Which of the following is NOT a core component of the WHO's global STI control strategy?
Which of the following statements is NOT true regarding health planning?
The commonly used theory to predict individual's behaviour regarding preventive health care is:
When an outcome is compared with intended objectives, it is called as -
In a village, despite health education for oral cancer, people don't follow instructions even after referral. Despite persuasive reminders, people are still reluctant. This best fits under which model:
All of the following are components of primordial prevention EXCEPT
In a basic Health Education model, the first step is Awareness, and the second step is Motivation. What is the third step?
Which of the following services are provided to pregnant women under the Integrated Child Development Scheme (ICDS)?
The best approach to prevent cholera epidemic in a community is:
In Guinea worm prophylaxis, all are true, except -
Explanation: ***Universal mandatory screening*** - While screening is part of STI control, **universal mandatory screening** for all STIs in the general population is not a core component of the WHO's strategy due to feasibility, cost, and ethical considerations. - The strategy emphasizes **targeted screening** for at-risk populations and opportunistic screening. *Case management* - **Case management**, including accurate diagnosis and effective treatment, is a critical component for managing current infections and preventing further transmission. - This involves syndromic or etiologic approaches to treatment and partner notification. *Strategic information systems* - **Strategic information systems** are essential for monitoring trends, evaluating interventions, and informing policy decisions related to STI control. - This includes surveillance data, program monitoring, and research. *Prevention services* - **Prevention services** are a cornerstone of the WHO's strategy, aiming to reduce the incidence of new infections. - These services encompass health education, condom promotion and distribution, vaccination, and pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP).
Explanation: ***Creating demands for needs is essential for effective health planning.*** - **Health planning** aims to **address existing demands and needs**, not to artificially create them. - Creating demands could lead to **unnecessary interventions** and misallocation of resources, which is counterproductive to effective planning. *Resource planning and implementation* - **Effective health planning** inherently involves the **strategic allocation and management of resources** (e.g., personnel, facilities, funds) to achieve health goals. - This ensures that identified needs can be met through **practical and sustainable strategies**. *Eliminating wasteful expenditure* - A core component of **responsible health planning** is to achieve **efficiency** by identifying and removing redundant or ineffective spending. - This optimizes the use of limited resources and ensures that funds are directed towards initiatives with the **greatest impact on health outcomes**. *Effective health planning focuses on addressing unmet needs.* - The primary goal of **health planning** is to identify **gaps in healthcare provision** and services for a population. - By focusing on **unmet needs**, planning ensures that interventions are relevant, impactful, and improve the overall health status of the community.
Explanation: ***Health belief model*** - This model is widely used for **predicting preventative health behaviors**, as it focuses on an individual's perceptions of threat and benefits. - It considers factors like **perceived susceptibility, perceived severity, perceived benefits, perceived barriers**, cues to action, and self-efficacy in motivating health actions. *Salutogenic model* - The salutogenic model emphasizes factors that **promote health and well-being**, rather than focusing on disease or risk factors. - It centers around an individual's **sense of coherence**, which is their capacity to comprehend, manage, and find meaning in life's challenges. *Transtheoretical model* - This model describes **stages of change** that individuals go through when modifying a health behavior, such as precontemplation, contemplation, preparation, action, and maintenance. - While useful for understanding behavior change, it is more about the **process of change** rather than predicting initial engagement in preventative care. *Social cognitive theory* - Social cognitive theory emphasizes the role of **observational learning, social experiences, and self-efficacy** in the development of personality and health behaviors. - While it explains how individuals learn and perform health actions, it is not as directly focused on the **cognitive factors influencing preventative care decisions** as the Health Belief Model.
Explanation: ***Evaluation*** - **Evaluation** is a systematic process of comparing actual outcomes against predefined objectives to assess their effectiveness, efficiency, and impact. - It involves making judgments about the **worth** or **significance** of a program, project, or policy. *Network analysis* - **Network analysis** is a technique used to understand the relationships and connections within a system, often focusing on communication or collaboration. - It does not primarily involve comparing outcomes to objectives but rather mapping and measuring interactions between entities. *Input-output analysis* - **Input-output analysis** is an economic technique that studies the interdependence between different sectors of an economy by tracing inputs and outputs. - It is concerned with resource allocation and production linkages, not the comparison of outcomes to explicit objectives. *Monitoring* - **Monitoring** involves the continuous tracking of activities and progress against plans to ensure things are on track. - While it collects data on actual performance, its primary purpose is to observe and report as events unfold, not to make judgments about overall success against original goals.
Explanation: ***Trans-theoretical model*** - This model emphasizes that individuals move through distinct stages (precontemplation, contemplation, preparation, action, maintenance) when adopting a new behavior. The villagers' reluctance to follow instructions, despite education and reminders, suggests they are likely in the **precontemplation** or **contemplation** stages, where they are either unaware of the problem or are not yet ready to take action. - The model accounts for the **difficulty in behavior change** even with external efforts, as readiness to change is internal and stages are progressive. *Health belief model* - This model focuses on an individual's perception of the **threat of a health problem** and the **pros and cons of taking action**. While education might address perceived susceptibility and severity, the model doesn't fully explain why people remain reluctant even after persuasive reminders, suggesting other factors beyond belief are at play. - It primarily explains *why* individuals might *consider* changing their behavior but not necessarily *how* they progress through the actual change process. *Public health model* - The public health model is a broad framework used to understand and address health issues at a population level, often focusing on **prevention, promotion, and interventions**. While addressing oral cancer in a village fits within this model's scope, it doesn't specifically explain the *individual psychological barriers* to behavioral change, like reluctance despite education and reminders. - This model is more about **strategies and policies** for population health rather than individual behavior change. *Social compliance* - Social compliance refers to individuals conforming to rules or requests from authority figures or social norms. The scenario explicitly states that despite "persuasive reminders," people are "reluctant," indicating a **lack of compliance** rather than an explanation for the behavior itself. - This term describes the *outcome* of behavior in a social context, not the *underlying psychological process* of behavior change over time.
