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Health Professions and Public Health: compete or complement

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Professional Experiences. Health Professional: Psychologist, ... public health professionals/state and local. Science and analysis. F ratio and Risk/Odds Ratio ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Health Professions and Public Health: compete or complement


1
Health Professions and Public Health compete
or complement
  • Don Lollar, Ed.D.
  • Senior Research Scientist
  • Centers for Disease Control Prevention
  • National Center on Birth Defects and
    Developmental Disabilities
  • dlollar_at_cdc.gov

2
Professional ExperiencesHealth Professional
Psychologist, Rehabilitation, 25 yearsPublic
HealthCDC, 10 years Health in both titles
does not suggest automatic interplay
3
Commonalities Bridges
  • Health and well-being is goal
  • Environment influences
  • Case definition/diagnosis important
  • Strength-based possibilities
  • Framework for both is ICD/ICF
  • Mortality
  • Morbidity
  • Disability
  • Each can complement the other
  • Use each other as leverage in larger systems
  • Each can inform the other
  • Research coordination

4
Differing points of view contrived, real, or
both
  • Target Individual vs. Population
  • Setting Clinical vs. Community
  • Concepts Rehabilitation vs. Disability
  • Treatment vs. prevention
  • Model Medical vs. Social
  • Is versus requiredor just learned?
  • Research applications could often include both

5
Barriers
  • Mind set
  • Different targetsindividual/population
  • Different settingsclinical/community
  • Different fundingreimbursement/not
  • Different conceptsprevention vs. treatment
  • Political constituencies
  • professional associations/guilds
  • advocates
  • public health professionals/state and local
  • Science and analysis
  • F ratio and Risk/Odds Ratio
  • Methods surveillance and research
  • Resources
  • Third party payers or public funds

6
Translation
  • Health Professions too focused on the individual,
    thereby not caring or knowing about the bigger
    picture
  • But clinical experience asks relevant questions
  • Public Health often uncomfortable with real
    people, content to deal with the population-based
    data and state programs
  • But public health provides aggregate data for
    policy use, financing

7
Observations while moving from Rehab to Public
Health
  • Missionary from rehab/disability to public health
  • Preventing disability is noble acknowledging
    primary prevention failures is crucial for
    public health to evolve beyond morbidity/mortality
  • Case definition/standard framework
  • ICD/DSM
  • Disability does not equal illness
  • Disability status is a demographic variable
  • Toxic can be applied to the environment of
    people with disabling conditionsre-define
  • Different science methods need for psychometric
    emphasis for instruments/tools

8
Diagnosis to Function the real compete
complement
  • Healthcare not health mostly medical
  • Not paid for health, but managing illness
  • Both clinical and public health practice are
    built on disease modeldiagnosis driven
  • Evolution from dx to function also naturally
    evolution--Leaders or followers
  • Diagnosis and function are both important in both
    health care and public health
  • Diagnosis does not predict function

9
Function Foundation for Coordination
  • International Classification of Functioning,
    Disability, and Health (ICF)
  • Approved in 2001 by World Health Assembly
  • Companion to International Statistical
    Classification of Diseases, Injuries (ICD)
  • Foundation for cooperation, coordinated projects,
    by use in practice and public health
  • Function important for treatment planning, but
    also public health assessment, policy
    development, risk adjustment

10
INTERNATIONAL CLASSIFICATION OF FUNCTIONING,
DISABILITY, AND HEALTH (ICF)
  • DESCRIBES HEALTH STATE IN DOMAINS
  • BODY FUNCTION/STRUCTURE
  • Impairments
  • ACTIVITIES/PERSONAL, and
  • Activity Limitations
  • PARTICIPATION/SOCIETAL
  • Societal Restrictions
  • ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS

11
INTERNATIONAL CLASSIFICATION OF FUNCTIONING,
DISABILITY, AND HEALTH (ICF)
  • BODY FUNCTIONS/STRUCTURES
  • PHYSIOLOGICAL and PSYCHOLOGICAL FUNCTIONS
  • e.g. Mental, Sensory, Digestive, Respiratory
  • ACTIVITIES/PARTICIPATION
  • ACTIVITIES/PERSON-ORIENTED
  • Mobility, Communication, Personal care..
  • PARTICIPATION/LIFE SITUATION
  • Work, School, Leisure, Economic, Civic
  • ENVIRONMENT
  • Physical/built, social/attitude, systems/policies

