* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Chronic Disease
Race and health wikipedia , lookup
Seven Countries Study wikipedia , lookup
Huntington's disease wikipedia , lookup
Kawasaki disease wikipedia , lookup
Transmission (medicine) wikipedia , lookup
Behçet's disease wikipedia , lookup
Infection control wikipedia , lookup
2001 United Kingdom foot-and-mouth outbreak wikipedia , lookup
보건학 개론 Introduction to Public Health 질병관리의 역학적원리 Epidemiological Principles of Disease Control 2014 Sung-Il Cho [[email protected]] Graduate School of Public Health Seoul National University Contents • • • • • • • • Epidemiology: The science of epidemics Epidemiology: Methods Concepts of “disease control” Infectious disease: characteristics Infectious disease: principles of control Chronic disease: characteristics Chronic disease: principles of control Conclusion 2 Epidemiology 전염병? 감염병? 유행병? • 전염병(communicable diseases) – 감염병의 다른 말 (‘옮는’ 병) (diseases that transmit) • 감염병(infectious diseases) – 미생물(세균, 바이러스, 곰팡이등)이 일으키는 질병 (diseases caused by microbes) • 유행병(epidemics) – 통상적인 수준보다 뚜렷하게 많이 발생하는 질병 (occur beyond usual levels) – 인플루엔자, 비만, 흡연, 자살 등도 유행병이 될 수 있다. (include flu, obesity, smoking, suicide, … ) 3 Epidemiology 역학 (Epidemiology) The Science of Epidemics • Hippocrates’ writings: ”Of the epidemics” • Epidemion (Greek) = epi(upon)+demos(people)= illness among people 4 Epidemiology 역학의 사전적 정의 Porta (2008): A Dictionary of Epidemiology • 역학은 특정한 인구집단에서 건강관 련 상태나 사건의 발생과 분포를 연 구하는 학문으로서, 그러한 상태에 영향을 주는 결정요인을 탐구하고 그 지식을 건강문제 통제에 적용하 는 것을 포함한다. • The study of the occurrence and distribution of health-related states or events in specified populations, including the study of the determinants influencing such states, and the application of this knowledge to control the health problems. 5 Epidemiology 건강관련 상태와 사건 Health-related States and Events Event 1 Event 2 State 0 State 1 Event 3 State 2 State 3 • Measure of state occurrence: 유병률(prevalence) – Hypertension, obesity, diabetes, disability, … • Measure of event occurrence: 발생률 (incidence) – Birth, death, injury, stroke, lung cancer, … 6 Epidemiology Key Measures of Occurrence: Incidence, Prevalence, Mortality, Case fatality • Incidence(발생률) = Frequency of occurrence per unit population per unit time • Prevalence(유병률) = Proportion of a specific state • Mortality(사망률) = Incidence of death • Case fatality(치명률) = Incidence of death from a specific disease among patients with the disease High case fatality high mortality In a steady state: Low case fatality high prevalence 7 Epidemiology Epidemiological Methods To Study Health-related States and Events • • • • Measure occurrence Describe distribution Identify determinants (causes) Guide application of the knowledge to control health problems 8 Disease Control Examples of Health Problems • Infectious diseases • Chronic diseases • What else? – E.g. aging-associated functional decline 9 Disease Control WHO Family of International Classifications Interventions procedures Reasons for encounter IND Nomenclature of Diseases Associated Products ICD-10 International Statistical Classification of Diseases & Related Health Problems ICF International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health Main Classifications Primary care adaptations Speciality adaptation s Adaptations 10 Disease Control ICD: An International Public Good 150 years of history International Standard WHO Mortality Database: 85 countries, >3000 Country Years Conversion tables ICD 8, 9, 10 Internet Connection On-line instructions 11 Disease Control ICF Publications 1. Main volume with glossary - Full version 9999 cat. - Short version 99 cat. 2. Clinical Descriptions & Assessment Guidelines 3. Assessment Criteria for Research 4. Other versions - Specialty adaptations • Children and Youth 5. Dedicated Assessment Tools 12 Disease Control 질병관리 (Disease control) • Cure vs control (individual) • Eradication vs control (population) • Prevention vs control (e.g. CDC = Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) • Prevention: Actions aimed at eradicating, eliminating, or minimizing the impact of disease and disability (Porta: A dictionary of epidemiology, 2008) • Control: Ongoing operations or programs aimed at reducing incidence and/or prevalence, or eliminating such conditions (Porta, 2008) 13 Disease Control Prevention & Control • It may seem that prevention is to do something before a disease occurs, and control is to do something after a disease occurs. • However, the concepts of prevention and control have respectively become so broad that their ranges completely overlap • Control = Ongoing operations and programs for prevention 14 Disease Control Phases of Prevention (Porta, 2008) • 원천예방 (Primordial prevention): Minimize hazards to health • 1차예방 (Primary prevention): Reduce the incidence of disease • 2차예방 (Secondary prevention): Reduce the prevalence of disease by shortening its duration (early detection & treatment) • 3차예방 (Tertiary prevention): Soften the impact of long-term disease and disability (eliminate or reduce impairment, disability, and handicap) 15 Disease Control Epidemiological Models for Disease Process • In order to implement control (ongoing operations and programs for prevention), we need to know the process of disease causation and the progress. • Epidemiological research provides the models for disease process. 