
Formal Organization
A formal organization is often described by means of 'organizational chart'.
Among the advantages of formal organization are those they:
Define broad area of responsibility
Provide a basis for writing job descriptions
Indicate channels of communication
Clarify relationships between people
Avoid complications caused by overlapping of functions
3.Biostatics
- Mean
- Median affected by extreme value
- Mode
The median of a finite set of values is that value which divides the set of values
in to two equal parts such that the number of values greater than the median is
equal to the number of values less than the median.
•If the number of values is odd, the median will be the middle value when all
values have been arranged in order of magnitude.
•When the number of observations is even, there is no single middle
observation but two middle observations.
•In this case the median taken to be the mean of these two middle observations,
when all observations have been arranged in the order their magnitude
Mode (x)
Measures of dispersion
•The measure of central tendency alone is not enough to have a clear idea about
the distribution of the data.
•Moreover, two or more sets may have the same mean and/or median but they
may be quite different.
•Thus to have a clear picture of data, one needs to have a measure of dispersion
or variability (scatterdness) amongst observations in the set.
Interquartilerange (IQR)
1 •It is a sample obtained in a way that ensures that every member of the
population has a known, none zero probability of being included in the sample.
2 •Probability sampling involves the selection of a sample from a
population, based on chance.
3 •Probability sampling is more complex, more time-consuming and
usually more costly than non-probability sampling.
The following are the most common probability sampling methods:–
o Simple random sampling–
o Systematic random sampling –
o Sampling with probability proportional to size–
o Stratified random sampling –
o Cluster sampling –
o Multi-stage sampling
What is P value
What are elements for chi- square test, correlation and regression
Properities of normal distribution, t-distribution and probability calculation
Probability sampling
Two points in determining sample size
4.Nutrition
Iron deficiency
Iron deficiency is the world's most common nutritional disorder. It affects
around 2 billion people. Half of that number suffer iron deficiency anemia. In
developing countries, 51% of children under the age of four years, 40% of all
women and 51% of pregnant women are affected.
Iron deficiency anemia reduces the ability of the blood to carry oxygen from the
lungs to the brain muscles and other organs. This phenomenon results in
reduced capacity to work and to learn. Fatigue, shortness of breath even after
slight exertion, dizziness, headache, and loss of appetite are also common with
anemia.
One of the greatest dangers posed by iron deficiency anemia is that it diminishes
the ability to fight infection and thus increases vulnerability to transmissible
diseases. Anemic expectant mothers face the risk of death resulting either from
spontaneous abortion, the stress of labor or other delivery complications
Interventions
-Iodine deficiency
Iodine is a mineral essential to human life. Some of the basic functions of the
human body depend on a steady supply of iodine. Iodine is present in its natural
state in the soil and water.
Goiter is the most visible sign of iodine deficiency. It is a swelling in the neck
caused by an enlarged thyroid gland. The thyroid increases in size when there is
not enough iodine available to it. Without enough iodine, a person can become
dull, easily tired and less active.
Iodine deficiency also results in stillbirths and high rates of infant mortality. In
pregnancy, this deficiency leads to mental and physical defects in the baby
ranging from mild mental retardation to cretinism.
Studies from many countries around the world show that children in iodine-
deficient areas suffer from poor hand-eye coordination and have 10 to 15 IQ
points less than children who get enough iodine in the diet. The effects upon a
child born to a severely iodine-deficient mother are rarely reversed. It is,
therefore, best to intervene before or during pregnancy if the child is not to suffer
a lifetime of compromised growth and development and of mental and other
disabilities
-Vitamin A
The term Vitamin A Deficiency (VAD) embraces all forms and degrees of
deficiency, including the most severe, in which the function and structure of the
eye are affected. All stages of the eye changes are covered by the term
Exophthalmia (X). It is only in the past two decades or so that the threat to health
and survival of lesser degrees of VAD has become apparent.
Vitamin A, in all its closely related forms, is only present in nature as a result of
enzymic action on certain precursor compounds within the bodies of most
vertebrate animals. These precursors of vitamin A comprise quite a small
proportion of a large group of compounds known as arytenoids
Longitudinal Surveys
Cross-sectional survey techniques may be the most efficient approach to an
initial analysis of health (and nutritional) parameters in a population. However,
longitudinal studies will generally be necessary to defi9ne cause and effect
relationships and demonstrate the effectiveness of specific interventions.
