Category Archives: Health promotion

Community based interventions for the prevention and control of tuberculosis

Infectious Diseases of Poverty is an open access peer-reviewed journal publishing articles around essential public health questions relating to infectious diseases of poverty.

Abstract

In 2012, an estimated 8.6 million people developed tuberculosis (TB) and 1.3 million died from the disease. With its recent resurgence with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV); TB prevention and management has become further challenging. We systematically evaluated the effectiveness of community based interventions (CBI) for the prevention and treatment of TB and a total of 41 studies were identified for inclusion. Findings suggest that CBI for TB prevention and case detection showed significant increase in TB detection rates (RR: 3.1, 95% CI: 2.92, 3.28) with non-significant impact on TB incidence. CBI for treating patients with active TB showed an overall improvement in treatment success rates (RR: 1.09, 95% CI: 1.07, 1.11) and evidence from a single study suggests significant reduction in relapse rate (RR: 0.26, 95% CI: 0.18, 0.39). The results were consistent for various study design and delivery mechanism. Qualitative synthesis suggests that community based TB treatment delivery through community health workers (CHW) not only improved access and service utilization but also contributed to capacity building and improving the routine TB recording and reporting systems. CBI coupled with the DOTS strategy seem to be an effective approach, however there is a need to evaluate various community-based integrated delivery models for relative effectiveness.

Keywords: Community-based interventions; Tuberculosis; DOTS; integrated delivery; CHWs

http://www.idpjournal.com/content/3/1/27?utm_campaign=&utm_medium=BMCemail&utm_source=Teradata

Des interventions infirmières et des sages-femmes pour la prévention des maladies non transmissibles (NCDs)

Nombreuses interventions existent pour pour faire face aux maladies non transmissibles (Non-Communicable Diseases ou NCDs en anglais) et celles-ci sont bien connues.

Afin d’ intensifier l’action, la participation des infirmières et des sages-femmes, qui représentent la plus grande catégorie de professionnels de la santé dans la plupart des pays, est essentielle.

L’expérience montre que les  interventions issues des soins infirmiers  et obstétricaux pour les NCDs peuvent aller au-delà de la prévention et du traitement et qu’elle peuvent inclure la promotion de la santé.

Ce document, publié par l’OMS, présente les interventions infirmières et des sages-femmes  pour la prévention des NCDs et le rôle que celles-ci jouent au niveau politique, de la recherche, du plaidoyer, de l’éducation  et dans la pratique.

Enhancing nursing and midwifery capacity to contribute to the prevention, treatment and management of noncommunicable diseasesHuman Resources for Health Observer – Issue No. 12

Accéder au document sur la page de l’OMS

Prévention du suicide: L’état d’urgence global

Le suicide  est devenu la deuxième cause de mortalité au niveau mondial chez les jeunes (15-29 ans)

L’OMS a publié pour la première fois un rapport concernant le suicide. Ce rapport présente l’épidémiologie et les facteurs de risque du suicide au niveau mondial, il fait l’état des lieux des connaissances actuelles en matière de prévention et donne des pistes pour la mise en place de stratégies nationales de prévention du suicide au niveau mondial. 

Le rapport Prévention du suicide: l’état d’urgence global, OMS, 2014 peut être téléchargé  sur le site

accéder au site Prévention du suicide de l’OMS

Inégalités en santé et minorités ethniques

Autour du monde, l’état de santé des personnes issues de minorités ethniques est moins bon comparé au reste de la population. Les soins de santé accessibles à ces populations sont de moins bonne qualité.

A travers son  rapport 2013, le Minority Rights Group International décrit  les facteurs contribuant aux inégalités en santé et propose des pistes d’intervention afin que les pays puissent mieux répondre aux besoins de l’ensemble de leur population.

accéder à la page ONU web : droits des minorités 

HIV/AIDS Treatment as Prevention works!

The PARTNER study, involving more than 750 discordant heterosexual and homosexual couples,  are showing that an effective treatment by antiretroviral therapy (ART) prevents the transmission of HIV to the seronegative partner.

This study brings evidence showing  that treatment as prevention works.

learn more about the study

Results were  reported at the 21st Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI 2014) in Boston, in March 2014

learn more about Treatment as Prevention

Soins aux patients migrants : une nouvelle formation en ligne!

L’OFSP vient de publier , dans le cadre du programme “Santé 2020”, un excellent outil de formation disponible gratuitement et en ligne destiné aux infirmiers, aux médecins et au personnel d’accueil.

Interaction et qualité
dans le domaine de la santé

Trois modules de formation avec un test final afin de favoriser des soins de qualité pour tous!

Accéder au module e-learning

How adverse experiences during childhood influence people’s health behavior

MBC Medicine published a study about the influence of adverse childhood experiences ACE (parental separation, domestic violence, physical or verbal abuse, sexual abuse, mental illness, alcohol or drug abuse, and incarceration) on health-harming behaviors H-HB (such as unintended teenage pregnancy, early sexual initiation, smoking, blinge drinking, drugs use, violence, poor diet, low physical activity and incarceration) among adults individuals living en England. One out of two adults across all socio-economic classes, have experienced at least one ACE. These individuals are more likely to develop H-HB and thus to suffer from non-communicable diseases.  

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Abstract

Background

Epidemiological and biomedical evidence link adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) with health-harming behaviors and the development of non-communicable disease in adults. Investment in interventions to improve early life experiences requires empirical evidence on levels of childhood adversity and the proportion of HHBs potentially avoided should such adversity be addressed.

Methods

A nationally representative survey of English residents aged 18 to 69 (n = 3,885) was undertaken during the period April to July 2013. Individuals were categorized according to the number of ACEs experienced. Modeling identified the proportions of HHBs (early sexual initiation, unintended teenage pregnancy, smoking, binge drinking, drug use, violence victimization, violence perpetration, incarceration, poor diet, low levels of physical exercise) independently associated with ACEs at national population levels.

Results

Almost half (47%) of individuals experienced at least one of the nine ACEs. Prevalence of childhood sexual, physical, and verbal abuse was 6.3%, 14.8%, and 18.2% respectively (population-adjusted). After correcting for sociodemographics, ACE counts predicted all HHBs, e.g. (0 versus 4+ ACEs, adjusted odds ratios (95% confidence intervals)): smoking 3.29 (2.54 to 4.27); violence perpetration 7.71 (4.90 to 12.14); unintended teenage pregnancy 5.86 (3.93 to 8.74). Modeling suggested that 11.9% of binge drinking, 13.6% of poor diet, 22.7% of smoking, 52.0% of violence perpetration, 58.7% of heroin/crack cocaine use, and 37.6% of unintended teenage pregnancy prevalence nationally could be attributed to ACEs.

Conclusions

Stable and protective childhoods are critical factors in the development of resilience to health-harming behaviors in England. Interventions to reduce ACEs are available and sustainable, with nurturing childhoods supporting the adoption of health-benefiting behaviors and ultimately the provision of positive childhood environments for future generations.

Keywords: 

Child abuse; Childhood; Alcohol; Smoking; Violence