0 Item(s)
PEDS 2. Preventive Medicine in Humanitarian Emergencies
Keyword(s)
clean water needs, clinic logs, monitoring systems, population, preventive medicine, rapid needs assessment, risk factors, sanitation, shelter, vectors
Description
Learning Objectives
Gathering and Using Population Data
- Recognize the difference between standard clinical practice and preventive medicine
- Recall the ways in which, after a disaster, public health measures have a higher priority than caring for individual patients.
- Describe and apply population evaluation tools such as rates and underlying causes of disease present in a given community affected by a disaster.
- Recall major components of a population evaluation: demographics, predisaster health conditions, an emergency needs assessment, health-care system evaluation, and establishing a surveillance program.
- Complete the major components of an emergency needs assessment. Draft disaster response plans using community resources (transportation, communication, security).
Post-Disaster Intervention Priorities
- Establish emergency intervention priorities following a disaster.
- Describe how the modes of disease transmission affect the intervention priorities after a disaster.
Surveillance Cycle
- Use the surveillance cycle to help make rational health-care decisions.
- Understand the key role that primary care doctors and pediatricians play in the compilation of quality information, while simultaneously attending individual patients.
- Use this information in an appropriate way for decision making.
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