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2.
Tunis Med ; 96(10-11): 847-857, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30746678

ABSTRACT

In the 21st century, public health is not only about fighting infectious diseases, but also contributing to a "multidimensional" well-being of people (health promotion, non-communicable diseases, the role of citizens and people in the health system etc.). Six themes of public health, issues of the 21st century will be addressed. Climate change is already aggravating already existing health risks, heat waves, natural disasters, recrudescence of infectious diseases. Big data is the collection and management of databases characterized by a large volume, a wide variety of data types from various sources and a high speed of generation. Big data permits a better prevention and management of disease in patients, the development of diagnostic support systems and the personalization of treatments. Big data raises important ethical questions. Health literacy includes the abilities of people to assess and critique and appropriate health information. Implementing actions to achieve higher levels of health literacy in populations remains a crucial issue. Since the 2000s, migration flows of health professionals have increased mainly in the "south-north" direction. India is the country with the most doctors outside its borders. The USA and the UK receive 80% of foreign doctors worldwide. Ways have been identified to try to regulate the migratory phenomena of health professionals around the world. The mobilization of citizen, health system users and patient associations is a strong societal characteristic over the last 30 years. In a near future, phenomena will combine to increase the need for accompaniment of patient or citizen to protect health, such increase of the prevalence of chronic diseases, reinforcement of care trajectories, medico-social care pathways, and importance of health determinants. Interventional research in public health is very recent. It is based on experimentation and on the capitalization of field innovations and uses a wide range of scientific disciplines, methods and tools. It is an interesting tool in the arsenal of public health research. It is essential today to be able to identify the multiple challenges that health systems will face in the coming years, to anticipate changes, and to explore possible futures.


Subject(s)
Public Health , Quality of Health Care , Africa, Northern/epidemiology , Climate Change/statistics & numerical data , Communicable Diseases, Emerging/epidemiology , Communicable Diseases, Emerging/etiology , Electronic Health Records , Health Literacy/history , Health Literacy/trends , Health Personnel/organization & administration , Health Personnel/trends , History, 21st Century , Humans , Patient Advocacy/standards , Patient Advocacy/trends , Public Health/history , Public Health/standards , Public Health/trends , Public Health Administration/standards , Public Health Administration/trends , Public Health Systems Research , Quality of Health Care/history , Quality of Health Care/standards , Quality of Health Care/trends , Social Change/history
3.
J Nurs Adm ; 47(6): 305-307, 2017 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28538462

ABSTRACT

This department highlights emerging nursing leaders who have demonstrated leadership in advancing innovation and patient care in practice policy, research, education, and theory. This interview profiles Joy Deupree, assistant professor, School of Nursing, The University of Alabama at Birmingham.


Subject(s)
Advanced Practice Nursing/history , Emergency Nursing/organization & administration , Health Literacy/history , Leadership , Nurse Administrators/history , Organizational Innovation , Alabama , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Nursing Administration Research
6.
Medizinhist J ; 50(1-2): 175-99, 2015.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26219193

ABSTRACT

This article offers a close consideration about the gender-specific contents of health education campaigns in the Federal Republic of Germany from 1970 to 1990. By using educational publications issued by the Bundeszentrale für gesundheitliche Aufklärung (BZgA), it is shown which breaks and continuities emerged and which kinds of role models are thereby conveyed. Whereas the health education of the 1950s and 1960s was characterised by a didactical approach towards men and women, this changed as from the 1970s. By deconstructing exemplary education campaigns and including internal files of the BZgA, it can be shown, that the societal discourse on the feminism in the FRG contributed to the fact, that during the 1970s the switch has been made to an increased use of positive role models. However, within the men-specific health education there was no break; the health deficiency discourse was still applied in many and diverse ways in order to describe male health behaviour and knowledge.


Subject(s)
Government Agencies/history , Health Education/history , Health Literacy/history , Health Promotion/history , Masculinity/history , Men's Health/history , Germany, West , History, 20th Century , Humans , Male
8.
J Health Commun ; 15 Suppl 2: 9-19, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20845189

ABSTRACT

The concept of health literacy evolved from a history of defining, redefining, and quantifying the functional literacy needs of the adult population. Along with these changes has come the recognition that sophisticated literacy skills are increasingly needed to function in society and that low literacy may have an effect on health and health care. We present a brief history of literacy in the United States, followed by a discussion of the origins and conceptualization of health literacy. Increased attention to this important issue suggests the need to review existing definitions of the term "health literacy," because despite the growing interest in this field, one question that persists is, "What is health literacy?"


Subject(s)
Health Literacy/history , Terminology as Topic , Adult , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , United States
9.
Stud Anc Med ; 35: 87-99, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21560571

ABSTRACT

The aim of this paper is to explore various aspects regarding the Hippocratic treatise Affections, mainly its relationships to other Hippocratic treatises concerning genre and the ideology of the author, with the aim of placing this work within its scientific and sociocultural context.


Subject(s)
Health Education/history , Health Literacy/history , Reference Books, Medical , History, Ancient , Humans , Textbooks as Topic/standards
10.
Stud Anc Med ; 35: 187-204, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21560576

ABSTRACT

The Hippocratic Corpus testifies to the existence of literate doctors, as well as to literate laymen interested in medicine, by the close of the fifth century BC. It is only in later Antiquity, however, that one can begin to speak with confidence about medical literacy encompassing a wide range of specific physicians and a lay public with valetudinarian interests. Evidence from the Roman province of Egypt, when coupled with testimony from Galen and others, is particularly helpful in the effort to sketch a portrait of writers and readers for medical texts. Of particular interest are the joins between the medical writers who have come down to us through the manuscript traditions, many of them practicing and lecturing to the elites of Rome, Alexandria, and eventually Constantinople, and the more ordinary practitioners and their students, friends, and neighbors in the towns and villages of Roman Egypt. My paper surveys texts on papyrus and other materials that bear witness to medical literacy: first, private letters that discuss medical matters; second, didactic texts that played a role in doctors' education, such as the catechisms (erotapokriseis) and medical definitions; and third, collections of recipes, some of which receptaria were once rolls of many columns, while others are but a single sheet with one or two recipes. The some four hundred recipes written down in Roman and Byzantine Egypt emphasize the degree to which the same or similar therapeutic medicaments are shared with medical authors of the manuscript traditions from Dioscorides and Galen to Oribasius, Aetius, and Paul of Aegina.


Subject(s)
Education, Medical/history , Formularies as Topic/history , Health Literacy/history , Manuscripts, Medical as Topic/history , Physicians/history , Education, Medical/methods , History, Ancient , Humans
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