12
ICF UTILITY in DISABILITY and REHABILITATION
  • ALLOWS CLINICAL CODING OF MULTIPLE DIMENSIONS OF
    DISABILITY
  • IMPAIRMENTS
  • PERSONAL ACTIVITY LIMITATIONS
  • RESTRICTIONS IN PARTICIPATION
  • ENVIRONMENTAL BARRIERS
  • EACH DIMENSION IS CODED INDEPENDENTLY CAN BE
    USED ALONE OR IN COMBINATION
  • CROSSES SETTINGSInpatient, Outpatient, Home,
    Community

13
ICF UTILITY in DISABILITY and REHABILITATION
  • Research
  • Craig Velozoactivities tools
  • David Grayparticipation and environmental
    barriers
  • Rune Simeonssonchildren and school participation
    and barriers and facilitators
  • Elena Andresen--caregivers
  • Clinical practice
  • ICF in patient encounters
  • ICF in treatment planning

14
UTILITY OF ICF IN PUBLIC HEALTH
  • SURVEILLANCE
  • National Survey of Children with Special Health
    Care Needs
  • RESEARCH
  • Psychiatric hospital to assess needs and progress
  • PROGRAMS
  • CDC Disability and Health state programs
  • Early intervention assessing family perceptions
    and professional evaluation

15
Functioning of Adolescent with Asperger Disorder
  • Mental Functions
  • b140.2 attention
  • b164.1 higher-level cognitive
  • Sensory Functions Pain
  • b265.2 touch functions
  • Learning Applying Knowledge
  • d160.2 focused attention
  • d165.2 solving problems
  • d177.1 making decisions
  • General Tasks Demands
  • d240.2 handling stress other psychological
    demands
  • Communication
  • d315.1 communicating with receiving nonverbal
    messages
  • d350.2 conversations
  • Interpersonal Interactions Relationships
  • d720.3 complex interpersonal interactions
  • d750.3 informal social relationships
  • Major Life Areas
  • d820.1 school education
  • Community, Social, Civic Life
  • d910.1 community life

16
SLAITS/CSHCN Survey--2005
  • Learning, understanding, or paying attention?
    D155,159,160
  • Speaking, communicating, or being understood?
    D330,350,349
  • With feeling anxious or depressed? b152
  • With behavior problems, such as acting-out,
    fighting, bullying, or arguing? D710, 750
  • Making and keeping friends? D770

17
Healthy People 2010 Vision for Health care and
Public Health
  • Disability and Secondary Conditions
  • GOAL PROMOTE THE HEALTH OF PEOPLE WITH
    DISABILITIES, PREVENT SECONDARY CONDITIONS, AND
    ELIMINATE DISPARITIES BETWEEN PEOPLE WITH AND
    WITHOUT DISABILITIES IN THE UNITED STATES
    POPULATION

18
DISABILITY AND SECONDARY CONDITIONS
  • CHAPTER 6 HAS 13 OBJECTIVES
  • 10 DATA DRIVEN
  • 3 DEVELOPMENTAL DATA CURRENTLY BEING COLLECTED
  • DISABILITY INCLUDED AS A DESCRIPTIVE/DEMOGRAPHIC
    VARIABLE IN 100 OBJECTIVES IN OTHER 27 HEALTH
    CHAPTERSe.g. ORAL HEALTH, PHYSICAL ACTIVITY,
    NUTRITION, INJURY, SMOKING, VIOLENCE

19
ICF BODY FUNCTIONSAND HP 2010
  • HEART DISEASE/STROKE (12) CORONARY HEART DISEASE
    DEATHS,STROKE DEATHS
  • MEDICAL PRODUCT SAFETY (17-3) PROVIDER REVIEW OF
    MEDICATIONS TAKEN BY PATIENTS
  • NUTRITION AND OVERWEIGHT (19) HEALTHY WEIGHT IN
    ADULTS, OBESITY IN ADULTS, OVERWEIGHT OR OBESITY
    IN CHILDREN AND ADOLESCENTS
  • ORAL HEALTH (21) UNTREATED DENTAL DECAY, DENTAL
    CARIES
  • PHYSICAL ACTIVITY (P.A.) (22) NO LEISURE-TIME
    P.A., MODERATE P.A., VIGOROUS PA

