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Situational Analysis of Global Health. Major determinants of healthPoverty and inequalityInadequate primary health care systemsOther factorsChanging global environment, migration ID pandemics, transition/chronic diseasesMilitarism (wars and oppression)Different geographical mixes .butmost
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1. Determinants of health and the evolution of Primary Health Care by
Steve Gloyd
HServ/Epi 531
2007
2. Situational Analysis of Global Health Major determinants of health
Poverty and inequality
Inadequate primary health care systems
Other factors
Changing global environment, migration
ID pandemics, transition/chronic diseases
Militarism (wars and oppression)
Different geographical mixes ….but
most consequences ultimately fall on the poor
Overwhelming poverty in the midst of the greatest accumulation of wealth in history. Gap between richest/poorest was 3/1 in 1900, now well over 100/1.
Health care for the poor –(and education) - in many countries is worse that it was 30 years ago
Overwhelming poverty in the midst of the greatest accumulation of wealth in history. Gap between richest/poorest was 3/1 in 1900, now well over 100/1.
Health care for the poor –(and education) - in many countries is worse that it was 30 years ago
3. Death & Illness 2005 11 million children under five die each year from preventable causes
In many African countries, 20% of children do not reach age five
In 16 countries, more are dying now than 15 years ago
500,000 women die each year in childbirth
3m adults die from AIDS, 2m Tb
4. Under-5 mortality 2004
5. Mortality rates - 2006
8. Severe malaria occurs mostly in Africa
9. HIV prevalence is very high in Sub-Saharan Africa
10. The Disability Adjusted Life Year or DALY is a health gap measure that extends the concept of potential years of life lost due to premature death (PYLL) to include equivalent years of ‘healthy’ life lost by virtue of being in states of poor health or disability (1). The DALY combines in one measure the time lived with disability and the time lost due to premature mortality. One DALY can be thought of as one lost year of ‘healthy’ life and the burden of disease as a measurement of the gap between current health status and an ideal situation where everyone lives into old age free of disease and disability.
DALYs for a disease or health condition are calculated as the sum of the years of life lost due to premature mortality (YLL) in the population and the years lost due to disability (YLD) for incident cases of the health condition:
The years of life lost (YLL) basically correspond to the number of deaths multiplied by the standard life expectancy at the age at which death occurs. The basic formula for YLL (without yet including other social preferences discussed below), is the following for a given cause, age and sex: The Disability Adjusted Life Year or DALY is a health gap measure that extends the concept of potential years of life lost due to premature death (PYLL) to include equivalent years of ‘healthy’ life lost by virtue of being in states of poor health or disability (1). The DALY combines in one measure the time lived with disability and the time lost due to premature mortality. One DALY can be thought of as one lost year of ‘healthy’ life and the burden of disease as a measurement of the gap between current health status and an ideal situation where everyone lives into old age free of disease and disability.
DALYs for a disease or health condition are calculated as the sum of the years of life lost due to premature mortality (YLL) in the population and the years lost due to disability (YLD) for incident cases of the health condition:
The years of life lost (YLL) basically correspond to the number of deaths multiplied by the standard life expectancy at the age at which death occurs. The basic formula for YLL (without yet including other social preferences discussed below), is the following for a given cause, age and sex:
13. What are the principal factors associated with high mortality? Education
Nutrition
Family income
Water, Sanitation
Health Care
Inequality
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Common denominator:
Poverty and Disparity
14. How important is parental education? Greater than income and access to health services combined
Accounts for most of the rural/urban, family size mortality associations
Maternal is more important than paternal education
Primary to secondary is more important than literacy to primary
Maternal education overrides the effect of decreased nursing, earlier weaning
16. Educated mothers’ children are healthier
18. Gender equalitythe role of women and child survival women are the keys to the health of their children
women’s reproductive health is important to subsequent child health
women’s education is the most important factor affecting overall health in developing countries
gender equality means improving conditions and status of women for themselves
