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CONCEPT OF DISEASE COMMUNITY RESEARCH PROGRAM 1 FAJAR AWALIA YULIANTO The modern Epidemiology : “Using quantitative methods to study , prevent, and control the disease in human population” CAUSATION OF DISEASE GENETIC FACTOR GOOD HEALTH POOR HEALTH ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS (INCLUDING BEHAVIOURS) EVALUATING INTERVENTIONS TREATMENT MEDICAL CARE GOOD HEALTH HEALTH PROMOTION PREFENTIVE MEASURES PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICES ILL HEALTH DEFINITION HEALTH Health is a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity DISEASE Conformed in epidemiology, as simple as “disease present” and “disease absent” NATURAL HISTORY OF DISEASE Death Good health Sub-clinical changes Clinical changes Recovery THE CONCEPT OF CAUSE A cause of a disease or injury is an event, condition, characteristic or a combination of these factors which plays an important role in producing the health outcome IS THE CAUSE SUFFICIENT OR NECESSARY FORMING THE DISEASE? Sufficient if: It inevitably produces or initiates an outcome Necessary if: An outcome can not develop in its absence EACH SUFFICIENT CAUSE HAS A NECESSARY CAUSE AS A COMPONENT FACTORS IN CAUSATION Predisposing factors : age, sex, genetic traits and previous illness may create susceptibility Enabling (Disabling) factors : low income, poor nutrition, bad housing and inadequate medical care may favor the development of illness Precipitating factors : exposure to a specific disease agent or noxious agent may be associated with the onset of disease Reinforcing factors : repeated exposure, unduly hard work may aggravate an established disease or injury TRADITIONAL MODEL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASE CAUSATION AGENT as an element or substance, animate or in animate,the presence (or absence) of it may initiate or perpetuate a disease process. COMPONENTS OF AGENT Nutritional Chemical Physical Infectious HOST A person or other living animal, that affords subsistence or lodgment to an infectious agent under natural condition. COMPONENTS OF HOST The age Sex Genetic-Hereditary Ethnic / race Physiologic / Psychological status Habit / tingkah laku Immunologic status The previous illnes ENVIRONMENT As the aggregate of all the external conditions and influence affecting the life and development of an organisme. COMPONENTS OF ENVIRONMENT Physical environment : such as Geographic, Geology, Climate Biological environment : such as people, flora, fauna ; population density, food Socioeconomic, such as : income, education, culture, urbanization, economic growth, poverty, fertility etc. CONSIDERATIONS FOR CAUSATION Temporal relation: Plausibility Does the removal of a possible cause lead to reduction of disease risk? Study design Is increased exposure to the possible cause associated with increased effect? Reversibility What is the strength of the association between the cause and the effect? (relative risk) Dose-response relationship Have similar results been show in other study? Strength Is the association consistent with the other knowledge? (MOA, evidence from experimental animal) Consistency Does the cause precede the effect? (essential) Is the evidence based in a strong study design? Judging the evidence How many lines of evidence lead to the conclusion? TERMS IN DISEASE THE INCUBATION PERIOD The time interval between contact with an agent and the first clinical evidence of resulting disease . It depends on : Portal of entry ( there is a defense mechanism) The ability of multiplication (infectivity). Number of agents Level of antibody in the host It varies individually Type of incubation period in the disease outbreak A B A : skewed to the left, when the disease has a short incubation period B : skewed to the right, when the disease has a longer incubation period DEFENSE MECHANISM THE ABILITY TO REACT AGAINST AGENT INVASION IN THE BODY : Consist of : The external defense mechanism such as physical and chemical reaction. The internal defense mechanism : cellular and humoral immunity INTERLUDE The lightwave travel not in straight singular waveform. The further, the more curvature it formed. TYPES OF DISEASES Communicable diseases Chronic non communicable diseases COMMUNICABLE DISEASES The leading communicable diseases in the world are: 1. Acute respiratory infections (3,76 millions) 2. HIV/AIDS (2,8 millions) 3. Diarrhoeal diseases (1,7 millions) 4. Tuberculosis (1,6 millions) 5. Malaria (1 million) 6. Measles (0,8 million) COMMUNICABLE DISEASES 1.Directly, from other infected humans or animals 2.Indirectly, through vectors, airborne particles or vehicles COMMUNICABLE DISEASES Vectors: insects or animals that carry infectious agents from person to person Vehicles: contaminated objects or elements of the environment Contagious: ability to spread between humans without intervening vector or vehicle COMMUNICABLE DISEASES Epidemics: the occurence of cases in excess of what is normally expected in a community or region Endemic: the relatively stable pattern of occurence in a given geographical area or population group at relatively high prevalence and incidence COMMUNICABLE DISEASES CHAIN OF INFECTION The Infectious agent The transmission process The host The environment COMMUNICABLE DISEASES THE INFECTIOUS AGENT The factors determining the nature of the infection: 1. Pathogenicity: The ability to produce a disease. Measured by ratio number of persons whom clinically ill compared to the exposed 2. Virulence: The severity of disease 3. Infective dose: The amount required to cause infection in susceptible subjects 4. Reservoir: The natural habitat 5. Source of infection:The person or object from wich the host acqures the agent COMMUNICABLE DISEASES THE TRANSMISSION PROCESS 1. 2. Direct transmission Indirect transmission COMMUNICABLE DISEASES THE HOST Extremely vary between individuals Determined by self-reaction to the agents COMMUNICABLE DISEASES ENVIRONMENT Plays a critical role in the development of communicable diseases CHRONIC NON COMMUNICABLE DISEASES The leading chronic diseases in the world are: 1. CVD (17,5 million deaths) 2. Cancer (7,5 million deaths) 3. Chronic respiratory disease (4 million deaths) 4. Diabetes (1,1 million deaths) CHRONIC NON COMMUNICABLE DISEASES The underlying determinants of health and their impact on chronic diseases Socioeconomics, Cultural, political & Environmental factors Common Modifiable & non modifiable risk factors Intermediate Risk factors Main chronic diseases CHRONIC NON COMMUNICABLE DISEASES Levels of prevention: 1. Primordial prevention 2. Primary prevention 3. Secondary prevention 4. Tertiary prevention Level Phase of disease Aim Actions Target Primordial Underlying economic, social, environment al conditions leading to causation Establish and maintain conditions that minimize hazards to health Measures that inhibit the emergence of environmental, economic, social and behavioral conditions Total population or selected groups; achived through public health policy and health promotion Primary Specific causal factors Reduce the incidence of disease Protection of health by personal and communal efforts, such as enhancing nutritional status, providing immunization, and eliminating environmental risks Total population, selected groups and healthy individuals; achieved through public health policy Secondary Early stage of disease Reduce the prevalence of disease by shortening its duration Measures available to individals and communities for early detection nd prompt intervention to control disease and minimize disability (e.g. Through screening programs) Individuals at igh risk and patients; achieved through preventive medicine Tertiary Late stage of disease (treatment, rehab) Reduce the number and/or impact of complication s Measures aimed at softening the impact of long-term disease and disability; minimizing suffering; maximizing potential years of useful life Patients; achieved through rehabilitation REFERENSI Bonita, R., Beaglehole, R., Kjellstrom, T. Basic epidemiology, 2nd ed. Geneva, World Health Organization, 2006