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FSU - Supercourse Developments

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Title: FSU - Supercourse Developments


1
FSU - Supercourse Developments
SCIENTIFIC NETWORKING AND THE GLOBAL
HEALTH SUPERCOURSE FOR THE PREVENTION OF THREAT
FROM MAN MADE AND NATURAL DISASTERS
  • Eugene Shubnikov for FSU Internet Prevention
    Network
  • August 8, 2005, Kaunas, Lithuania

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www.pitt.edu/super1/national/index.htm
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Selected Causes of Death
7
I-PreventionLow band width information transfer
reaching large numbers of well people to prevent
  • Information for non-communicable diseases is what
    vaccinations are to infectious diseases.

8
Steps in Developing of Russian/FSU Supercourse
  • Network of the scientists involved in
    prevention and the Internet in Russia and FSU
  • Russian Language or Russia/ FSUs connected
    Public Health Library of lectures at the Internet
  • I-prevention Program with relations between
    Russian, FSU, US and scientists from around of
    the world

9
Communications between members
  • Mailing list
  • Sharing of lectures
  • Personal E-mail contacts
  • Personal meetings

10
Our Help for Russian/ FSU Public Health Teachers
  • Free access to the Supercourse web library of
    lectures www.pitt.edu/super1
  • Cutting edge, interesting lectures available from
    Supercourse website and CDRoms.
  • Share knowledge, education and training systems
    with other public health professionals in FSU and
    worldwide through personal contacts

11
What is the reasons of current bad health indices
in Russia?
12
Health status
  • It is useful to begin an account of health status
    developments with a consideration of the Soviet
    period, as the present health crisis of the
    Russian Federation has its roots in events that
    long precede the collapse of the Soviet Union.

13
The period until 1991Life expectancy (both
sexes)
14
The period until 1991Life expectancy in 1965
15
The health care principles upon which the Soviet
health care system was to be based (Nikolai
Semashko)
  • government responsibility for health
  • universal access to free services
  • a preventive approach to social diseases
  • quality professional care
  • a close relation between science and medical
    practice
  • continuity of care between health promotion,
    treatment and rehabilitation.

16
Next steps following the establishment of the
Semashko model in 1918
  • The health care system was under the centralized
    control of the state, which financed services by
    general government revenues as part of national
    social and economic development plans.
  • All health care personnel became employees of the
    centralized state, which paid salaries and
    provided supplies to all medical institutions.
  • The main policy orientation throughout this
    period was to increase numbers of hospital beds
    and medical personnel.

17
Next steps following the establishment of the
Semashko model in 1918 (cont.)
  • Russia made massive strides in arresting the
    spread of infectious diseases.
  • Drastic epidemic control measures were
    implemented, particularly in the cases of
    tuberculosis, typhoid fever, typhus, malaria and
    cholera.
  • These involved community prevention approaches,
    routine check-ups, improvements in urban
    sanitation and hygiene, quarantines, etc.

18
Health crisis
  • The diverging paths of Russia and other
    industrialized nations with respect to health
    status from the 1960s onward has been attributed
    to the failure of the Russian health care system
    to successfully respond to the epidemiological
    transition.

19
Healht Crisis(cont.)
  • The Soviet philosophy did not encourage the
    development of responsibility of the individual
    with respect to lifestyle issues that have a
    major bearing on health (alcohol use, smoking,
    diet, etc.), a situation exacerbated by the heavy
    dependence on alcohol sales as a means of
    circulating currency in a country with little
    access to consumer goods.

20
A campaign against alcohol
  • By the 1980s, the gap between Russia and Western
    countries in life expectancy at birth came to
    about 10 years for men and 6 years for women,
    mostly due to high death rates among those of
    working age. In the mid-1980s, the government
    made an attempt to address this problem. It was
    by then generally understood that potentially
    avoidable human losses were mostly attributable
    to excess adult age mortality from particular
    causes such as injuries, accidental poisoning,
    suicide, homicide, sudden cardiac death,
    hypertension and other conditions closely related
    to alcohol abuse and its consequences.

21
Life expectancy at birth related to Campaign
22
But.
  • Russia failed to maintain this record, however
    by 1987 the USSR was no longer able to enforce
    the anti-alcohol campaign and death rates rapidly
    resumed their upward trend from 1988 onwards. The
    anti-alcohol campaign was largely prohibitive and
    did not affect the attitude of the majority of
    Russias population towards alcohol.

23
The period after 1991
  • The health status of the Russian population
    declined precipitously following the collapse of
    the Soviet Union in late 1991. By all accounts,
    in the last decade Russia has been experiencing a
    shock unprecedented in peacetime to its health
    and demographic profiles.

24
Russian Federation Population (1980-2000)
25
Total mortality, 1990s
Russian Federation
St. Petersburg
26
Life expectancy in Russia, male
27
Life expectancy in Russia, female
28
The leading causes of death in the Russia
Federation
  • Cardiovascular diseases with rates that are the
    highest in the European Region.
  • External causes of injury and poisoning
  • Cancer

29
Causes of the mortality crisis
  • Major social and economic shock and income
    stratification in a population already vulnerable
    because of
  • Poor diet, high levels of smoking, and weak
    systems of social support, in which alcohol and,
    increasingly, intravenous drugs, are easily
    available.
  • Health care system is poorly equipped to respond
    to challenges.

30
What can be done?
  • The government of the Russian Federation clearly
    recognizes the urgency of the health and
    demographic crises. The Former Minister of Health
    Y. L. Shevchenko for instance, referred to the
    public health system as a significant factor in
    national security of the nation
  • President Putin, in a speech to the State Duma
    on 8 July 2000, stated that a persistence of
    recent demographic trends would endanger the
    survival of the nation.

31
What can be done?(cont.)
  • Health promotion, prevention and attention to
    lifestyles
  • Primary care development based on family practice
  • De-emphasizing secondary and tertiary care
  • Quality of care

32
What ways we may use for improve Health in
Russia?
  • Improve prevention
  • Reach everybody
  • Make it inexpensively

33
Role of FSU Internet PreventionNetwork in
improvement Health in Russia
  • Networking Russian Public Health specialists via
    Internet
  • Improve prevention through the training of
    Russian Public Health specialists through
    Supercourse Library of lectures in Epidemiology,
    Public Health and Internet - www.pitt.edu/super1/
    national/index.htm
  • Provide Russian Language Lectures on prevention
    via FSU Internet Prevention web site
    www.pitt.edu/super1/national/index.htm

34
Thank you!And Welcome to Siberia!
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