Using a Population Health Driver Diagram to Support Health Care and Public Health Collaboration

2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ron Bialek ◽  
◽  
Jack Moran ◽  
Micaela Kirshy ◽  
◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Maria José Lucena e Vale ◽  
Filipa Vale

The existence of adequate and reliable information to assess population health is essential to build solid strategies for public health promotion and social care, as to help demonstrate efficient investment in these areas. There are several health-related databases, covering different scales: World, Europe, or National, including several datasets with different details. These different datasets should be reviewed and selected on the basis of their ability to support efficient strategies associated with monitoring population health and their usefulness in the promotion of health care efficiency. To understand the relevance of these database infrastructures when integrated with Web-based, geographical information management tools, and use these to improve the knowledge of health issues, this chapter integrates examples related to enhancing the performance analysis of this collaborative spatial data infrastructure in three distinct areas: national health systems and health care; disease prevalence studies in different countries, and integrated analysis of environment quality and public health.


2018 ◽  
Vol 24 ◽  
pp. S66-S68
Author(s):  
Susan Tilgner ◽  
Lance Himes ◽  
Terry Allan ◽  
Krista Wasowski ◽  
Beth Bickford ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
pp. 142-174
Author(s):  
John Ashton

This chapter addresses the value of health services as a public health measure and makes the case for the use of public health skills in health service planning. The question as to what sort of health services are most appropriate to optimize population health is explored with reference to the development of the World Health Organization Alma Ata Declaration with its emphasis on the eight elements of primary health care. The application of epidemiological thinking in National Health Service frameworks for health care is described. Examples of the use of a public health approach in health care planning include: planned parenthood and family planning services; population-based diabetic retinopathy screening; and whole-system health care transformation in the county of Cumbria. Also covered are the proactive role of the mainstream media in taking the public on a journey of change and the handling of serious clinical service failure in the form of inappropriate organ retention at the Alder Hey Children’s Hospital, breast screening failure in a Cumbrian hospital, and a corporate clinical disaster at the Morecambe Bay University Hospitals.


Author(s):  
Espen Gamlund ◽  
Carl Tollef Solberg

There have been debates in both philosophy and the field of population health on the issue of how mortality can and should be measured. In population health, the intention has been to produce measures of public health that can guide the formulation of policies governing the distribution of health care resources. However, there are many questions concerned with the evaluation of death that have not been carefully addressed in the literature on population health but that have been extensively discussed in the philosophical literature on death. Conversely, there are debates in population health about whether and how to summarize mortality and morbidity that have largely escaped the attention of philosophers. The purpose of this book is to bring these two general debates—the one in philosophy and the one in population health—into dialogue with one another, with the aim of evaluating deaths and examining the relevance of such evaluation to health policy.


Author(s):  
Altyn Aringazina ◽  
Gabriel Gulis ◽  
John P. Allegrante

The Republic of Kazakhstan is one of the largest and fastest growing post-Soviet economies in Central Asia. Despite recent improvements in health care in response to Kazakhstan 2030 and other state-mandated policy reforms, Kazakhstan still lags behind other members of the Commonwealth of Independent States of the European Region on key indicators of health and economic development. Although cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of mortality among adults, HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and blood-borne infectious diseases are of increasing public health concern. Recent data suggest that while Kazakhstan has improved on some measures of population health status, many environmental and public health challenges remain. These include the need to improve public health infrastructure, address the social determinants of health, and implement better health impact assessments to inform health policies and public health practice. In addition, more than three decades after the Declaration of Alma-Ata, which was adopted at the International Conference on Primary Health Care convened in Kazakhstan in 1978, facilitating population-wide lifestyle and behavioral change to reduce risk factors for chronic and communicable diseases, as well as injuries, remains a high priority for emerging health care reforms and the new public health. This paper reviews the current public health challenges in Kazakhstan and describes five priorities for building public health capacity that are now being developed and undertaken at the Kazakhstan School of Public Health to strengthen population health in the country and the Central Asian Region.


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