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Mind Map #11 - Coggle Diagram
Mind Map #11
Population health status measures is quantitative summary measures of the health of a large population, such as life-expectancy and HALEs
Health-Adjusted Life Expectancy (HALE) is a population health status measure that combines life-expectancy with a measure of the population's overall quality of health
Infant mortality rate is a population health status measure that estimates the rate of death in the first year of life
Life expectancy is a population health measure that summarizes the impact of death in an entire population utilizing the probability of death at each age of life in a particular year in a particular population
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Health communication is the full range of uses of information in health, from data collection to decision-making
Incomplete information is correct or accurate information that does not provide the full picture and may be misleading
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Public health surveillance is the collection of health data as the basis for monitoring and understanding health problems, generating hypotheses about etiology, and evaluating the success of interventions
Sources of public health surveillance data
-Single case or small series
-Statistics and reportable diseases
-Surveys, sampling
-Self-reporting
-Sentinel monitoring
-Syndromic surveillance
-Social media
Under-5 mortality is a new measurement that has become the standard health status measure used by the World Health Organization (WHO) to summarize the health of children
Decision analysis is a process that compares the outcomes of two or more interventions based on principles of expected utility
Utility scale is a scale that goes from 0 to 1, with 0 reflecting immediate death and 1 reflecting full health. This scale is used to measure the value or importance that an individual or a group places on a particular outcome
Health literacy is the degree to which individuals have the capacity to obtain, process, and understand basic health information and services needed to make appropriate health decisions
Risk-taking attitudes are decision-making attitudes in which an individual or group consistently favors taking actions or avoiding actions that differ from the recommendations of a decision analysis utilizing probabilities, utilities, and the timing of events