working on this page tonight - drop me a line if you want to take pages and it's not done yet.

--Vinay Gupta 14:49, 14 August 2007 (PDT)

What is "Public Health"

Public health is concerned with threats to the overall health of a community based on population health analysis. Health is defined and promoted differently by many organizations. The World Health Organization, the United Nations body that sets standards and provides global surveillance of disease, defines health as: "A state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity." Public health experts agree this definition is incomplete. Other components included in an individual's health are nutritional, spiritual, and intellectual.

The population in question can be as small as a handful of people or as large as all the inhabitants of several continents (for instance, in the case of a pandemic). Public health has many sub-fields, but is typically divided into the categories of epidemiology, biostatistics and health services. Environmental, social and behavioral health, and occupational health, are also important fields in public health.

An alternative definition by Winslow from Modern Medicine in 1920 is: "the science and art of preventing disease, prolonging life and promoting health through the organised efforts and informed choices of society, organisations, public and private, communities and individuals."

In some ways, public health is a modern concept, although it has roots in antiquity. From the early beginnings of human civilization, it was recognized that polluted water and lack of proper waste disposal may spread vector-borne diseases. Early religions attempted to regulate behavior that specifically related to health, from types of food eaten, to the extent which certain behaviors could be indulged, such as drinking alcohol or sexual relations. The establishment of governments placed responsibility on leaders to develop public health policies and programs to gain some understanding of the causes of disease to ensure stability, prosperity, and maintain order.

Public Health and Infrastructure

Four or five hundred years ago, Europe was a very different place. There was very little scientific knowledge about the world, and people did not understand why they got sick or how to get well. There was no electricity, no gas, very little plumbing or organized sewage disposal. Europe was very poor. As a result, Europeans had many of the same health problems which are found all over the world in poor areas today. Europeans built up their infrastructure over a long period of time, several hundred years.

One very important historical event is the story of John Snow and the Broad Street Pump. This happened in London in about 150 years ago, in 1854. London was in the middle of an outbreak of cholera. At the time, Europeans did not know what caused cholera. People saw that a lot of people were getting sick and dying, and they ran away to other places hoping they would not get sick too. One man, a doctor called John Snow, watched who was getting sick very carefully. He made a map and put a mark on the map for each person who had got sick and died.

This map showed a very important pattern that had not been seen by anybody before John Snow. It showed that the people who were within walking distance of a water pump (or a well) on Broad Street were the ones getting sick. From this fact, and from the fact that people who lived in the area but got their water from another source did not get sick, John Snow discovered two things: cholera was spread from drinking water, and the water from the well on Broad Street carried the disease.

When the authorities took the handle off the pump at the well so nobody could drink from it, the cholera outbreak slowed down a lot. The well turns out to be very close to a sewer pipe which had been leaking germs into the water and making people sick. The well was closed, and the link between infrastructure and disease was now proven.

As a result of John Snow and the Broad Street Pump, people in London and later around the world came to understand that their health and well-being rests on their infrastructure sometimes. People got together and asked for good wells and good sewage systems so that they and their families could stay healthy. It took many years for this work to be completed, but people in Europe, America and other wealthy areas of the world very rarely get sick from bad water or sewage any more, although it does happen sometimes.

Public Health and Infectious Disease

Some kinds of public health problems are caused by diseases which are transmitted from one person to another. One example is tuberculosis. Tuberculosis was a very common problem all over the world until a good understanding of the disease helped scientists and doctors invent treatments. Less than 100 years ago, many famous people died from the disease, including artists, writers, philosophers, scientists, politicians and even some kings and queens.

Three things helped make tuberculosis less of a problem. The first is the invention of antibiotics. Antibiotics are powerful drugs which can cure some but not all infectious diseases. They are like poisons which do not harm people, but harm the germs which give people diseases. The first antibiotic invented is called Penicillin. It was discovered in 1928 by Sir Alexander Fleming. Once these drugs were discovered, it became possible to cure people who were sick from tuberculosis although it is still difficult and expensive even today.

The second thing that made tuberculosis less of a problem was the discover of a vaccine.

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