
Miscellaneous Topics in Community Medicine
Biosafety Levels

Level | Agents | Examples | PPE | Facilities |
BSL-1 | Non-pathogenic, minimal risk | E. coli K12 | Lab coat, gloves (optional) | Open bench, sink |
BSL-2 | Moderate risk pathogens | HBV, HIV, S. aureus, Salmonella SARS-CoV molecular test/PCR | Lab coat, gloves, face/eye protection | Class II biosafety cabinet for aerosols, autoclave |
BSL-3 | Lethal via inhalation | TB, SARS-CoV direct handling/culture, Coxiella burnetii | Protective clothing, respirator | Negative air pressure, Class II/III cabinet, sealed windows |
BSL-4 | High-risk, life-threatening, no treatment/vaccine | Ebola, Marburg, Lassa virus | Full-body positive pressure suit OR Class III cabinet | Isolated building, dedicated air & water supply |
Bioterrorism
Category A
- Highest priority – easily transmitted, high mortality
- Anthrax
- Smallpox
- Plague
- Botulism
- Tularemia
- Viral Hemorrhagic Fevers (e.g., Ebola, Marburg)
- Mnemonic: Anthrayil (anthrax) Smallkids (smallpox) Play (Plague) cheythirunna Boatil (botu) terrorist (A) Tula ittu → Viral (VHF) ayi
Category B
- Moderately easy to disseminate, moderate morbidity, low mortality
- Brucellosis
- Psittacosis
- Typhus fever
- Salmonella
- Diarrheagenic E. coli
- Hepatitis A
- Caliciviruses
- Ricin toxin
- West Nile virus
Category C
- Emerging pathogens with potential for mass dissemination in future
- Mnemonic: Enta Nippah
- Nipah virus
- Hantavirus
- Covid
Lattice Theory

Prozone | Equivalence zone | Post zone |
Excess Ab | Proper ratio | Excess Ag |
No aggregation | Aggregation | No aggregation |
Antibody pro when excess | ㅤ | Antibody post → when low amount |

Levels of Prevention


Levels of Prevention | Prevents | Examples |
Primordial Prevention/ Health promotion (Ideal) | Risk factor | - Lifestyle modification - Health education - Sanitation - Safe water |
1° Prevention / Specific protection/ Presumptive/ Prospective/ Predictive (Best) | Disease | - Specific protection - Immunization - Pre-employment checkup - Pre-exposure prophylaxis - Chemoprophylaxis - Food fortification Screening - HIV screening: ◦ In mothers in ANC: Opt-out testing. ◦ During blood donation: Unlinked anonymous - COVID screening in airports - Immigrant screening protocol |
2° Prevention / Prescriptive (m/c) | Complication | - disability (or complication) prevention - Early diagnosis - Prompt treatment - Screening for disease, - Fecal occult blood test - Mammography - PAP smear - Urinary ALA levels - VDRL |
3° Prevention | Disability/death | - Disability treatment/rehabilitation/limitation - Prosthesis - Transplants |
According to the NACO guidelines, what level of prevention is achieved when an HIV patient
undergoes counselling and screening for TB at an ICTC clinic?
A. Primordial
B. Primary
C. Secondary
D. Primary & secondary
undergoes counselling and screening for TB at an ICTC clinic?
A. Primordial
B. Primary
C. Secondary
D. Primary & secondary
ANS
Counselling for TB here is primary level as a risk factor is present and screening for TB is a secondary level of prevention as we are trying to do early diagnosis and treatment
Q. Hand washing during COVID-19 is what level of prevention?
A. Primordial prevention
B. Primary prevention
C. Secondary prevention
D. Tertiary prevention
A. Primordial prevention
B. Primary prevention
C. Secondary prevention
D. Tertiary prevention
ANS
B
Q. A government plans to outline tobacco control laws. What is the level of prevention here?
A. Primordial prevention
B. Primary prevention
C. Secondary prevention
D. Tertiary prevention
A. Primordial prevention
B. Primary prevention
C. Secondary prevention
D. Tertiary prevention
ANS
B
Vaccination & Mass chemoprophylaxis represent
A. Health promotion
B. Specific protection
C. Early diagnosis and treatment
D. Rehabilitation
A. Health promotion
B. Specific protection
C. Early diagnosis and treatment
D. Rehabilitation
ANS
B
Hand Hygiene/ Steps of Hand Washing


- Steps: Wet hands → Soap → Rub palms → Right palm over left dorsum (interlaced) → Palms to palm (interlaced) → Backs of fingers to opposing palms → Rotational rubbing of thumbs → Rotational rubbing of clasped fingers → Rinse → Dry → Use towel to turn off faucet.

