HW215: Models of Health & Wellness Unit 7: Health and Wellness Models Geo-political Influences.
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HW215: Models of Health & Wellness
Unit 7: Health and Wellness Models Geo-political Influences
Agenda for the Unit 7 Seminar
Unit 7 Learning Objectives
Discussion of the Importance of the Efficacy of Screening
Unit 7 Discussion Questions
Unit 7 Learning Objectives
Recognize the effects of geography on health outcomes.
Recognize the power politics holds on distribution of health resources which in turn affects health outcomes.
Describe geo-political design components. Evaluate the impact of eHealth and the use of
advanced technology related to geography on health and wellness models.
Identify design components for incorporation into a geo-political model of health and wellness.
A Closer Look at Breast Cancer Screening . . . . Why? Recognize the power politics holds on
distribution of health resources which in turn affects health outcomes (Unit 7 Learning Outcome)
Evaluate Health and Wellness Information(US Preventive Services Task Force & American Cancer Society)
What is the Issue?
2002 Recommendations:- A “B” Recommendation for screening mammography
for women 40 years or older.
2009 Recommendations:- A “C” Recommendation for screening mammography
for women 40 years or older.
B=Recommended Routinely
C=Not Recommended RoutinelyAgency for Health Care Research and Quality.U.S. Preventive Services Task Force – About USPTF (n.d). Retrieved electronically on 4/7/10 from http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/uspstfab.htm
U.S. Preventive Services Task Force
U.S. Preventive Services Task Force
“The mission of the USPSTF is to evaluate the benefits of individual services based on age, gender, and risk factors for disease; make recommendations about which preventive services should be incorporated routinely into primary medical care and for which populations; and identify a research agenda for clinical preventive care.”
“Public Law Section 915 mandates that AHRQ convene the USPSTF to conduct scientific evidence reviews of a broad array of clinical preventive services, develop recommendations for the health care community, and provide ongoing administrative, research, technical, and dissemination support.”
Agency for Health Care Research and Quality.U.S. Preventive Services Task Force – About USPTF (n.d). Retrieved electronically on 4/7/10 from http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/uspstfab.htm
Why the Change?
“The precise age at which the benefits from screening mammography justify the potential harms is a subjective judgment and should take into account patient preferences.”
Benefits vs. Risks Beneficence, Non-Malfeasance
Reduced chance of dying vs. false positives, unnecessary biopsies
U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (2009). Screening for breast cancer: U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommendation statement. Annals of Internal Medicine. 151(10):716-726.
Ann Intern Med 2009;151:716-726
©2009 by American College of Physicians
American Cancer Society
“With its new recommendations, the USPSTF is essentially telling women that mammography at age 40 to 49 saves lives; just not enough of them. The task force says screening women in their 40s would reduce their risk of death from breast cancer by 15 percent, just as it does for women in their 50s. But because women in their 40s are at lower risk of the disease than women 50 and above, the USPSTF says the actual number of lives saved is not enough to recommend widespread screening. The most recent data show us that approximately 17 percent of breast cancer deaths occurred in women who were diagnosed in their 40s, and 22 percent occurred in women diagnosed in their 50s. Breast cancer is a serious health problem facing adult women, and mammography is part of our solution beginning at age 40 for average risk women.”
American Cancer Society. American Cancer Society Responds to Changes to USPSTF Mammography Guidelines (11/16/2009). Retrieved electronically on 4/7/10 from http://www.cancer.org/docroot/MED/content/MED_2_1x_American_Cancer_Society_Responds_to_Changes_to_USPSTF_Mammography_Guidelines.asp
Efficacy of a Screen?
Validity – Is the test accurate?
Reliability – Will the test produce the same result when repeated?
Validity of a Screen
Sensitivity – false negatives - the extent to which those with the disease will be told they don’t have the disease.
Specificity – false positives – the extent to which those without the disease will be told they do have the disease.
Unit 7 Seminar: Question #1
What are the benefits and negative consequences of using Web-based information for health and wellness education, medical diagnoses and treatment on the design of health and wellness models?
Evaluating Health Web Sites
Accuracy
Authority
Bias/Objectivity
Currency/Timeliness
CoverageNational Network of Libraries of Medicine. Evaluating Health Web Sites (n.d.).Retrieved electronically on 4/6/2010 fromhttps://nnlm.gov/outreach/consumer/evalsite.html
Unit 7 Seminar: Question #2
What key advancements in health care technology occurred during the last few decades? How have these improvements affected health care?
Unit 7 Seminar: Question #2
a. Access to care
b. Patient/family self-care
c. Care management
d. The future role of community hospitals and health centers
e. The future role of physicians
f. The future role of nurses
g. Issues relating to minority health
Ellis, D. (2003). The Impact of Technological Advances on Community Healthand the Role of Foundations in Fostering Beneficial Use. Retrieved on 4/6/2010 from http://hfd.dmc.org/upload/docs/WKKF.pdf
Unit 7 Seminar: Question #3
What geographic and political considerations accompany the use of Web-based information for health and wellness, education, medical diagnoses and treatment?
Questions?
References
American Cancer Society. American cancer society responds to changes to USPSTF mammography guidelines (11/16/2009). Retrieved electronically on 4/7/10 from http://www.cancer.org/docroot/MED/content/MED_2_1x_American_Cancer_Society_Responds_to_Changes_to_USPSTF_Mammography_Guidelines.asp
Ellis, D. (2003). The Impact of Technological Advances on Community Healthand the Role of Foundations in Fostering Beneficial Use. Retrieved on 4/6/2010 from http://hfd.dmc.org/upload/docs/WKKF.pdf
National Network of Libraries of Medicine. Evaluating health web sites (n.d.). Retrieved electronically on 4/6/2010 from https://nnlm.gov/outreach/consumer/evalsite.html
U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (2009). Screening for breast cancer: U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommendation statement. Annals of Internal Medicine. 151(10):716-726.
Agency for Health Care Research and Quality. U.S. Preventive Services Task Force – about USPTF (n.d). Retrieved electronically on 4/7/10 from http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/uspstfab.htm
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