20
ICF ACTIVITIES ANDHP 2010
  • DEPRESSION AMONG CHILDREN WITH DISABILITIES 6-2
  • DEPRESSION AMONG ADULTS WITH DISABILITIES 6-3
  • ACTIVITY LIMITATIONSARTHRITIS (2-11), CHRONIC
    LUNG PROBLEMS (24-9)

21
ICF PARTICIPATION AND HP 2010 OBJECTIVES
  • SOCIAL PARTICIPATION OF ADULTS (6-4)
  • EMPLOYMENT PARITY (6-8)
  • INCLUSION OF CHILDREN IN REGULAR EDUCATION
  • HIGH SCHOOL COMPLETION (7-1),
  • OLDER ADULT PARTICIPATION IN COMMUNITY HEALTH
    PROGRAMS (7-12)
  • EMPLOYMENT OF PERSONS WITH SERIOUS MENTAL ILLNESS
    (18-4)
  • SCHOOL OR WORK DAYS LOST, RESPIRATORY DISEASES
    (24-5)

22
ICF ENVIRONMENT AND HP 2010 OBJECTIVES
  • 6-7 CONGREGATE CARE DECREASE
  • 6-10 ACCESSIBILITY OF HEALTH/WELLNESS PROGRAMS
  • 6-11 ASSISTIVE DEVICES AND TECHNOLOGY
  • 6-12 ENVIRONMENTAL BARRIERS AFFECTING
    PARTICIPATION
  • 6-13 DATA SYSTEMS AND PROGRAMS IN STATES

23
ICF ENVIRONMENT AND HP 2010 OBJECTIVES
  • ACCESS TO HEALTH SERVICES 1-1,4,5 HEALTH
    INSURANCE, ONGOING CARE, PRIMARY CARE PROVIDER
  • CANCER 3-11, 12, 13 PAP TESTS, COLORECTAL
    SCREENING, MAMMOGRAMS
  • EDUCATION/COMMUNITY-BASED PROGRMS 7-6 EMPLOYER
    SPONSORED HEALTH PROMOTION ACTIVITIES

24
Barriers to ScreeningIndividual and Population
  • Difficulty with positioning
  • Inaccessible facilities and equipment
  • Provider attitudes
  • Manufacturers and where distributed

25
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26
HP2010 CHAPTER 6 NEW FREEDOM INITIATIVE
  • HP2010 CHAPTER 6 IS THE CLEAREST WAY TO
    OPERATIONALIZE THE GOALS OF THE NEW FREEDOM
    INITIATIVE
  • SPECIFIC OBJECTIVES ADDRESS
  • REDUCTION IN CONGREGATE CARE
  • REMOVING ENVIRONMENTAL BARRIERS
  • INCREASING COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION
  • IMPROVING EMOTIONAL SUPPORT FOR PEOPLE WITH
    DISABILITIES CAREGIVERS
  • INCLUDING CHILDREN, ADOLESCENTS, ADULTS

27
DIRECTIONS
  • Global perspective greater continuity
  • Individual and population based emphasis on
    health promotion and prevention of secondary
    conditions CARF Credential
  • Disability and public health courses, integrating
    disability concepts, methods, examples, into
    curriculum
  • OHSU
  • Boston U

28
Competition, Communication, Cooperation,
Coordination
  • Competitionone side wins if not each battle,
    certainly the war (for funds, emphasis.)
  • Communicationlets talk about similarities and
    differences in what we do, and how we see our
    professional worlds
  • Cooperationmaybe, lets look at how we might
    work together on a project(s)
  • Coordinationlets see how our visions for future
    work can fit together
  • Not immersion, Coordination

29
Health Professions and Public Health combined
make each stronger
  • With whom can you work to communicate,
    cooperate, and collaborate?
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