- Areas missed:
- Thumb,
- Inter digital areas,
- Finger tips.
- 5 moments:
- "2 Before":
- Before touching patient.
- Before clean/aseptic procedure.
- "3 After":
- After body fluid exposure.
- After touching patient.
- After touching patient's surroundings.
- Soap and water/sanitizer:
- C/I for sanitizer:
- After toilet visit.
- Visibly soiled hands.
Essential PPE:
- Gown, Gloves, Mask, Goggles, Face shield
Step | Sequence |
1. Donning (Putting on PPE) | Gown → Mask → Goggles/Face Shield → Gloves |
2. Doffing (Removing PPE) | Gloves → Goggles/Face Shield → Gown → Mask |
Health & Development Indicators
ㅤ | PQLI Mnemonic: 11L | HDI | GHI |
Survival | 1. Life expectancy at 1 year | 1. Life expectancy at birth (in years) | 1. Under-5 mortality rate. |
Education | 2. Literacy rate | 2. Mean school years 3. Expected school years | - |
Living standard/ Economic status | 3. Infant mortality rate | 4. Gross national income (GNI) per capita | 2. Undernourishment in child under 5 yrs (wasting & stunting) 3. Inadequate food supply (Adult & child undernourishment) |
Values | - | HDI = 0.63 Rank 132. | GHI = 29.1 (Serious hunger), Rank 107/132. |
Given by | WHO | UNDP | UNDP |
1. Physical Quality of Life Indicator (PQLI) = 1
- WHO
Dimensions (3) | Indicators (3) |
Health | Life expectancy at 1 year |
Knowledge | Effective literacy rate (>7 years) |
Health Care Delivery & Utilization | Infant mortality rate |
2. Human Development Index (HDI)
- UNDP
Dimensions (3) | Indicators (4) | Min | Max |
Health | Life expectancy at birth (in years) | 20 | 85 |
Knowledge | Mean school years (years of schooling at age of 25 years) | 0 | 18 |
ㅤ | Expected school years (expected years of schooling till 25 years) | 0 | 15 |
Income/Standard of Living | Gross national income (GNI) per capita GDP is not a critera Income generated by a citizen of a country | 100 | 75000 |
- Dimension index (Di) (of individual indicators)
- (Actual value - minimum value) / (maximum value - minimum value)
- Geometric mean (DI of all 4 indicators)
- ³√(Li × Ki × Ii)
- Better indicator due to inter-dimensional inequalities.
- Li (Life index): Di of health.
- Ki (Knowledge index): Di of knowledge.
- Ii: Di of income.
3. Global Hunger Index (GHI)
- Proportion of population that is undernourished (%) + Prevalence of underweight in children under 5 yrs (%) + mortality rate of children under age of 5 yrs (%)
3 - → Arithmetic mean

- GHI: Arithmetic mean
- (Undernourishment + underweight + U5 mortality rate) / 3
Parameter | Weightage in GHI |
Under 5 mortality rate | 1/3 |
Child undernutrition | - |
- Wasting | 1/6 |
- Stunting | 1/6 |
Inadequate food supply (Adult & child) | 1/3 |
4. Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI)
Dimensions (3) | Indicators (10) |
Health | * Undernourishment * Not surviving till 18 years of age |
Education | * At least 6 years of school * Not completed 8th class |
Standard of living | * Household cooking with dung/wood/charcoal/coal * No sanitation * No drinking water * No electricity * Kutcha house * No modern gadgets |
In India
Indicator | Score | Interpretation |
HDI | 0.633 | Medium HDI (by UN Development Program) |
GHI | 107/121 | Serious hunger |
MPI | 25% | Medium poverty |
* Bihar | 51.9 | Highest poverty |
* Kerala | 0.7 | Lowest poverty |
Q. Life expectancy of two different countries can be compared using which of the following demographic indicators?
A. QALY
B. DALY
C. HDI
D. HPI
B. DALY
C. HDI
D. HPI
ANS
HDI: Human developmental illness
Disability Indicators


- Important terms:
- Impairment:
- Anatomically impaired
- Loss of anatomical organ or physiological function.
- Eg: Loss of vision
- Disability:
- Personal disability
- Loss of activity or work.
- Eg: I cant see, Blindness
- Handicap:
- Socially handy
- Loss of occupation or job (Social role), money, or position.
- DALY (Disability Adjusted Life Years):
- DALY = Years of life lost to premature death + years lived with disability (YLD)
- 1 DALY: 1 year of healthy life lost
- Perfect health=0
- Death=1
- Measure for burden of disease.
Highest DALY:Depression- Prepladder and latest standard textbooks
- Highest DALY: Ischemic heart disease
- Maximum YLD: Depression
- QALY (Quality Adjusted Life Years):
- QALY =
(life expectancy with intervention - life expectancy without intervention) × utility value - Score between 0 (death) and 1 (perfect health)
- Expressed in terms of utility value
- Measures quality of life in health gain
- Most important measure of effectiveness of an intervention.
- Best measure of cost-effectiveness of intervention
- Positive indicator.
- No. of years of life added due to the medical intervention.
- Gain in quality life years with an intervention.