Explanation: ***Immunization*** - **Immunization** is a component of **primary prevention**, aiming to prevent the onset of disease in healthy individuals. - Primordial prevention focuses on preventing the establishment of risk factors themselves, rather than preventing the disease directly. *Behavioural changes* - **Behavioural changes**, such as encouraging healthy lifestyles from a young age, are central to primordial prevention. - The goal is to prevent the adoption of unhealthy behaviours that could lead to disease later in life. *Health education* - **Health education**, particularly in early life stages, is a key strategy for primordial prevention. - It helps in fostering healthy habits and promoting awareness before risk factors emerge. *Nutritional education* - Providing **nutritional education** to prevent the development of poor dietary habits is a core aspect of primordial prevention. - This aims to prevent the establishment of risk factors like obesity and hypertension from an early age.
Explanation: ***Action*** - Following **awareness** and **motivation**, **action** is the crucial third step where individuals actively engage in the new behaviors or lifestyle changes. - This step involves the practical implementation of learned health information and the commitment to maintaining these changes over time. *Reflection* - **Reflection** typically occurs after an action has been taken, allowing individuals to review their experiences and learn from them. - It is not the immediate next step after motivation in the sequence of most health education models. *Dedication* - **Dedication** is a quality or characteristic often developed over time as an individual commits to a new behavior, rather than a distinct sequential step in health education models. - While important for sustaining change, it doesn't represent the primary third step in the progression from awareness to behavior change. *Contemplation* - **Contemplation** often precedes motivation, representing the stage where an individual is considering making a change but has not yet committed to it. - In models like the **Transtheoretical Model**, contemplation is an earlier stage than the actual "action" of behavior change.
Explanation: ***Supplementary nutrition*** - **Supplementary nutrition** is the most direct and primary tangible service provided under ICDS specifically targeting pregnant women as beneficiaries. - Under ICDS, pregnant women receive **300 calories and 10-12 grams of protein** for at least 90 days during pregnancy to bridge the calorie and protein gap in their diets. - This is a core service directly provided at Anganwadi centers, ensuring better health outcomes for both mother and developing fetus. - Among all ICDS services for pregnant women, supplementary nutrition is the **most distinctive and substantial direct benefit** that pregnant women receive. *Health check-up* - While health check-ups are part of ICDS package services, they are primarily conducted by ANMs and medical officers from the health system. - Anganwadi Workers facilitate identification, weight monitoring, and referrals, but the comprehensive health examinations are delivered through convergence with the health department rather than as a direct standalone ICDS service. *Nutrition and health education* - Nutrition and health education is indeed provided under ICDS to pregnant women and mothers. - However, it is an **enabling/educational service** rather than a direct tangible provision like supplementary nutrition. - The question likely seeks the most characteristic direct service, which is supplementary nutrition. *Immunization against tetanus* - Immunization services including tetanus toxoid are part of the integrated ICDS-health system approach. - However, vaccines are administered by health workers (ANMs), not by Anganwadi Workers themselves. - ICDS role is primarily facilitative through awareness generation and referral linkages to health facilities.
Explanation: ***Safe water and sanitation*** - Cholera is primarily transmitted through **fecally contaminated water** and food sources. Ensuring access to **safe drinking water** and proper **sanitation facilities** (e.g., latrines, waste management) is the most effective and sustainable way to break the chain of transmission. - These measures prevent the spread of the *Vibrio cholerae* bacteria in the environment, thereby stopping new infections and preventing large-scale outbreaks. *Health education* - While important for promoting good hygiene practices like handwashing and safe food preparation, **health education alone** is often insufficient to control a widespread cholera epidemic without concomitant improvements in infrastructure. - It may improve individual behaviors but does not address the fundamental environmental contamination that drives large outbreaks. *Mass chemoprophylaxis with tetracycline* - Administering antibiotics like **tetracycline** to entire communities is not a sustainable or practical strategy for epidemic prevention. - It can lead to **antibiotic resistance**, has limited effectiveness in preventing widespread transmission, and carries potential side effects. *Vaccination of all individuals* - **Oral cholera vaccines** are effective and can be used in conjunction with other measures, especially during outbreaks or in high-risk areas. - However, achieving **universal vaccination** quickly enough to prevent an ongoing epidemic can be challenging due to logistical hurdles, cost, and vaccine availability, making it less immediate and comprehensive than addressing water and sanitation.
Explanation: ***Mass treatment with anti-helminthic drugs*** - Guinea worm disease (Dracunculiasis) is caused by the parasite *Dracunculus medinensis*, which is transmitted through contaminated drinking water containing **copepods (water fleas)** harboring larvae. - Unlike many other helminthic infections, Guinea worm disease **does not respond to anti-helminthic drugs** for treatment or prevention, making mass treatment ineffective. *Identification of carriers* - Identifying and containing individuals who are actively expelling worms is crucial to prevent further contamination of water sources. - This strategy focuses on interrupting the parasite's life cycle by preventing infected individuals from entering communal water bodies. *Acute search of new cases* - Active surveillance and rapid detection of new cases enable prompt intervention, such as safe containment of the emerging worm and prevention of water source contamination. - This helps in monitoring incidence and targeting interventions effectively to achieve eradication. *Health education to people to use a sieve for straining drinking water* - This is a cornerstone of Guinea worm prophylaxis, as it directly addresses the mode of transmission by filtering out the **copepods** from drinking water. - Providing **cloth filters** or using fine-mesh sieves is a simple and effective way to ensure safe drinking water and interrupt the life cycle.
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