A BRIEF HISTORY OF PUBLIC HEALTH Because, well, death…. “To promote health and quality of life by preventing and controlling disease, injury, and disability.” —CDC.
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Transcript A BRIEF HISTORY OF PUBLIC HEALTH Because, well, death…. “To promote health and quality of life by preventing and controlling disease, injury, and disability.” —CDC.
A BRIEF HISTORY
OF PUBLIC HEALTH
Because, well, death….
“To promote health and quality of life by
preventing and controlling disease, injury,
and disability.”
—CDC Mission Statement
Define public health.
Describe conditions that existed before the advent
of modern public health.
Describe the role of the CDC.
Requirements for Survival
Care
Shelter
Food
Water
Air
Tribal Rules
Hieroglyphs
Chinese Empire
Bible (Leviticus)
Koran
Roman Senate
Salus populi: suprema lex esta
Ancient Greece
Roman Empire
Middle Ages
Birth of Modern Medicine
“Great Sanitary Awakening”
Modern Public Health
Personal hygiene
Physical fitness
Olympics
Naturalistic concept
Disease caused by
imbalance between man
and his environment
Hippocrates
Father of Western medicine
Causal relationships
Disease and climate, water, lifestyle,
and nutrition
Coined the term epidemic
Epis (“on” or “akin to”)
Demos (“people”)
Adopted Greek
health values
Great engineers
Sewage systems
Aqueducts
Administration
Public baths
Water supply
Markets
Le Pont du Gard
Shift away from Greek and
Roman values
Physical body less important
than spiritual self
Decline of hygiene and
sanitation
Beginnings of PH tools
Quarantine of ships
Isolation of diseased individuals
Death of
25% to 50%
of population
Disease, spread by
traders and explorers
Killed 90% of
indigenous people in
New World
Birth of Modern Medicine
William Harvey
1628 theories of circulation
Edward Jenner
1796 cowpox experiment
Coined the term vaccine (vacca,
Latin for “cow”)
Growth in scientific knowledge
Humanitarian ideals
Connection between poverty
and disease
Water supply and sewage
removal
Monitor community health
status
Made under the direction of
W. De F. Day, M.D., Sanitary Superintendent, NYC Health Dept.
www.ihm.nlm.nih.gov
Louis Pasteur
1862 germs caused many diseases
1888 first public health lab
Robert Koch
1822-1895
1883 identified the vibrio (water bacteria)
that causes cholera, 20 years after Snow’s
discovery
Discovered the tuberculosis bacterium
1843-1910
England
1842 Edwin Chadwick’s “Survey
into the Sanitary Condition of
the Labouring Classes in Great
Britain”
Landmark research
Graphic descriptions of filth and
disease spread in urban areas
1848 General Board of Health
1800-1890
U.S.
1850 Lemuel Shattuck’s
“Report of the Sanitary
Commission of
Massachusetts”
1869 State Board of Health
1793-1859
“The landmarks of political, economic and social
history are the moments when some condition
passed from the category of the given into the
category of the intolerable…The history of public
health might well be written as a record of
successive redefinings of the unacceptable.”
- Geoffrey Vickers, Secretary, Medical Research Council, Great Britain, 1958
In the next 5 minutes:
Brainstorm and record a list of
“things” affecting the public’s health
that have passed from tolerable
(accepted) to intolerable
(unaccepted).
Include items that you wish would
become unacceptable.
Clean water; water treatment
Food inspection
Soaps, disinfectants, and pharmaceuticals
Personal hygiene (bathing)
Public works departments; garbage collection,
landfills, and street cleaning
Public health departments and regulation
U.S. Mortality Rate: 1900-2001
Vaccination.
2.
Motor-vehicle safety.
3.
Safer workplaces.
4.
Control of infectious diseases.
5.
Decline in deaths from coronary heart disease and stroke.
6.
Safer and healthier foods.
CDC, Morbidity and Mortality
7.
Healthier mothers and babies.
Weekly Report, December 24, 1999
/ 48(50); 1141.
8.
Family planning.
Available at:
9.
Fluoridation of drinking water.
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/
mmwrhtml/mm4850bx.htm
10. Recognition of tobacco use as a health hazard.
1.
Tobacco
Diet/Activity
Alcohol
Microbial agents
Toxic Agents
Firearms
Sexual Behavior
Motor Vehicles
Illicit Drug Use
19%
14%
5%
4%
3%
2%
1%
1%
<1%
McGinnis & Foege, JAMA, 1993
Tobacco
Diet/Activity
Policies and Interventions
Behavior
Physical
Environment
Individual
Biology
Access to Quality Health Care
Source: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Health People 2010
Social
Environment
Population (in millions)
2010
1850
Year
Health Protection…
Health Equity
To promote health and quality of life
by preventing and controlling disease,
injury, and disability
Health Protection Goals
Healthy People in
Every Stage of Life
Healthy People in
Healthy Places
People Prepared for
Emerging Health Threats
Healthy People in a
Healthy World
Goals and Strategic Subgoals
Healthy People
During Every Stage
of Life
Infants &
Toddlers
Children
Adolescents
Adults
Older Adults
Healthy People in
Healthy Places
Workplace
Communities
Homes
Travel &
Recreation
Healthcare
Settings
Schools
Institutions
People Prepared for
Healthy People in a
Emerging Health
Healthy World
Threats
Prevent
Detect & Report
Investigate
Control
Recover
Improve
Health Promotion
Health Protection
Health Diplomacy
Health Protection: Urgent Challenges
World
Trade
Center
Sept
2001
Space
Shuttle
Hurricane
Isabel
Columbia
Disaster
Sept 03
Feb 03
West
Influenza
Nile
Sept 03
Virus
Aug-Nov
SARS
02
Mar-Aug 03
Anthrax
Attacks
Oct-Nov 01
Monkey
Pox
RNC
2004
California
Wildfires
Northeast
Blackout
Aug 03
G8
Summit
Oct-Nov 03
June 04
Ricin
Tularemia
Anthrax
Oct-Nov 03
June-Aug 03
Aug 04
BSE
Dec 03
Guam
Typhoon
Feb 04
Avian
Influenza
Jan-Mar 04
DNC
2004
July 04
2004
Summer
Olympics
June 04
Ricin
Domestic
Response
Feb 04
Tsunami
Dec 04
West
Nile Virus
Aug-Nov 04
Hurricanes
(Charley,
Frances,
Ivan, Jean)
Aug-Oct 04
Hurricane
Katrina
Aug. 05
Hurricane
Wilma
E.Coli
Nov 06
Oct 04
Influenza
Vaccine
Shortage
Hurricane
Isabel
Sept 03
Hurricane
Rita
Sept. 05
Climate
Change
Oct 04
Marburg
Virus
Mar 05
TB
May ‘07