21. Progress in Nutrition
22. Distribution of family income < $2/day
23. Impact of family assets (income)
25. BBC News Headline, Sept 28 2006 “Dirty water 'kills 1.5m children'
28. Medicine does make a difference
29. But, over 5m people worldwide are dying without access to AIDS, TB, malaria treatmentBut, over 5m people worldwide are dying without access to AIDS, TB, malaria treatment
30. Inequality
37. Overview of Mortality and Morbidity Non-homogeneous (regions of 3w, urban-rural, rich-poor, male-female)
Most deaths in children
Aggregate data obscures extreme differences
Tropical vs. “tropicalized” diseases
Analogy with MRs in Europe, USA: 1850-1900, except…
Industrialization era used cheap raw materials from colonies
Debt & AIDS
38. The big picture – determinants of global health
39. How to improve child survival? Reduce poverty (improve family income)
Improve education (especially girls)
Improve nutrition, water, sanitation, housing
Improve gender equality
Improve access to quality health care
Preventive and curative – common diseases
AIDS treatment
40. Kerala and Sri Lanka – Equity oriented strategies Education - Universal and compulsory primary education
Sri Lanka 1950
Kerala 1959
Land Reform
Kerala Land Reform Act 1959 (50% got land)
Sri Lanka Land Resettlement Program (1940’s)
Housing, Water, Sanitation (targeted for poor)
Major projects in both countries, 1950-1970
Simple health services
Developed in both countries
Common Denominator –
all require government intervention
41. Kerala, Sri Lanka, and India: Changes in infant mortality(per 1000 live births)
42. Equity strategies and rapid growth Asian tigers 1945-1980
Taiwan, S.Korea, Singapore, Hong Kong
Huge growth (7-10%), mortality reductions (8-10%)
Protectionism, land reform, literacy campaigns, social net, good markets
Newer Asian economies 1960 – 1990
Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia
Less growth (4-5%) less mortality reduction (2.5-5%)
Female literacy - 80-92%
Africa growth countries 1961-87
Botswana, Cameroon, Congo, Lesotho, Gabon, Kenya
No relationship of U5MR reductions with growth
Mixed literacy levels
44. Policy Evolution Vertical Programs: 1910 - 1960 (1977)
Malaria, yellow fever, yaws, small pox, (polio)
Era of optimism: 1960’s and 70’s
Independence, decolonization
Disillusion with clinical, vertical approaches
China, Cuba social revolutions
Kerala, Sri Lanka equity strategies
Experiments in Africa
45. Success stories create optimism Health for All 2000 (1975)
Primary Health Care (Alma Ata-1978)
Millennium Development Goals 2000
46. Declaration of Alma-Ata (1978) Health is a fundamental human right & requires inter-sectoral action
Existing gross health inequality unacceptable
Improved health and peace require economic and social development based on a new international economic order (NIEO)
Governments have responsibility to provide adequate health and social measures for health
Primary health care is appropriate, accessible, acceptable, affordable and requires community participation (Specifies components of PHC)
Governments need the will to formulate and implement PHC policies
International cooperation is necessary
HFA 2000 requires redirecting resources from military to social expenditures (including health)
47. “Essential components” of Primary Health Care Health education
Environmental sanitation, especially food and water
The employment of community or village health workers
Maternal and child health programs, including immunization and family planning
Prevention of local endemic diseases
Appropriate treatment of common diseases and injuries
Provision of essential drugs
Promotion of nutrition
Traditional medicine
51. Why did PHC fail to take off? Inadequate national political commitment (and resource allocation) to overall goals of Alma-Ata
Tertiary-primary care, private-public, urban-rural, doctor-nurse
Western (US) resistance to social change governments (cold war excuse)
Debt and structural adjustment programs – reduction of overall budgets
Child survival programs “adjustment with a human face”
54. Global Distribution of Health Workers in Selected Countries
57. Private sector health organizations - Pakistan
58. Private hospital
59. Poorly maintained and equipped health facilities
61. Millennium Development GoalsUnited Nations 2000 Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger
Achieve universal primary education
Promote gender equality and empower women
Reduce child mortality
Improve maternal health
Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria, other diseases
Ensure environmental sustainability
Develop a global partnership
Poor achievement in sub-Saharan Africa
62. Poverty reduction – some progress, but not in Africa
63. Primary education progress everywhere except Africa
64. Gender equality in education is improving – except Africa
65. Africa lags behind in mortality reduction
67. Why is Africa* lagging behind? Debt, structural adjustment programs (SAPs), and crumbling public infrastructure
Forms of foreign assistance
War and militarism