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Anticipatory care Dr. Basema AL.Khudhair MOH) ) Family Medicine consultant & trainer Clinical Assistant Professor (KSU ) email ( ba lkhudhair@yahoo.com). If we take responsibility for preventive work only of proven value we shall have our hands full. 1 Diseased, diagnosed & controlled
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Anticipatory care Dr. Basema AL.KhudhairMOH))Family Medicine consultant & trainerClinical Assistant Professor (KSU)email( balkhudhair@yahoo.com)
If we take responsibility for preventive work only of proven value we shall have our hands full.
1 Diseased, diagnosed & controlled 2 Diagnosed, uncontrolled 3 Undiagnosed or wrongly diagnosed disease 4 Risk factors for disease 5 Free of risk factors Diagnosed disease Undiagnosed or wrongly diagnosed disease Iceberg phenomenon ?
Does it work? • USA: Mortality from stroke has decreased by 50% since 1972 • Early diagnosis and treatment of hypertension • Mortality from cervix cancer decreased by 80% • Pap smear • Neonatal screening: Decrease in mental retardation • Phenylketonuria screening • Congenital hypothyroidism National Center for Health Statistics. http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/r&d/ndi/ndi.htm
Health Promotion • Includes all measures which promote good health and prevent or delay the onset of disease or their complications. • The essential union of prevention with care and cure (RCGP,1981).
Aims: 1-Improve the quality of life. 2-Reduce the burden of premature disability. 3-Increase life expectancy.
Health Promotion : 1-Primary Prevention: • Health education. • Prophylaxis.
Primary Prevention: A. Health education: Aims to enlighten people by providing them with information factors which are known to cause disease. B. Prophylaxis: An active intervention in an attempt to protect the individual from developing a particular disease e.g.: vaccination.
Cont. 2-Secondary Prevention: • Screening. • Case finding. 3-Tertiary Prevention : systematic long term monitoring to prevent or minimize the impact of complication.
What are primary care physicians doing? Tertiary Prevention Primary Prevention Secondary Prevention Preventive Medicine!
Secondary Prevention: A. Screening: Are systematic attempts to detect undeclared disease in a population of apparently healthy people. • Before mounting a screening initiative certain criteria must first be satisfied (Wilson, 1973) .
PHE Evaluation of apparently healthy individuals in certain time periods, using a number of standard procedures such as counseling, physical examination, and laboratory investigations is called Periodic Health Examination.
Preventive Medicine and Periodic Health Examinations in Primary Care Introduction to Primary Care: a course of the Center of Post Graduate Studies In FM
The Criteria: 1- The condition (the disease) sought should be: • Important. • Recognizable at an early stage. • Readily treatable.
Cont. PHE 2- The screening test used should be: • Practical and safe. • Acceptable to patients and non invasive. • Highly sensitive and highly specific and easy to interpret. 3-Facilities for diagnosis and management should be readily available.
Cont. PHE 4- Treatment should be: • Recognized • Effective. 5- The cost of screening test should be balanced and screening should be a continuous process. 6- To agree on a policy on whom to treat.
Cont. PHE 8-The population screened : • Sufficiently high disease prevalence. • Accessibility 9-Compliance with subsequent diagnostic tests &necessary therapy.
Does it work? • USA: Mortality from stroke has decreased by 50% since 1972 • Early diagnosis and treatment of hypertension • Mortality from cervix cancer decreased by 80% • Neonatal screening • Decrease in mental retardation • Phenylketonuria screening • Congenital hypothyroidism National Center for Health Statistics. http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/r&d/ndi/ndi.htm
Rationale: • Many young people die every year due to RTA • > 90,000 die < 65year : <32,000 due to cancers. <25,000 due to IHD . • Cessation of smoking <33% reduction in all cancers. <25% reduction In IHD. • Treating & controlling hypertension reduce CVAs by 50%
Think of your daily life • A50-year old woman applies to your office. She has no history of disease but afraid of having breast cancer. • Should you perform a breast exam? • Should you teach her breast self exam? • Should you order a mammography? • How do you decide?
Rationale • It’s an important disease for women • Worldwide 719000 new cases/year. (1/1000) • Ist female's cancer (Saudi cancer registry) • It can be recognized early without symptoms • Mammography • Curable • Surgery, Chemotherapy, Radiotherapy • The value of treatment is far more than its adverse effects
Screening / PHE programs in Saudi Arabia • Annual periodic health examination for all diabetic and hypertensive patients registered at PHC • Cervical screening • Breast cancer screening in some areas • Pre-marital screening (genetic dis., infectious dis.) • Well baby clinic
Conclusion: • Management decision must be related to one or more of the following objectives: • Prevention of an illness. • Prevention of disability in curable illness. • Prevention of further disability in chronic disease. • Prevention of relapse. • Prevention of death.
Principles of patient education • Interest • the recognition of the need • patients are unlikely to listen to those things which are not to their interest • Motivation
Principles of patient education • Participation • active learning • Known to unknown • knowledge is build up to enable patients to develop an in-depth insight into their own health problems
Principles of patient education • Comprehension • Making patient understand what you say • Educational background • Mental capacity • Re inforcement • repetition of the information in the same or during subsequent consultation
Principles of patient education • Encourage the patient to participate in decision making and in accepting some degree of responsibility for his/her own management • Record body weight • glucocheck • Monitoring temperature • B.P
Principles of patient education • Encourage feed back • Involvement of others e.g. family members where appropriate • Establish wheather the objectives have been met and the patient is happy with the outcome
Principles of patient education • Provide take away information • patient instruction leaflets • resource contacts • Arrange follow up • Reinforcement of information • preventive measures
Principles of patient education • It is sometimes wrongly assumed that just by providing people with information, they will automatically be able to make healthy choices. • Examples ??
Principles of patient education • Fahad 55 years old blind recently diagnosed type 2 diabetes mellitus, come to the primary care clinic for follow up visit. How you will help fahad to understand and cope with diabetes?
Patient education model • Establish the patient’s knowledge of the problem • Describe the problem • Establish the patient’s attitudes to the problem
Patient education model • Correct any incorrect health beliefs • Supplement the patient’s existing knowledge to a level appropriate to the needs of the patient and the doctor • Facilitation by the use of special charts, diagrams, models.
Patient education model • Explore other preventive opportunities • Reinforce the information • Develop a management plan • immediate • long term • patient participation in decision making
Patient education model • Learning by doing • the right step towards positive action • Good human relationship • patients must accept you as a friend • Leader • patients learn best from the educator whom they respect and regard
conclusion • Practicing the principles of patient education will facilitate the doctor relationship with patients and families and improve patient’s satisfaction, and outcome.