Cut of point for low birth wt, its determinant (cause and effect)
2.5KG
5. Environmental health
BASIC CONCEPTS/DEFINITIONS
“Health is a state of complete physical, mental, and social well being and not
merely the absence of disease or infirmity.” (Constitution of WHO).
“Environment is the sum of all external influences and conditions which effect
health, life, and growth. This includes the physical, biological, chemical, and
psycho-social environment”
Ecology is the study of organisms in relation to the surroundings (environment)
in which they live. It is also the study of the interactions between living
organisms and their environment.
Human ecology is the study of the interactions between humans with one
another, with other living things, and with their environment in general.
Public Health is “the science and the art or preventing diseases, prolonging life,
and promoting health through organized efforts of society” (WHO). It is an
organized effort carried out for the benefit of community.
Sanitation is “the establishment of environmental conditions favorable to health.
It is the prevention of diseases by eliminating or controlling the environmental
factors which form links in the chain transmission.” (WHO). This definition can
be equally applied to Environmental sanitation. Sanitation in Latin means sanitas
meaning health. Hygiene and sanitation are often interchangeably used.
Environmental Health is “the control of all those factors in man’s physical
environment which exercises or may exercise a deleterious effect on his physical,
mental, and social well being.” (WHO).
DDT
Incinerator
Incineration: burning of contaminated waste like sharps, gauzes, syringes,
pathological wastes, etc.
Waste management
On-site storage:
Needles & sharps be kept in a puncture proof container immediately
after use;
Sorting and segregation of hazardous and non-hazardous and non-
hazardous solid wastes stored in a separate bin of 80-100 litres of
different colour.
Decontamination of hazardous waste: sharps, cultures, discarded
linens, etc.; use of chemical (chlorine solution, hydrogen peroxide,
Lysol, etc) or thermal disinfectants (boiling, autoclaving, dry heating);
Hazardous waste in red plastic bag wrapped and stored in red bin
until collection.
Non-hazardous waste in black bin.
Aelf care during waste handling: i) Provision of personal protective
devices: head cover, thick rubber gloves, plastic aprons, rubber boots
covering at least half of the leg; ii) SOP: type of container by waste
type, collection schedule, training for safe handling;
2. Collection:
Collection of the red and black bins is done manually with the use of cart
to the main storage container (transfer station). The two types of wastes
need to be collected separately in every instance.
3. Transport and Disposal:
Landfill: The domestic or general type of waste can be disposed in
this way.
Incineration: sharps, gauzes, syringes, pathological wastes, etc.
A commercial type of incinerator: at 900-1000C0 destructs the waste
with significant volume reduction into ash.
A domestic type of incinerator: destroys the pathogens with no
significant volume reduction.
Burial: placenta, blood, excretions, secretions;
Drainage: only after decontamination.
Golden rules of food handling
Ten golden rules for safe food preparation and consumption (WHO)
1. Choose food processed for safety
2. Cook food thoroughly
3. Eat cooked food immediately
4. Store cooked food immediately
5. Reheat Cooked foods thoroughly
6. Avoid contact between raw and cooked foods
7. Wash hands repeatedly
8. Keep all kitchen surfaces meticulously clean
9. Protect foods from insects, rodents, and other animals
10. Use pure water.
Ecology
Ecology is the study of organisms in relation to the surroundings (environment)
in which they live. It is also the study of the interactions between living
organisms and their environment.
Pollution
Pollution it is contamination with toxic waste. Pollution is the presence of
a substance in a medium with result of change of its “natural” state
potentially to cause an adverse effect to the environment.
Air pollution: it means the presence in the atmosphere of one or more air
contaminants or combination there of in such quantities and of such
duration that they may be harmful to human, plant, or animal life, or
property, or that may interfere with comfortable enjoyment of life or
property or the conduct of business or other human activities (Purdom
1980).
Water pollution: is the presence of physical, chemical, and biological
matters in amount that cause adverse effects to man, animals, plants, and
materials
Prevention and Control of Pollution
Recycling and reuse of waste materials;
Waste reduction;
Control the use of chemicals
Proper disposal of wastes;
Treatment of wastes before discharge;
Use of “cleaner” energy sources, such as sun energy, wind, etc.;
Reduce emission of air pollutants using different techniques;
Formulation of rules and regulations
Ozone depletion
Types of latrine
What is the commonest latrine used in Ethiopia? How much percentage?