16 Infectious Disease Epidemiological Model for Infectious Disease 숙주 병원체 질병 환경 17 Infectious Disease R Determines The Size of Epidemic Cases High R Low R R = Reproduction number(감염재생산수). Total number of cases produced by one patient Epidemic occurs when R >1, and ends when susceptible individuals are depleted by death or immunity R = scpd = (susceptible proportion)*(contact rate) *(transmission probability)*(duration of infectivity) 18 Infectious Disease General Principles of Infectious Disease Control cp Susceptible 감수성자 1/d Infective 감염자 Resistant 회복, 면역자 Principles: Cases 1) Vaccination (s) 2) Prevent infection (cp) 3) Rapid recovery (d) patient pool 19 Infectious Disease Control Based on The Epidemiologic Model: Reducing the interaction A B C • A: Vaccination(s) • Preventing infection(c, p) – B: Stop transmission • patients: quarantine, isolation • susceptibles: hygiene, protection D E – C: Early detection • Surveillance & reporting • Lab test, diagnostic confirmation • D: Rapid recovery(d) – Early and effect treatment • E: Environmental control(c, p) – Disinfection – Biological vector control – Physical vehicle control 20 Infectious Disease 21 Infectious Disease 원칙 22 Chronic Disease Top 10 Causes of Death (2010) 1. Cancer 2. Stroke 3. Heart disease 4. Suicide 5. Diabetes 6. Pneumonia 7. Low respiratory disease 8. Liver disease 9. Traffic injury 10. Hypertensive disease How many belong to chronic disease? What are the causes? 23 Chronic Disease Chronic Disease Process: Multiple Causes in Multiple Steps causes State 0 normal causes State 1 obesity State 2 hypertension causes ... State n stoke 24 Chronic Disease WHO (2005) 25 Chronic Disease Quiz: With the advance of therapeutic methods, which of the following is expected? 1. 2. 3. 4. Decrease in incidence Decrease in mortality Decrease in prevalence Increase in prevalence 26 Chronic Disease Quiz: With the advance of therapeutic methods, which of the following is expected? 1. 2. 3. 4. Decrease in incidence (prevention methods) Decrease in mortality (therapy 1) Decrease in prevalence (therapy 2) Increase in prevalence (therapy 2 < therapy 1) Prevention (Prevalence ↓) Normal Disease Death Therapy 1 (Prevalence ↑) Therapy 2 (Prevalence ↓) 27 Chronic Disease Reducing Prevalence: Cure or Kill? Treatment often increases prevalence 28 Chronic Disease Chronic Disease Key Relationships • P PO = ID • Prevalence approximately equals to the incidence rate (I) duration of the disease (D). • PO = prevalence odds = p/(1-p) Non-diseased 1-p I Diseased 1/D Cured/Dead p In a steady state where p is constant, input = output. During a fixed time, (1-p) I = p (1/D), i.e. p/(1-p) = PO = ID 29 Chronic Disease Chronic Disease Characteristics and Strategies Non-diseased I 1-p Diseased 1/D Death p Cure? • • Difficult to cure – While cure is under research, other strategies are necessary. – Control focuses on delaying death (reducing mortality). – Delaying death may increase prevalence. Long duration – There may be time for early detection and treatment (screening). – Control is more effective by reducing prevalence. – Reduction of prevalence should be achieved by lowering the incidence. 30 Chronic Disease Chronic Disease Stopping/Slowing The Process 1-p Non-diseased p I Diseased Pre-clinical Clinical Death Tertiary prevention Primary prevention Prevent disease occurrence 1/D Secondary prevention Early detection & early treatment Treatment to reduce disability 31 Chronic Disease Stage Control Strategies Risk Factors Exposure Disease Prevention Health Promotion 1’ 2’ Target Population All Effect Lower risk Disability 3’ Risk Factors Limited Ds Advanced Ds Lower incidence Slower progress Lower disability Modified from APHA(2010) 32 Chronic Disease 10 Tips To Prevent Cancer (KNCC) 33 Chronic Disease 34 Chronic Disease 9 Tips To Prevent Cardiovascular Diseases (Ministry of Health & Welfare) 35 Chronic Disease 36 Conclusions • Epidemiology is the study of health-related states and events – Occurrence, Distribution, Determinants, Application • Disease control is achieved by the application of knowledge about determinants • Disease control strategy can be more effective by the use of epidemiologic models of disease occurrence 37