Why Community Medicine?
Why Community Medicine?
Why Community Medicine?
Hippocrates on Epidemics
Timeless advice to physicians
who seek to determine of health and
disease
Whoever would study medicine
must learn
of the
following subjects:
First
He must consider the effects of each
of the seasons of the year and the
differences between them.
Secondly
(1) With increased medical costs has not come increased benefits in terms of health
(2) Despite advances in medicine, the threat posed by some major diseases like
Malaria, Schitosomiasis, Leprosy, Filaria, trypanosomiasis , Leishmanisiasis etc,etc,.
has not lessened.
(3) Despite advances in medicine, infant and child mortality in developing countries
remain high.
(4) Evidence shows that significant improvements in longevity had achieved through
improved food supplies and sanitation long before the advent of modern drugs and
high technology.
(5) Modern medicine is elitist in orientation even in health systems adapted to
overcome social disparities
The Shift towards Whole
(holistic approach)
• Medicine is regarded as an essential component of socio-economic
development.
• The goal of Modern Medicine is no longer merely treatment of
sickness.
• UNO set sustainable Development Goals including reducing
poverty and hunger, tackle ill health, gender inequality, lack of
education, access to clean water; and environmental degradation.
• Few goals are directly health related and other are indirectly
related to health.
• Community medicine is being regarded as a vehicle to achieve
these goals and have the leading role in modern medicine.
• The concept “ Agent, Host and Environment” embodies the holistic
approach.
Why Holistic Approach?
• Clinical Medicine does not simply mean
prescribing a number of drugs.
• Neither it can limit itself to an individual
patient even if the aim is to cure his illness.
• Holistic approach implies not only integrating
medical domains but also calls non-health ones
like agriculture, industry, media, education,
law-enforcing agencies and many others to
achieve a healthy environment and society.
From Reactive to Proactive Role
• Doctors if are restricted to their traditional
roles mere serves as diagnoser of ailment,
prescribers of pills and potions and exciser of
lumps.
• The world now calls on the doctors to be an
educator, case-finder, preventer , counsellor
and an agent of social change.
Epidemiology
Focus on of Diseases
Community
Biostatistics
Health
Education
Anatomy Health Planning
Community Medicine
& Management
Mental Health
Focus on Screening &
Clinical Medicine
Individual Physiology Surveillance of
Diseases International
Health
Biochemistry Demography &
Family Planning Health
Economics
Pathology Environmental
Health
Pharmacolog Occupational
y Health
Public Health Medicine
PREVENTION DIAGNOSIS
HEALTH PROMOTION TREATMENT
Emphasis WHOLE COMMUNITY WHOLE PATIENT
INTERVENTION AIMED AT
Paradigm ENVIRONMENT, HUMAN BEHAVIOR ORGAN (CARDIOLOGY)
AND LIFE STYLE, AND MEDICAL
CARE
State of Complete
Population –centered Physical, Mental & Social Well-Being
approach defines as and not
mere absence of disease
Agent
• A substance, living or nonliving, or a force, tangible
or intangible, the excessive presence or relative
lack of which may initiate or perpetuate disease
process.
• Categories:
• Biological Agents,
• Physical Agents
• Chemical Agents
• Nutrient Agents
• Mechanical Agents
• Social Agents
• A disease may have a single agent, a number of
independent agents or complex of 2 or more factors.
Host
• A person or an animal, including birds and
arthropods, that afford subsistence or lodgment to an
infectious agent.
• An Obligate Host means the only host, e.g., man in
measles and typhoid
• Definitive Host: those in which the parasite passes it
sexual stage.
• Intermediate Host: those in which the parasite is in
larval stage or in asexual stage
• Transport Host: a carrier in which the organism
remains alive but does not undergo development
Host Factors
1. Demographic characteristics
2. Biological characteristics
3. Social and economical characteristics
4. Lifestyle factors
Environment
1. Physical environment
2. Biological environment
3. Psychosocial environment
Concepts of Disease and Health
(Modeling interconnections of Disease & Health)
Miasma Theory
• The theory that diseases such as cholera,
chlamydia or the Black Death were caused by
a miasma(Greek word for "pollution"), a
noxious form of "bad air".
