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Chapter 3: Public Health Data and Communications - Coggle Diagram
Chapter 3: Public Health Data and Communications
Health Communications:
Deals with the methods for collecting, compiling, and presenting health information
Incomplete Information:
Correct or accurate information that does not provide the full picture and may therefore be misleading
Misinformation:
Any inaccurate or false information which is believed by the user to be accurate
Disinformation:
False or inaccurate information that is spread deliberately to deceive
Collect: Where does public health data come from?
Compile: How is public health information compiled or put together to measure the health of a population?
Present: How can we evaluate the quality of the display and presentation of public health information?
Perceive: What factors affect how we perceive health information?
Combine: What types of information need to be combined to make health decisions?
Decision-Making: How do we utilize information to make health decisions?
Health-Adjusted Life Expectancy (HALE)
Mobility: the ability to walk without assistance
Cognition: mental function
Self-Care: activities of daily living
Pain: regular pain that limits function
Mood: alteration in mood that limits function
Sensory Organ Function: impairment of vision or hearing that impairs function
Health Care Decisions
Inform of Decision:
A decision-making approach in which a clinician is merely expected to inform the patient of what is planned
Informed Consent:
A decision-making approach or research process in which a clinician is expected to provide information and obtain agreement to proceed from the patient
Shared Decision-Making:
A decision-making approach in which a clinician is expected to directly or indirectly provide information and option for intervention to a patient and then rely on the patient to synthesize the information and make his or her own decision