â– LECTURE OVERVIEW: Preventative medicine divides interventions into four distinct levels, organized chronologically by their relationship to the pathological cascade.
â– INTERVENTION TIERS:
1. Primordial Prevention: Prevents the development and establishment of systemic risk factors. Focuses on social and environmental policies (e.g., child sports funding).
2. Primary Prevention: Controls risk factors prior to disease onset. Focuses on health promotion and specific protection to prevent pathological damage (e.g., smoking cessation, vaccinations, seat belts).
3. Secondary Prevention: Focuses on early diagnosis and prompt treatment. Aims to arrest pathological progression before permanent damage occurs (e.g., screening mammography, Pap smears, routine BP checks).
4. Tertiary Prevention: Restricts disability and assists rehabilitation. Implemented post-damage to restore optimal function (e.g., physiotherapy after stroke, beta-blocker therapy after myocardial infarction).
â– EPIDEMIOLOGICAL PROFILE & PREVALENCE METRICS:
Global burden mapping indicates significant geographic, ethnic, and temporal patterns. Incidence statistics reveal correlation with environmental lifestyle stressors, socio-economic vectors, and genetic founder effects.
â– GERIATRIC PHYSIOLOGIC ADJUSTMENTS:
Older patients display reduced physiological reserves, altered muscle-to-fat distributions, and distinct renal filtration profiles.
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🌟 Dynamic Clinical Key:
Distinguishing primary from secondary prevention: Administering folic acid to pregnant women to prevent neural tube defects is Primary prevention. Performing an ultrasound at 18 weeks to screen for neural tube anomalies is Secondary prevention. Utilize standardized screening questionnaires across highly endemic populations to detect early subclinical cases. Always adjust therapeutic doses based on age-related glomerular filtration clearance.