Discuss its drawbacks
Environmental health in developing countries are linked to high death of
infant children and adults. Describe how this linkages can be justified
About 75% registered OPD cases are associated to lack of basic sanitation:
dysentery, diarrhea, skin and eye infections, helminthiasis, protozoal
infections
proportion of diarrhea among under fives is 45%,
Two week incidence of diarrhea under fives 16.5% at 3-7 episodes per year
per child.
6. Health education
The following essential points are relevant and applicable to HE in all possible
situations.
What is communication?
To communicate means (dictionary definition) "to impart, pass on or transmit a
message, information, etc.; to exchange ideas or information with, be in touch
with, to have access, to be connected with," and communication means "the act of
communication, the things communicated, the means of communicating."
Essentially communication deals with transmission of information or ideas and
sharing and exchanging of information.
Health promotion
It is an intervention whose purpose is to minimize or curtail illnesses and
enhance quality of life through change and development of health related
behavior and condition of leaving.
Health Promotion Programs operate either at primary (hygiene and health
enhancement), secondary (early detection) or tertiary (therapeutic) stages of
prevention, it may accurately be seen as an intervention whose purpose is to
short-circuit illness or enhance quality of life through change or development of
health related behavior and conditions of living.
Enhance quality of life through change or development of health related
behavior and conditions of living. The PRECEDE framework (predisposing,
reinforcing and enabling constructs in educational / environmental diagnosis
and evaluation) takes into account the multiple factors that shape health status
and helps the planner arrive at a highly focused subset of those factors as targets
for intervention. PRECEDE also generates specific objectives and criteria for
evaluation. The PROCEED framework (policy, regulatory and organizational
constructs in educational and environmental development) provides additional
steps for developing policy and initiating the implementation and evaluation
process.
PRECEDE-PROCEED works in tandem, providing a continuous series of steps or
phases in the planning, implementation, and evaluation process. The
identification of priorities and the setting of objectives in the PRECEDE phases
provide the objects and criteria for policy, implementation, and evaluation in the
PROCEED phases.
Telephone
Signs and gestures
Elements of communication
Sender
Receiver
Message
Mode of communication
┌──────┐ ┌────────┐ ┌───────┐ ┌────────┐
│Sender├──>│Encoding├───>│Channel├────>│Decoding├─────>│Recei
ver│
└──────┘ └────────┘ └───────┘ └────────┘
└───┬────┘
^ ┌────────┐ │
└─────────────────────┤Feedback┤<───────────────────
────┘
The most highly influential and widely researched theory of why people practice
health behavior is the health belief model. The health belief model of Rosenstock
(1990) and Backer (Janz & Backer, 1984) emphasize the intellectual dimension of
health behavior. Recently it has added the psychological dimension of Social
Learning Theory (Bandura; Rotter), and we might also add the social dimension
from the Theory of Reasoned Action (Ajzen, 1988). The theory identifies the
following knowledge as relevant:
3. Self-Efficacy is confidence that one has the skill and resources to perform
the specified action. This comes from Bandura's social learning theory. If
one has self-efficacy, one can perform the action with confidence and pride,
though not necessarily with skill or expertise. Practice enhances self-
efficacy.
Message
A message is the information, which a communicator wishes the audience to
receive, understand, accept or act upon. Message will, therefore, consist of
statements made verbally during conversation or transmitted through any media.
Channel
The sender and the receiver of the message have to be connected with each other
through a medium or channel of communication. In face to face communication
there is no particular medium except the atmosphere. When message have to be
transmitted to distant places we resort to various types of media or channels of
communication. The physical bridges between the sender and the receiver of the
message are the channels.
4. Selection of channels
It is very important for the communicator to find the proper channel for his
message. The channel must be easily available and accessible to the receiver and
also the receiver should be acquainted and accustomed to utilize the message
coming through the particular channel. While selecting the channel the
communicator has to make sure that noise is kept to the minimum or eliminated.
Another important precaution is that the medium should not become a barrier.
5. Audience or receiver
In a good communication process the receiver can take the role of source or
communicator for the purpose of giving feedback. Therefore, in teaching/learning
situation the communicatee has to develop skills for proper communication. The
receiver should be able to receive the message physically, mentally and
psychologically. He/she should be confident and eager to receive. He must have
faith in the source and must view the source with due regard and cordially.
