Public Health Goals for the Second Fifty Years - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 62
About This Presentation
Title:

Public Health Goals for the Second Fifty Years

Description:

Diuretic use by those without hypertension or congestive heart failure ... 10. Congestive heart failure. Early detection, prevention, drug therapy. 9. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:101
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 63
Provided by: stephan65
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Public Health Goals for the Second Fifty Years


1
Public Health Goals for the Second Fifty Years
  • Steven M. Albert, PhD
  • Department of Behavioral and Community Health,
    GSPH
  • University of Pittsburgh

smalbert_at_pitt.edu
2
Ten Great Public Health Achievements, 1900-1999
  • Vaccination
  • Motor vehicle safety
  • Safer workplaces
  • Control of infectious diseases
  • Decline in mortality from heart disease and
    stroke
  • Safer and healthier foods
  • Healthier mothers and babies
  • Family planning
  • Fluoridation
  • Recognition of tobacco as hazard

CDC 2000
3
A Cultural Model of Aging (ours, too)
NRC, The Aging Mind, 1997
Aging viewed in light of ability and disability
4
Part I Challenges of Success
  • Reduction in mortality
  • Older ages at death but greater prevalence of
    chronic disease and complex disability dynamics
  • Reduction in fertility
  • Greater investments in old-age (e.g., education)
    but fewer family caregivers

5
(No Transcript)
6
(No Transcript)
7
Age Distribution of Deaths Swedish Females,
Selected Periods
Horiuchi 2003
8
Part II Aging
  • Whips and scorns of time or something more
    complex?

9
  • The aging process involves decline in many
    physiological parameters
  • (Nathan Shock Model)

Few examples Reaction Time (longer) Cognitive
Status Nerve Conduction Velocity Muscle
Strength Visual Acuity Macro and Micronutrients
intake Insulin Sensitivity Testosterone Estrogens
IGF-1 Cytokines and APR (higher) ROS /
Antioxidants Complexity of CV reflexes
65
100
10
Physiologic reserve - Hypothetical Trajectory to
Illness, Functional Limitation, Disability
1
hip fracture
pneumonia
congestive heart failure
Functional limitation
Physiologic reserve
2
Disability
3
Younger age
Older age
(Newman 2006)
Time
11
Decline in Gait Speed with Age
Bohannon 1997
12
Age and Grip Strength
Frederiksen 2006
13
Mobility (and hence sarcopenia) is a better
predictor of mortality than chronologic age in C.
elegans
Herndon et al., Nature 2002
14
Indicator 17 - Memory Impairment
15
Indicator 20 - Respondent-Assessed Health Status
16
Cumulative Risk of AD, by Race-Ethnicity, Limited
to APOE e3/3
From Table 1, Tang et al 1998
17
Age and Cancer
NHIS 2004
18
Age and Diabetes, Arthritis
NHIS 2004
19
Age and Sensory Problems
NHIS 2004
20
Age and Functional Limitation A Mixture of
Senescence, Disease, and Environment
NHIS 2004
21
Draw a clock with hands showing the time 1120
22
Unhealthy Physical or Mental Health Days, by Age
MMWR Oct 28, 2005 54(SS04) 1-35
23
Aging Reduction in Behavioral Risk Factors
NHIS 2004
24
Risk factors for total mortality in CHS
  • Increasing age, male
  • Low income
  • Lack of moderate or vigorous exercise
  • Smoking for more than 50 pack-years
  • High ankle-brachial index (systolic blood
    pressure)
  • Diuretic use by those without hypertension or
    congestive heart failure
  • Elevated fasting glucose level (130 mg/dL)
  • Low albumin level (
  • Elevated creatinine level (or to 106
    micromoles/L 1.2 mg/dL)
  • Low forced vital capacity (
  • Aortic stenosis (moderate or severe) Abnormal
    left ventricular ejection fraction Congestive
    heart failure
  • Difficulty in any IADL/ADL
  • Worse Digit Symbol Substitution test score

25
(No Transcript)
26
Part III Prospects for Optimal Aging
  • Diversity in Aging
  • Historical perspective
  • Interventional gerontology

27
What Has Changed Over Last Century?
  • Less infectious disease ( less long-term
    effects, or scarring)
  • Typhoid, diarrheal disease, cholera, measles,
    rheumatic fever, scarlet fever, diphtheria,
    whooping cough
  • Less occupational stress
  • Technologies reduce manual labor
  • Greater affluence

28
Plowing, 1868
29
Plowing, 1910
30
Plowing, 1940
31
NYC, 1911, Dirty floor, vermin abounded, garbage
standing uncovered
32
Prevalence of Symptoms and Conditions, 1900 and
1990 (Males, Age 60-74)
(Costa, 2002)
33
Definitions of Optimal Aging
Physical, cognitive, and/or emotional
functioning
34
Albert, J Cross-Cult Gerontol, 2006
35
Preventable Diseases in Aging
36
Preventable Diseases in Aging
37
QOL Domains Supportive Service Populations
(Kane, 2000)
  • Sense of security order
  • Enjoyment
  • Meaningful activity
  • Social relationships (reciprocity)
  • Dignity
  • Privacy
  • Individuality (identity with past)
  • Autonomy (express choices)
  • Spiritual well-being
  • Functional competence
  • Physical comfort

