Course: NCM 110
Exam: Midterm - Week 1
Everlasting Father, thank you for your plans.
Acknowledgment of college as part of God's plan.
Prayer for guidance in future endeavors.
At the end of a 2-hour interactive lecture:
Discuss health statistics, indicators, and implications.
Discuss principles and steps of epidemiology.
Calculate epidemiological measures for assessing community health.
Identify patterns and distribution of disease.
Describe epidemiology of communicable diseases and transmission factors.
Explain the role of an epidemiology nurse.
Purpose: Tools and health indicators for assessing community health.
Focus Areas:
Health indicators in the Philippine situation.
Epidemiology fundamentals.
Breakdown of the word:
Epi (upon) + demos (people) + logos (study).
Definition: Study of distribution and determinants of health-related events in populations for prevention and control.
Prevention and Control of disease.
Monitoring and Evaluation of health interventions.
Evidence Provision for policy formulation.
Assessment of community health status.
Elucidation of disease natural history.
Causation Determination of diseases.
Demography: Study of human population size, composition, and distribution.
Health Indicators: Metrics such as fertility, morbidity, prevalence, and mortality rates.
Definition: Study of vital events (births, deaths, marriages).
Importance: Indicates community health and success of health initiatives.
Components:
Individual records
Population records
Population indicators
RA 10625: Philippine Statistical Act of 2013 for registration of births/deaths.
PD 651: Birth registration law requires registration within 30 days.
Rates: Relationship between a vital event and exposed population.
Ratios: Describes the relationship between two numerical quantities without regard to time/place.
Fertility Rates, Mortality Rates, and Morbidity Rates defined further in detail.
Crude Birth Rate (CBR):
Formula: CBR = (Total live births/Estimated population) x 1,000
General Fertility Rate (GFR):
Formula: GFR = (Number of live births/Midyear population of women aged 15-49) x 1,000
Crude Death Rate (CDR):
Formula: CDR = (Total deaths/Estimated population) x 1,000
Specific Death Rate (SDR):
Formula: SDR = (Deaths in specified group/Midyear population) x 1,000
Infant Mortality Rate (IMR):
Formula: IMR = (Total deaths under 1 year/Total live births) x 1,000
Maternal Mortality Rate (MMR):
Formula: MMR = (Deaths from maternal causes/Total live births) x 1,000
Roles of the epidemiology nurse:
Renders nursing care and supervises others.
Teaches health measures and prevention strategies.
Follows up on cases and community education campaigns.
Sporadic: Rare, infrequent disease.
Endemic: Constant presence in an area.
Epidemic: Sudden increase above normal.
Pandemic: Widespread across several countries.
Steps to investigate outbreaks:
Establish presence of the epidemic.
Establish time and space relationships of the disease.
Correlate data obtained during the investigation.
Epidemiological Triangle:
Host, Agent, Environment interaction.
Iceberg Principle: Highlights hidden disease prevalence.
Web of Causation: Relationship of multiple factors contributing to disease.
Key components:
Pathogenous agents, portals of entry and exit, modes of transmission, susceptible hosts.
Importance of preventing disease transmission through sanitation, precautions, and education.
Support for families:
Health education, ensure access to medical care, isolation/quarantine teaching.
Social support referrals and communication with health authorities.
Knowledge of local health statistics and preventive practices.
Definition: Assurance against harm from food preparation.
Objectives of the Food Safety Act of 2013.
Recap of major health statistics and epidemiology concepts to be understood for midterm exam preparation.