HPE162 Lecture Notes - Lecture 2: Household Income, Social Class, Hypercholesterolemia
HPE162
Exam Review questions
Lecture 1
• . Usig su ae as a eaple to eplai the puli health appoah.
• . With efeee to the Ottaa Chates atio aeas eplai Austalias suess
story regarding tobacco.
• 3. Using Diabetes as an example, make a case for prevention.
• 4 Explain the difference between individualistic and collective approaches to health.
• 5. What is meant by social norms and how do these influence health positively and
negatively?
• 6. Explain with the use of examples why evidence based policy is important in health.
Major Public Health Issues
Health , ill health and what causes it
Recap: Socio –Environmental interventions
• Changing behaviour is hard – sometimes its easier to change the environment
• Changing the environment can change social norms, which can change behaviour
– Policy and legislation (making the healthy choice the easy choice and
sometimes the only choice)
– Supportive environments – physical and social environment
– Technological advancements
• What are our major killers and disablers?
• Social Determinants of health and Indigenous Australian health disparities
Global Inequities: Life Expectancy
• In developed countries life expectancy is 75.2 years
• 49.2 years in the least developed countries
– For persons born in 1999
• WORLDWIDE VV
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(WHO, 2014)
BY 2020: The Rise of Non-communicable Diseases
• Deaths from non-communicable disease are expected to rise 77%.
• Projections for rich countries show little change
• But change will be extreme in some developing regions.
• Why?
Leading causes of death in Australia (ABS 2013)
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find more resources at oneclass.com
Leading underlying causes of death in Australia by age group, 2011–2013
What are the Biggest Threats to Global Health after Climate Change and Dispossession
(WHO, 2006)
• TOBACCO:
– Estimated to kill about 10 million people a year by 2030
• New infectious diseases, epidemics (Eboli)
• Nutrition – both under and over
• AIDS:
– Destabilizing nations, reversing development trends, inciting famines (kills off
productive members of society)
AIDS:
• 42 million infected with HIV/AIDS currently,
– Over 95% in the developing world
• Over 20 million orphans in 2012
• 15,000 new infections each day
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find more resources at oneclass.com
Document Summary
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