38
Healthy People 2010 Goals
  • Objective Target Current
  • Reduce who are obese 15 22
  • Reduce who have no
  • leisure-time physical activity 20
    26
  • Reduce who smoke 12
    23

39
Healthy People 2010 Goals
  • Objective Target Current
  • Increase who have had
  • cholesterol checked 80 73
  • Increase who have had
  • colorectal cancer screen 50 46
  • Increase with annual
  • influenza vaccine 90 66
  • Increase who received
  • mammography 70 76

40
The 10 KeysTM to Healthy Aging
  • Control blood pressure (SBP
  • Regulate blood glucose (
  • Lipids (LDL
  • Stop smoking
  • Be active
  • Participate in cancer screenings
  • Get regular immunizations
  • Prevent bone loss and muscle weakness
  • Combat depression
  • Maintain social contact

41
Heat Mortality Chicago, 1995
/100,000
Klinenberg 1995
42
Place-Based Vulnerability
Mortality /100,000
Klinenberg, 15 communities with highest deaths,
10 lowest
Population lost 30 yr
43
Neighborhood Effects on Relationship between
Individual Education and Cognitive Performance
75 of community HS education
Elder Cognitive Score

0
College
8
12
Individual Educational Attainment
After Wight 2006
44
Part IV Disability in Old Age
  • The central challenge

45
Function What Really Concerns Us
The women worked all the time washing laundry,
ironing shirts, mending socks, turning collars,
sewing on buttons, mothproofing woolens,
polishing furniture, sweeping and washing floors,
cleaning sinks, tubs, toilets, and stoves,
vacuuming rugs, nursing the sick, shopping for
food, cooking meals, feeding relatives, tidying
closets and drawers, overseeing paint jobs and
household repairs, arranging for religious
observances, paying bills and keeping the
familys books while simultaneously attending to
their children and health, clothing, cleanliness,
schooling, nutrition, conduct, birthdays,
discipline, and morale. Roth, The Plot Against
America, pg. 3
46
Factors that Influence Function
  • Function
  • Disability (ADL) or broader engagement?
  • Self-reported or observed performance?
  • External or Internal Factors
  • Built and community environment
  • Home accessibility, safety assistive devices
  • In-home services distance to key services
  • Physical, cognitive, and psychological resources
  • Strength, memory, mood
  • Motivation to be independent, self-efficacy

47
Basic Adult Competencies
  • ADL
  • Bathing
  • Dressing
  • Grooming
  • Self-feeding
  • Using toilet
  • Transfer
  • IADL
  • Light shopping
  • Light housework
  • Preparing meals
  • Managing medications
  • Handling finances
  • Using telephone
  • Laundry

Advanced driving, working, programming
appliances, self-care, parenting, heavy cleaning,
complex shopping, home repairs
48
(No Transcript)
49
(No Transcript)
50
(No Transcript)
51
Indicator 19 - Disability
52
(No Transcript)
53
Trends in Old Age Disability
Spillman, 2004, NLTCS
Age standardized. Disability ADL help, IADL
difficulty, SNF, 3 mo helppersonal assistance
54
Senescence, Chronic Disease, Environment, and
Disability
Physiologic changes of aging, not disease-based
(e.g., sarcopenia, hypometabolism)
A
Frailty
27
Disability
Disease, comorbidity
B
C
55
Albert, 2002
18
55
A Model of Disablement
Self-Reported Disability
Functional Limitation
Pathology
Impairment
Loss of lower-extremity strength
Sarcopenia
Altered performance in daily tasks
56
Disablement
57
Preventing Disability

Primary-Secondary, 1-2
Functional Limitation
Self-Reported Disability
Pathology
Impairment
Loss of lower-extremity strength
Sarcopenia
Altered performance in daily tasks
Tertiary,3
58
Partitioning Survival by Functional Status WHO
Model, 1
Survival

50
Age
75
59
Partitioning Survival by Functional Status WHO
Model, 2
Disability
Survival

50

Age
70
75
60
Partitioning Survival by Functional Status WHO
Model, 3
Disability
Survival

Pre-clinical disability
50
//
Age
70
60
75
61
But Many Challenges
  • To a certain extent, it is as if we have not
    fully engaged in applying public health practice
    to older populations . The aging network is
    looking to public health for science-based health
    promotion and disease prevention strategies that
    are tested and proven effective.
  • --JS Marks, CDC, US Senate, 5/19/03

62
Parallel Networks Aging Services and Public
Health
Department of Health and Human Services
AoA
CDC
CDD Chronic Disease Program Directors
NASUA Natl Assn of State Units on Aging
57 SUAs
58 SHDs
NACCHO National Asso of County City Health
Officials
N4A National Assn of Area Agencies on Aging
655 AAAs
3,000 LHDs
Community Orgs
Community Orgs
Benson, 2005
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com