Environment
Personality,
Beliefs &
Economics Behavioral choices Health care
system
Genetic
Endowment
Air pollution Water quality
Infectious
Disease
Outbreaks
Multi-factoral Causation
• This approach asserts that diseases have many causes,
which may sometimes be present without the disease or
absent when the disease is present.
• It entails that there are many risk factors operating at many
different levels. Some exist at the societal level, others at
the community or neighborhood level, and some at level of
individual behavior or biological level.
• Prevention programs for multi-factorial diseases must be
designed to deal with as many of these levels as possible.
Web of Causation
ENVIRONMENT
HEREDITY SMOKING
Lung Cancer
DIET OCCUPATION
(Vector)
HEREDITY SMOKING
Lung Cancer
DIET OCCUPATION
Iceberg of Disease
Tip of the Iceberg
(Diagnosed)
Submerged Portion
(Undiagnosed,
Subclinical cases,
Carriers, latent,
Pre-symptomatic)
• Examples which represent this model are many diseases including
hypertension, diabetes, anemia, malnutrition etc, etc.
• Hidden part constitutes an important, undiagnosed reservoir of
disease in the community and its detection and control is a
challenge to Preventive Medicine.
PERIOD OF PRE-PATHOGENESIS PERIOD OF PATHOGENESIS
Human (Host) is not infected Course of Disease in Humans
DEATH
NATURAL HISTORY OF DISEASE
• Economic disadvantage
• Limited language competence
• Physical, cognitive, or sensory disability
• Cultural/geographic isolation
• Age & Gender vulnerability
Forms of Occurrence of Disease
• Cases occur irregularly from time to time, and generally
infrequently.
• The case are few and separated widely in space and time and show
Sporadic little or no connection with each other, nor have a recognizable
common presence
• Constant source of infection.
of disease or infectious agent within a given
•• geographic
Examples: area
Polio,ortetanus, herpes
population zoster
group, and meningococcal
without importation from
Endemic outside.
• may also refer to the “ usual” or “ expected “ frequency of the
disease.
• Examples:
“Unusual”CommonoccurrenceCold. in a community or region of disease,
Epidemic specific health-related behavior ( e.g., smoking) or other
events (e.g., traffic accidents) clearly in excess of “expected
The term is used for a small, usually localized epidemic in the interest of
occurrence”.
Out break minimizing public alarm, unless the number of cases is indeed very large
ERADICATION
Reducing the prevalence of disease to Zero by
Termination of all transmission of infection
by extermination of infectious agent through surveillance and
containment
Case A person in the population or
study group identified as
having the particular disease,
Carrier health disorder, or condition
A person
under or animal that
investigation . harbors a
specific infectious agent in the
absence of discernible clinical
disease
Susceptible
?
immune
?
Diagnosis
• ?
Identification of unrecognized
disease or defect by application of
Screening
tests, examination or other
procedures which can be applied
rapidly.
• D o n e o n a p p a re nt l y h e a l t hy .
Population and Individual
Reliable produce the same results when used more than once to measure
precisely the same phenomenon
are related to
• Mortality
• Morbidity
• Disability
• Health care delivery
Herd Immunity
• “The resistance of a group to invasion and spread of an
infectious agent, based on the immunity of a high proportion
of individual of the group”.
• During the course of an epidemic a number of susceptible
people come down with the disease, thus providing multiple
sources of infection to others.
• As the epidemic progresses the proportion of non-
susceptible ones increases and the likelihood of effective
contact between patients with the disease and remaining
susceptible declines.
• Herd Immunity can be quoted as an example of Public Good.
• An important consequence of herd immunity
is that , in general, it is not necessary to
achieve 100% immunity in a population in
order to halt an epidemic or control a disease.
• BUT THIS OBSERVATION IS NOT AN ABSOLUTE.
• Public health is what we, as a society, do
collectively to assure the conditions for people
to be healthy.
• The State of Debate : Scholars and practitioners are conflicted
about the “reach” or domain of public health. Some prefer a
narrow focus on the proximal risk factors for injury and disease.
• The role of public health agencies, according to this
perspective, is to identify risks or harms and intervene to
prevent or ameliorate them.
• Others prefer a broad focus on the socio-cultural-economic
foundations of health. Those favoring this position see public
health as interested in a more equitable distribution of social
and economic resources because social status, race, and wealth
are important influences on the health of populations.