Discuss counseling
Through counseling, an individual is encouraged to think about his problems and
thus comes to a greater understanding of their causes. From this understanding
that person will hopefully omit himself to taking action that will solve the
problems. The kink of action that a person takes, will also be that person's own
decision although guided, if necessary, by the counselor.
Counseling means choice, not force, not advice. A health worker may think that
his advice seems reasonable, but it may not be appropriate to the situation in
which the individual lives. Through counseling, the solutions are more likely to be
appropriate. An appropriate solution will be one that the person can follow with
successful results.
Define RH
Reproductive health has been defined within the framework of the WHO
definition of health as “a state of complete physical, mental and social well-
being, and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity.” Reproductive
health is a state of complete physical, mental, and social well being and not
merely the absence of disease or infirmity, in all matters related to the
reproductive system and to its functions and process.
Reproductive health addresses the human sexuality and reproductive processes,
functions and system at all stages of life and implies that people are able to have
“a responsible, satisfying and safe sex life and that they have the capability to
reproduce and the freedom to decide if, when and how often to do so.”
Components of Reproductive Health
Quality family planning services
Promoting safe motherhood: prenatal, safe delivery and post natal care,
including breast feeding;
Prevention and treatment of infertility
Prevention and management of complications of unsafe abortion;
Safe abortion services, where not against the law;
Treatment of reproductive tract infections including sexually transmitted
infections;
Information and counseling on human sexuality, responsible parenthood
and sexual and reproductive health;
Active discouragement of harmful practices, such as female genital
mutilation and violence related to sexuality and reproduction;
Functional and accessible referral
Describe four important points for eradication of polio
Define RH rights
Men and women have the right to be informed and have access to safe, effective,
affordable and acceptable methods of their choice for the regulation of fertility
which are not against the law, and the right of access to appropriate health care
services for safe pregnancy and childbirth and provide couples with the best
chance of having a healthy infant. Reproductive health is life-long, beginning
even before women and men attain sexual maturity and continuing beyond a
woman's child-bearing years.
Characteristics of gender
Sex is the biological difference between males and females.
Gender refers to the economic, social and cultural attributes and opportunities
associated with being male or female in a particular social setting at a particular
point in time
What are the four strategies for polio eradication
What are the main justification for mother and child health services
Why focus on maternal health?
In developing countries, pregnancy and child birth are the leading causes
of death, disease and disability among women of reproductive age.
At least 30 to 40 % of infant deaths are the results of poor care during
pregnancy and delivery.
Poor Maternal health and nutrition contributes to low birth weight in 20
million babies each year-almost 20 % of all births.
Motherless children are likely to get less health care and education as
they grow up.
Maternal health interventions are among the most cost-effective
investments in health.
- US 3$ /person is the approximate cost of ensuring that women in low-
income countries get health care during pregnancy, delivery and after
birth; post partum family planning; and newborn care (WHO).
When a mother dies, the family and community suffer, and surviving children
face higher risk of poverty, neglect or even death.
There is a global effort that aims to reduce deaths and illnesses among women
and infants, especially in developing countries. This effort is called Safe
Motherhood Initiative. The global safe motherhood initiative was launched in
1987 to improve maternal health and reduce the number of maternal deaths by
half in the year 2000. It is led by a unique alliance of co-sponsoring agencies that
work together to raise awareness, set priorities, stimulate research, mobilize
resources, provide technical assistance and share information. When the
initiative was launched, death from the complications of pregnancy and
childbirth was little known. During the initiative’s first decade, these safe
motherhood partners developed model programs, tested new technologies and
conducted research in a wide range of countries and settings. The essential
services that are identified and the most important lessons we have learned
through ten years record
In many developing countries, including Ethiopia, complications of pregnancy
and childbirth are the leading cause of death among women of reproductive age.
More than one-woman dies every minute from such causes. More than 600,000
women die each year worldwide. From this, 99% is accounted by developing
countries. Of these, around 273,000 women die each year in Africa. Particularly
being one of the less developed countries in the world, 46,000 women die each
year in Ethiopia.
