Ch 2 - Foundations of U.S. Health Care Delivery Flashcards

1
Q

Health

A

Absence of illness and disease

Optimum health exists when:
A person is free of symptoms.
A person does not require medical treatment.

“ A state of physical and mental well-being that facilitates the achievements of individual and societal goals.” —Society for Academic Medicine

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2
Q

WHO Health

A

“A complete state of physical, mental and social well being, not merely the absence of disease.” —WHO

Referred to as the biopsychosocial model of health

WHO defined a health care system as all the activities whose primary purpose is to promote, restore, or maintain health.

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3
Q

Illness vs Disease

A

Illness
Identified by a person’s perception and evaluation of how he/she is feeling

People are ill when they infer a diminished capacity to perform tasks and roles expected by society.

Disease
Based on a professional evaluation
Requires therapeutic intervention

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4
Q

Holistic Health

A

Treats the whole person

Incorporates alternative therapies

Has physical, mental, social, and spiritual aspects

Literature shows that:
Religious and spiritual belief has a positive impact on overall well-being.
It affects the incidence, experience, and outcomes of common medical problems.

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5
Q

Disease Classification

A

Acute
Relatively severe
Episodic (of short duration)
Often treatable (i.e., myocardial infarct, lack of kidney function)

Subacute
Some acute features
Postacute treatment after discharge (i.e., head trauma, ventilator)

Chronic
Less severe but long and continuous
Can be controlled but can lead to serious complications (i.e., asthma, diabetes, hypertension)

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6
Q

Quality of Life

A

Overall satisfaction with life during and following a person’s encounter with the health care delivery system

An indicator of how satisfied a person was with the experiences while receiving health care

Comfort, respect, privacy, security, autonomy

A person’s overall satisfaction with life and self-perceptions of health, especially after a medical intervention

Goal: To have a positive effect on an individual’s ability to function, meet obligations, feel self-worth

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7
Q

Determinants of Health

A

Environment- Physical, social, cultural, and economic factors

Behavior/Lifestyle -Diet and foods play a major role in most significant health problems.

Heredity -Predisposes individuals to certain diseases. Current lifestyles can impact future progeny.

Medical care - Access to adequate preventive and curative health care services

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8
Q

Healthy People 2020

A

10-year plans
Key national health objectives
Founded on the integration of medical care and prevention, health promotion, and education

Goals:
Attaining high-quality, longer lives free of preventable disease, injury, and premature death

Achieving health equity, eliminating disparities, and improving the health of all groups

Creating social and physical environments that promote good health for all

Promoting quality of life, healthy development, and health behaviors across all life stages

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9
Q

Social and Market Justice Approaches

A

The production, distribution, and consumption of health care must be perceived as equitable.

No society has a perfectly equitable method to distribute limited resources.

Any method of resource distribution leaves some inequalities.

A theory of justice is needed to resolve the allocation of health care.

Equitable access to health services is addressed by the theories of market and social justice.

These two contrasting theories govern the production and distribution of health care services.

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10
Q

Market Justice

A

“Economic Good”

Fair distribution of health care to the market forces in a free economy

Medical services distributed on the basis of people’s willingness and ability to pay

Health care is an economic good governed by free market forces.

Individuals are responsible for their own achievements.

People make rational choices in their decision to buy health care products and services

People consult with their physicians, who know what is best for them.

The market works best without interference from government.

The production of health care is determined by how much the consumers are willing and able to buy at the prevailing price.

Those not able to pay have barriers to health care: “Rationing by ability to pay.”

Focus on individual rather than a collective responsibility for health

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11
Q

Social Justice

A

“The Good Society”
Theory is at odds with capitalism and market justice.
The equitable distribution of health care is society’s responsibility.
Best when a central agency is responsible for the production and distribution of health care

Health care is a social good.
Should be collectively financed and available to every citizen

Health care should be based on need rather than cost.

There is a shared responsibility for health.
Factors outside a person’s control might have brought on the condition.

There is an obligation to the collective good. The well-being of the community is superior to that of the individual.

Government, rather than the market, can better decide, through planning, how much health care to provide and how to distribute among all citizens.

Planned rationing, supply-side rationing, or nonprice rationing is where government limits the supply of health care services, particularly those beyond the basic level of care.

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12
Q

Limitations of Market Justice

A

Fails to rectify human concerns, such as crime, illiteracy, and homelessness, which can significantly weaken the fabric of a society

Does not always protect the society
Individual health issues can have negative consequences for society

Does not work well in health care delivery

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13
Q

Focusing on Determinants

A

To improve the nation’s health and resolve To improve the nation’s health and resolve disparities, it is critical to address both the social and medical determinants of health.

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14
Q

Social Determinants of Health

A

The framework includes demographics, personal behaviors, and community-level inequalities and their defining influence on health.

Personal demographics (e.g., race/ethnicity or age) directly contribute to vulnerability levels.

Social and income inequalities have shown to contribute to disparities in health.

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15
Q

Medical Determinants of Health

A

The medical care system focuses primarily on treating illness or poor health.

This framework includes a broad spectrum of medical care services and interventions to improve health through preventive and primary care and through contributions to the general health status.

Others are more influential in end-of-life mortality (specialty and long-term care).

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16
Q

Social or Public Policy Interventions

A

Policy interventions are social or public policy initiatives which affect the health of the population.
Guards the welfare of the nation
Vulnerable populations are uniquely dependent upon social and public policy to develop and implement programs that address basic nutritional, safety, social, and health care needs.
Policy initiatives can be prevention strategies to alter the dynamics linking social factors to poor health.

17
Q

Community Based Interventions

A

Many health disparities may be addressed at the community or local levels.

Neighborhood poverty, the presence of local health and social welfare resources, and societal cohesion and support contribute to the level of inequalities in a community.

Community partnerships:
Reflect the priorities of a local population
Are often managed by members of the community
Minimize cultural barriers
Improve community buy-in to the program
Mobilize resources at the local level to address problems

Community resources can be applied directly to community members.

Businesses have greater incentive to contribute to local health causes.

Community solutions benefit from participatory decision-making.

18
Q

Health Care Interventions

A

Designed to:
Improve the quality and efficiency of services provided

Reduce disparities across groups

Examples include:
Integrated electronic medical record systems to coordinate care for populations with multiple chronic and acute conditions

Continuing education for pediatricians to target developmental services to children

Educating pregnant mothers to receive regular prenatal care

19
Q

Individual Interventions

A

Attempts to intervene and minimize the effects of negative social determinants on health status

Altering behaviors that influence health is often the focus of these individual-level interventions (e.g., reduce smoking and encourage exercise).