Title: Golden Lecture of Prevention
1Golden Lecture of Prevention
- Building a Global Prevention Network to Share
Knowledge and Wisdom reaching 1 million with
prevention lecture
2Hygeia In Greek mythology The goddess of
health. Hygiene The science that deals with the
preservation promotion of health.
September 19, 2003 Hippocrates Day
This lecture is dedicated to a man who is
currently recognized as the father of medicine.
Its because of his work, healers became doctors
instead of sorcerers. Hippocratic oath is
administered during the graduation ceremonies of
all modern medical schools.
3Objectives
- To define prevention and highlight its importance
in global health. - 2. To discuss the importance of network in the
context of the Supercourse and to begin to
organize the internet based globalization for
prevention - 3. To distribute the golden lecture to 1 million
faculty, students and professionals all over the
world
4Definition of Prevention
- Actions aimed at eradicating, eliminating, or
minimizing the impact of disease and disability.
The concept of prevention is best defined in the
context of levels, traditionally called primary,
secondary, and tertiary prevention - A Dictionary of Epidemiology, Fourth Edition
- Edited by John M. Last
5Public Health and Sanitation
- Achievements of the 20th century
- Improvements in hygiene practices
- Improvements in food handling (refrigeration)
- Improvement in water and sewage treatment
- Vaccination practices
6Rising Life Expectancy
Source United Nations (U.N.) Population
Division, Demographic Indicators, 1950-2050 (The
1996 Revision) (U.N., New York, 1996).
7Prevention and Religion
- Washing Hands
- Hands should be washed when one touches something
polluted or unclean likewise, before or after
eating. - The Prophet, Peace Be Upon Him, said Whoever
sleeps and his hands are not clean from fat and
thereby gets harmed should blame no one but
himself - The Prophet, Peace Be Upon Him, used to wash his
hands before eating
8Historical Examples of Global Prevention
Activities
Model for acute infectious agents
9Death rate for Tuberculosis, 1860-1960, United
States, Source US Bureau of the Census,
Historical Statistics of the United States
Colonial Times to 1970 (Washington, D.C
Government Printing Office, 1975), Part 1
pp58,63. Note Data between 1860 and 1900 for
Massachusetts only.
Koch identified tubercle bacillus
Streptomycin introduced
Vaccination available
10The Sanitary Revolution and the Ascendancy of
Public Health
- The sanitary revolution produced the greatest
transformation in the pattern of disease that the
world had known since nomadic hunter-gatherers
settled in permanent villages, and ultimately
developed modern urban industrial communities
11Death Rates for Measles in Children Under Age 15,
England and Wales, 1850-1970
Source Thomas McKeown, The Modern Rise of
Population (Academic Press, San Francisco, 1976),
pp. 93, 96.
12Epidemiologic Transition, MexicoDecline in
Communicable, Rise of NCDs
13(No Transcript)
14Example of successful prevention program in Cuba
VACCINATION PROGRAM RESULT
POLIO ELIMINATED SINCE
1962 DIPHTHERIA ELIMINATED SINCE 1969 NEWBORN
TETANUS ELIMINATED SINCE 1972 CONGENITAL
RUBELLA ELIMINATED SINCE 1989 MENINGITIS POST
MUMPS ELIMINATED SINCE 1989 MEASLES
ELIMINATED SINCE 1993 WHOOPING COUGH
TRANSMISSION INTERRUPTED SINCE 1994 RUBELLA
TRANSMISSION INTERRUPTED SINCE
1995 MUMPS TRANSMISSION
INTERRUPTED SINCE 1995 MORBIDITY MENINGOCOCCICA
L DISEASE REDUCTION 93 TYPHOID
FEVER REDUCTION 75 B
HEPATITIS REDUCTION 52
15Introduction
- Cervical cancer is the 2nd most common cancer
among women globally - Higher cervical cancer mortality in developing
countries due to lack of effective screening
programs
16Costs of malaria control
- Government-invests US 99,970/yr, protects 3.4
million people in transmission zone at 0.03 per
head - Population blood surveys (surveillance) 25
- Vector surveillance (strategic knowledge) 12
- Case-management (disease-transmission control)
-60 - Community
- US4.18 cost per illness-cases incur 83 of cost
(10 days income 1/3rd for drugs, gt1/3rd due to
lost income). - Govt pays 17 of cost per illness and creates
treatment system and case-management standards
17Estimated impact of AIDS on under-5 child
mortality rates Selected African countries, 2010
Source US Bureau of the Census
18Death Rates for Coronary Heart Disease by Country
Men Ages 35-74, 1970 and 1993 (Rate/100,000)
750
FIN
USA
AUST
SCOT
NZ
CAN
500
SING
USSR
250
ITY
SPN
FRAN
JPN
HK
CHN
0
19Lifestyle Factors
Genes load the gun.Lifestyle pulls the trigger
Dr. Elliot Joslin
20Relation Between CHD Events and LDL-C in Recent
Statin Trials
30
2 Prevention
25
20
with
15
1 Prevention
CHD event
10
5
0
90
110
130
150
170
190
210
Mean LDL-C level at follow-up (mg/dL)
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22Prevention and Internet Internet Epidemic
Number of Internet users (millions)
Year
23Methods Supercourse model
24Telepreventive Medicine
Inexpensive Low to High bandwidth systems
designed to reach large numbers of healthy people
to prevent disease.
Tele-Medicine
Expensive High bandwidth systems designed to
reach small numbers of sick people to cure
disease.
25Supercourse Lecture Growth
26Conclusions
- Increased life expectancy in the past century was
achieved through the improvement of sanitation
and prevention - Successful prevention in the past and in the
future needs to be rooted in the networking of
health professionals around the world to share
their knowledge - Internet based Information sharing is the key to
prevention and a golden world
27What is the future of prevention?
- Globalization of Prevention
- Networking of people in prevention
- Sharing of data, knowledge and wisdom
-
Please forward the Golden Lecture to faculty,
students and health professionals in your country
28Peer Review of the Lecture
- Your input is critical to the continued
development of the Supercourse and of this
lecture. Please complete the review form below
and return your response by clicking copying your
response into e- mail message and sending it to
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