Around 50 million pregnant women worldwide had morbid illness each year, of
which 15% of them have disabilities like fistula, infertility, etc. Over 300 million
women in the developing world currently suffer from short term and long term
illness related to pregnancy and childbirth.
the right of couples and individuals to decide freely and responsibly the
number and spacing of children and to have the information and means to
do so;
the right to attain the highest standard of sexual and reproductive health;
and,
The right to make decisions free of discrimination, coercion or violence.
I have been working in the area of FP/RH for over 15 years. I had an opportunity
to work in 3 Government hospitals Health centers in different assignments and
mostly I was assigned in the Gyne and FP units. After I joined Marie stops
International Ethiopia, one of the leading NGOs working in the fields of FP/RH I
got the opportunity and privilege to work in different capacities from a FP/RH
clinical provider to the level of project coordinator and program manager. I now
work as Adolescent Reproductive Sexual Health program manager and FP/RH
technical advisor for Save children USA country office.
Demographic data shows that Ethiopia's population size and growth rate are
among the highest in Africa. The population is estimated at more than 77 million,
making it the second most populous Sub-Saharan African country after Nigeria.
As per the information given by Engender Health, with an annual growth rate
estimated at 2.4%, Ethiopia's population will approach 110 million before 2020.
Nearly 2 million people are added to the country's population each year. Rapid
population growth as a result of continuing high fertility, is a fundamental
constraint to sustainable development in Ethiopia. This unbelievably accelerated
population growth sores the reproductive health problems in general. STI/STD,
HIV/AIDS unwanted pregnancy, abortion and abortion related morbidity and
mortality are some of the endemic reproductive health problems.
The experience I have gained from the different working opportunities and
progressive management positions and the fact that we have at hand makes me
think critically on the problematic issues that we all are facing.
I have been working in the FP clinics and have witnessed the progress of FP
program the intervention and also at the same time and in many instances. I was
confronted with challenges which some times can not get the right answer to
solve the problem. I have been involved with FP/RH service provisions when I
was working as FP/RH nurse and clinic manager. I have tried to address and
voice the problems which the provider and the clients encounter during service
provision and implementation. This work opportunity has also helped me
identify the gaps in quality service provision and the vacuum created in this
regard to forward the FP/RH programs
With regard to the policy issue, we all know that the country is confronted with
great challenge and the policy has to focus and design very practical
reconciliation mechanisms to mach the recourse available with the population
size. The policy decisions made in different policy formulation meetings on
population and FP/RH has to be implemented and the Government and the
policy makers have to take the ownership to spear head these implementations
through net working, partnership and resource mobilization.
The Ethiopian youth comprises 34% of the total population. As the future
country’s developmental force and the future leaders the youth have to be be
given special attention in every direction like health, education, security,
employment. Enhancing ,Strengthening and supporting effective youth
programs on reproductive and sexual health, Family planning and HIV/AIDS,
and other reproductive health problems including streamlining livelihood
programs together with the other undertakings should be the priority for the
country’s policy program. Sharing experience and duplicating best practices in
the area is one and feasible mechanism to start up and create awareness and
trigger self assertive action at the early age.
The social and cultural factors related to gender influence the extent to which
women and men are able to influence decisions affecting their health and the
quality of their lives.
Streamlining HIV/AIDS with other population and RH activities has to be given
a focus to register an impact. I believe we have done a lot in this regard, but the
larger bulk of the work is still dragging behind. There is still a lot to be done to
systematically bridge the observed gaps to address these observed unmet needs
in the area of FP/RH and population issues.
Finally I believe that this post graduate study coupled with my motivation and
dedication to the public health services that I have been with, will be very
instrumental for my carrier and future endeavour.
9. REFERENCES
Attributable risk (AR) or Risk difference (RD) indicate how much of the risk is
due to (or attributable to) the exposure. Quantify the excess risk in the exposed
that can be attributable to the exposure by removing the risk of disease that
could have occurred anyway due to other causes.
Relative risk (RR): estimates the magnitude of the association between exposure
and disease and indicates the likelihood of developing the disease in the exposed
group relative to those who are not exposed.
RR = Risk in exposed
Risk in unexposed
Odds Ratio (OR): is the odds in the exposed over the odds in the unexposed.
Some people call it cross product.
= OR – 1 X 100
OR
Population Attributable Risk (PAR) is the risk in total population minus risk in
the non-exposed. Estimate the excess rate of disease in the total study population
that is attributabe to the exposure.
l
PAR = Risk in population – Risk in unexposed