Global health Issue

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Global Health 101 Second Edition

Chapter Two

Health Determinants, Measurements, and Trends

The Importance of Measuring Health Status

In order to address global health issues, we must understand:

The factors that influence health status most

The indicators used to measure health status

The key trends that have occurred historically

Determinants of Health

The interconnected factors that determine an individual’s health status

Determinants include personal features, social status, culture, environment, educational attainment, health behaviors, childhood development, access to care, and government policy

Increasing attention is being paid to the “social determinants of health”

Key Determinants of Health

Levels of racism: A theoretic Framework and a Gardner’s Tale

Camara Phyllis Jones MD, MPH, PhD

Research Director on Social Determinants of Health and Equity, CDC

Allegory

3 Levels of Racism

Institutionalized

Personally Mediated

Internalized

“..Discrimination is a hellhound that gnaws at Negroes in every waking moment of their lives declaring that the lie of their inferiority is accepted as the truth in the society dominating them.”

Martin Luther King, Jr. [1967]

Key Health Indicators

Health status indicators are useful for:

Finding which diseases people suffer from

Determining the extent to which the disease causes death or disability

Practicing disease surveillance

To perform these functions, it is important to use a consistent set of indicators

Racial Disparities in Health

African Americans have higher death rates than Whites for 12 of the 15 leading causes of death.

Blacks and American Indians have higher age-specific death rates than Whites from birth through the retirement years.

Minorities get sick sooner, have more severe illness and die sooner than Whites

Hispanics have higher death rates than whites for diabetes, hypertension, liver cirrhosis & homicide

(CDC, 2015)

Key Health Status Indicators

Life Expectancy, 1950-2006

Percentage of Persons in Poverty Race/Ethnicity (US Census, 2010)

Relative Risk of Premature Death by Family Income (U.S.) 9-year mortality data from the National Longitudinal Mortality Survey

Infant Mortality by Mother’s Education (CDC, 2015)

Unnatural causes

Life Expectancy at Birth, by World Bank Region, 2008

Infant Mortality Rate

Key Health Indicators

Terms

Morbidity- sickness or any departure, subjective or objective, from a psychological or physiological state of well-being

Mortality- death

Disability- temporary or long-term reduction in a person’s capacity to function

Prevalence- number of people suffering from a certain health condition over a specified time period

Incidence- the rate at which new cases of a disease occur in a population

Key Health Indicators

Classifications of Disease

Communicable disease- illnesses caused by a particular infectious agent that spread directly or indirectly from people to people, animals to people, or people to animals

Noncommunicable disease- illnesses not spread by an infectious agent

Injury- include road traffic injuries, falls, self-inflicted injuries, and violence, among other things

Vital Registration

Vital registration systems record births, deaths, and causes of death

An accurate system is key to having quality data on a population

Many low- and middle-income countries lack a vital registration system

Developing a system is progress towards understanding and addressing health problems

Measuring the Burden of Disease

Twp indicators used to compare how far countries are from a state of good health

Health-Adjusted Life Expectancy (HALE)- summarizes expected number of years to be lived in what might be termed the equivalent of good health

Disability-Adjusted Life Year (DALY)- a unit for measuring the amount of health lost because of a particular disease or injury

The 10 Leading Causes of Death and DALYs

The Global Burden of Disease

Causes of Death by Region

Higher income countries tend to have a greater burden of noncommunicable disease

Lower income countries to have a greater burden of communicable disease

Africa and South Asia are set apart by their large burdens of communicable disease

The Leading Causes of the Burden of Disease

The Global Burden of Disease

Causes of Death by Age

Children in low- and middle-income countries often die of communicable disease

HIV/AIDS and TB are among the leading causes of death among adults in low- and middle-income countries

The 10 Leading Causes of Death in Children Ages 0-14, by Broad Income Group, 2001

The Global Burden of Disease

The Burden of Deaths and Disease Within Countries

In most low- and middle-income countries:

Rural people will be less healthy

Disadvantaged ethnic minorities will be less healthy

Women will suffer from their weak social positions

Poor people will be less healthy

Uneducated people will be less healthy

Risk Factors

Risk factor- an aspect or personal behavior or life-style, an environmental exposure, or an inborn or inherited characteristic, that, on the basis of epidemiological evidence, is known to be associated with health-related conditions considered important to prevent

Most important risk factors in low- and middle-income countries are malnutrition, high blood pressure and high cholesterol, smoking, and unsafe sex

The Leading Risk Factors for the Burden of Disease, 2001, Low- and Middle-Income and High-Income Countries, Ranked in Order of Percent of Total DALY

Demography and Health

Population Growth

Majority of population growth will occur in low- and middle-income countries

Put pressure on the environment

Create need for more infrastructure and services

Demography and Health

Population Aging

Population of the world is aging

Implications for burden of disease because people will be living longer with morbidities and disabilities

Healthcare financing will be affected by change in ratio of working people to those over 65 years

Demography and Health

Urbanization

Majority of the world’s population lives in urban areas for the first time

Enormous pressure on urban infrastructure like water and sanitation

Demography and Health

The Demographic Divide

Highest income countries: low fertility, declining populations, aging populations

Lowest income countries: relatively high fertility, growing populations

Demography and Health

The Demographic Transition

Shift from pattern of high fertility and high mortality to low fertility and low mortality

Mortality declines due to better hygiene and nutrition

Population grows with younger share of population increasing

Fertility declines

Population growth slows and older share of population increases

Demography and Health

The Epidemiologic Transition

Shift from burden of disease dominated by communicable disease to burden of disease dominated by noncommunicable disease

Most low-income countries are in ongoing transition so they face large burdens of communicable and noncommunicable disease

Progress in Health Status

Improvements in raising life expectancy and improving health not uniform across countries

Life expectancy in South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa lag that in other regions

Life expectancy in Europe and Central Asia changed little due to break-up of Soviet Union

Life expectancy in East Asia has increased dramatically due to rapid economic growth

Looking Forward

Projecting the Burden of Disease

Substantial changes from 2004 to 2030

Low- and lower-middle-income countries will shift away from communicable disease

Causes associated with aging will increase in importance

Mental health issues will increase in importance

Looking Forward

Political Stability

Necessary for long-term gains in health

Instability causes illness, disability and death as well as breakdown of infrastructure and services

Looking Forward

Political Stability

Necessary for long-term gains in health

Instability causes illness, disability and death as well as breakdown of infrastructure and services

Looking Forward

Climate Change

Impact not entirely clear

Possible migration from places that become inhabitable

Adverse weather

Possible change in populations of disease vectors

Looking Forward

Scientific and Technological Change

Development of vaccines, drugs, and diagnostics

Country’s ability to adopt these changes will determine their effect on health

Looking Forward

Economic Development

Economies of low-income countries need to grow in order to invest in health

Impact of economic development will depend on countries investing in areas that improve health such as water, sanitation, and education

40

60

80

Life Expectancy

1950196019701980199020002006

White

Black

9.3

25.3

26.6

16.1

10.7

21.5

16.8

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

WhiteBlackAmI/ANNH/PIAsianHisp.

Any

2+ races

Race

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

3.0

3.5

4.0

<10K10-19K20-29K30-39K40-49K50-99K100+K

9.9

6.5

5.1

4.2

17.3

14.8

12.3

11.4

6

5.9

5.4

4.4

5.7

5.5

5.1

4

12.7

7.9

5.7

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

18

20

<121213-1516+

Years of Education

Infant Mortality

NH WhiteBlackHispanicAPIAmI/AN