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Principles of Community Medicine/Community Health. July 25, 2007 Vanessa S. Wong, MD. Objectives. Describe the 4 dimensions of community medicine Understand the curricular requirements for community medicine Discuss the UH DFMCH community medicine curriculum.
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Principles of Community Medicine/Community Health July 25, 2007 Vanessa S. Wong, MD
Objectives • Describe the 4 dimensions of community medicine • Understand the curricular requirements for community medicine • Discuss the UH DFMCH community medicine curriculum
Community Medicine • Providing medical services in the community • Understanding community resources • Health promotion and disease prevention • Occupational health • Knowledge of communities • Care of populations • Community participation in health care activities
4 Dimensions of Community Medicine • Paying attention to sociocultural aspects of patient care • Coordinating a community’s health resources in the care of patients • Identifying and intervening in a community’s health problem • Assimilating into a community and participating in its organizations
Definition of community • A true community in the sociological sense (shared community sentiment, social institutions) • A defined neighborhood • Workers/students in a defined company/school • Persons registered as potential users of a group practice/HMO/health center • Users of a defined service or repeated users of the service
Declaration of Alma Ata • International Conference on Primary Health Care, 1978 • Health is a fundamental human right
Community Oriented Primary Care (COPC) • Primary care practice • Defined community • Process • Defining and characterizing the community • Describing community health problem • Modifying health care program to address high-priority health needs • Monitoring effectiveness of program modifications
COPC Competencies • Define and characterize a given population using secondary data • Recognize a community health problem using either subjective or objective data • Design an intervention to address a recognized community health problem • Know which community resources address a recognized problem
COPC Competencies • Contribute to an organized community action group and monitor the group’s progress • Determine roles of attending and faculty physicians in community action groups • Locate local, state and national databases for common or chronic disease states • Exhibit group leadership skills in a multidisciplinary setting
COPC Competencies • Understand the utility of personal computers and EHRs in COPC • Analyze activities of a community action group in COPC terms • Understand the difference between health promotion and disease prevention projects and a COPC practice
COPC Curricular Topics • Clinical epidemiology • Design and evaluation of outcome studies • Leadership and group facilitation skill training • Team skills • Medical information storage and retrieval systems • Medical cost analysis • Health promotion and disease prevention techniques • Family physician’s role in the community’s health • Population-based medicine
Community Medicine Curriculum • 2002 Study in Family Medicine • 89% have formal community medicine curriculum • 86% required rotation • 76% at least 1 month devoted exclusively • 49% at least 2 months • 10% at least 10 months
ACGME Requirements • Each residency must have a structured curriculum in community medicine, including didactic and some experiential components. • There must be a process to evaluate this curriculum and to document appropriate resident skill attainment in this area.
ACGME Community Medicine Curriculum • (1) assessment of risks for abuse, neglect, and family and community violence • (2) reportable communicable disease • (3) population epidemiology, and the interpretation of public health statistical information • (4) environmental illness and injury • (5) school health • (6) disease prevention through immunization strategies • (7) disaster responsiveness • (8) community-based disease screening, prevention, health promotion • (9) factors associated with differential health status among subpopulations, including racial, geographic, or socioeconomic health disparities, and the role of family physicians in reducing such gaps
ACGME Community Medicine Curriculum • (10) experience in using community resources appropriately for individual patients who have unmet medical or social support needs • (11) structured interaction with the public health system • (12) occupational medicine including disability determination, employee health and job-related illness and injury • (13) experience in community health assessment • (14) experience in developing programs to address community health priorities • (15) community-based health education of children and adults
Experiential site visits DOH clinical experience Direct experience w/minority communities Home visits Meetings/lectures w/dept staff Community Tour Prepared readings Use of community resource manual Cultural sensitivity training Participation in longitudinal community medicine project Meetings w/community leaders/activitists Instruction in the COPC model Community assessment activities Formal presentation of experiences Team-building skills Review and use of secondary data Collection of primary data Research/evaluation of community interventions Working w/the media Conflict resolution Curricular Methods/Training Experiences
Experiential site visits DOH clinical experiences Home visits Cultural sensitivity training Participation in longitudinal community medicine project Meetings w/community leaders/activitists Instruction in the COPC model Curricular Methods Predictive of Perceived Competency
UH DFMCH Community Health Goals • Family Practice residents will have an understanding of community medicine by the time of graduation • Family Practice residents will participate in community health during their residency
UH DFMCH Community Health Curricular Content • 1. Definition of community health • 2. Disease prevention and health promotion • 3. Occupational medicine • 4. Principles of Primary Health Care (PHC) and Community-Oriented Primary Care (COPC)
UH DFMCH Community Health Curricular Objectives • 1. Given a particular health program in a particular community, residents will be able to recognize the manner in which its activities fulfill the principles of PHC according to the Declaration of Alma Ata or COPC according to principles outlined by Sidney Kark. • 2. Demonstrate knowledge of community health resources in patient care plans to preceptors.
UH DFMCH Community Health Instructional Methods • 1. Individual study: Selected readings on the fundamentals of community health. • 2. Lectures and discussions: Faculty members and invited speakers will give talks during Wednesday afternoon conferences on their experiences with the process of community health as they have experienced it personally. • 3. Individual projects or joining an ongoing project.
UH DFMCH Community Health Evaluations • 1. Quarterly meetings with faculty community health director and selected community health advisor(s). • 2. Yearly presentation of progress and any findings during a Wednesday afternoon conference. • 3. Faculty and fellow residents will critique the methodology and findings of the residents projects.
UH DFMCH Community Health • Lectures/Discussions(integrated with the Research and Cross-Cultural Curriculum)
Wilikina COPC project Ka Nupepa articles School career days School physicals School talks Family planning Tar Wars Community clean-up HOME Clinics Medical tent volunteers Church donations Home visits Cross-cultural curricular activities UH DFMCH Community Medicine Activities – Past and Present
Group Interaction • 4 groups • Each group discuss 1 of the dimensions of community medicine • Discuss the dimension – what does it mean, why is it important • Brainstorm – how would the dimension look like in a formal community medicine rotation/curriculum
Participation in health activities in the community • Identifying and intervening in the community’s health problems
Sociocultural awareness in the care of patients • Responding to the particular health issues of local cultural groups when caring for patients
Understanding and appropriate use of the community’s health resources in the care of patients • Coordinating local community health resources in the care of patients
Community participation and assimilation • Assimilating into the community and its organizations
The highest reward for a person's toil is not what they get for it, but what they become by it.... John Ruskin