- HALE (Health Adjusted Life Expectancy):
- Equivalent number of years in 'full health' that a new-born can expect to live based on current rates of ill health and mortality.
- Positive indicator.
- Indicates health status or sickness burden in a population.
- Best measure of healthy life expectancy (No. of years in good health, free from disability).
The average life expectancy for a woman in Japan is 87 years. Due to recent advances in testing for cervical cancer, there is an increase in life expectancy by 15 years. The healthcare utility value is 0.8. Which of the following can be calculated from the parameters given?
A. HALE
B. DALY
C. DFLE
D. QALY
B. DALY
C. DFLE
D. QALY
ANS
QALY
Due to recent advances in testing for breast cancer, life expectancy has reportedly increased by 20 years in a country X. The healthcare utility value for the country was 0.7. Which indicator can be calculated from the parameters given?
A. DALY
B. HALE
C. QALY
D. DFLE
B. HALE
C. QALY
D. DFLE
ANS
C
Q. All are disability indicators except:
A. Disability-adjusted life years
B. Health-adjusted life expectancy
C. Sullivans index
D. Life expectancy
B. Health-adjusted life expectancy
C. Sullivans index
D. Life expectancy
ANS
Life expectancy: Positive mortality indicator
Q. Life expectancy of two different countries can be compared using which of the following demographic indicators?
A. QALY
B. DALY
C. HDI
D. HPI
B. DALY
C. HDI
D. HPI
ANS
HDI: Human developmental illness
Utilisation Indicators
Best Assessment criteria | Indicator |
- Overall general indicator - Overall country development | IMR |
- Social and political development - United nations indicator for nation's development | u5MR |
- Overall human development - Economic development - Life expectancy | HDI |
Hunger, malnutrition | MPI > GHI |
Overall maternal care / MCH care | MMR |
Overall health care services, facilities | PNMR > IMR |
Health care services utilization in public/private sector | Bed occupancy rate |
Disability; Burden of a disease | DALY |
Effectiveness of intervention | QALY |
Healthy life years or health status of community | HALE |
- Utilisation indicators
- Bed occupancy rate = Average daily in-patient census / Average number of bed days
- Average length of stay = No. of days of care rendered / No. of discharges
- Bed turnover ratio = No. of discharges / Average no. of beds
- No. of ANC visit
- PNMR: Perinatal mortality rate.
- MPI: Multidimensional Poverty Index.

Health Communications, Family & SE Scales

What barrier will the doctor be addressing when a male patient inquires about the potential impotency caused by the recommended vaccine during a vaccination drive?
A. Physical barrier
B. Environmental barrier
C. Physiological barrier
D. Cultural barrier
A. Physical barrier
B. Environmental barrier
C. Physiological barrier
D. Cultural barrier
ANS
Cultural barrier


Information & Communication
- Types of communication:
- One way → Didactic communication.
- Two way → Socratic communication.
- Total communication
- Used for Hearing impaired children
- Incorporates oral, aural and manual mode of communication
- Communication loop:
- Sender → message → Channel → Receiver
- Feedback:
- most important component
- component of receiver
Levels/Methods of Communication


Personal | Group | Mass |
- Letters. - Message. - Personal letters. | - Focused group discussion: Discussion among 6-12 members with a moderator. - DELPHI: Formal discussion among groups to solve major problems. - Symposium: Series of lectures in front of audience by experts. NO live discussion - Panel discussion: Discussion among experts in front of audience with a moderator on a theme. - Lecture: Talk on a theme to a large audience. - Seminar: Talk on a theme to a smaller audience. - Workshop: Hands-on training for skill development in a small group. - Demonstration: Best way to teach technical skills. - Role play: To ↑ communication. | - Media (TV, radio). - Bulk mail. - Posters. - Advertisement. - Folkways. |
What is the method employed to gather agreement on predictions among a substantial group of
individuals?
A. Television
B. GATHER approach
C. Conferences
D. Delphi method
individuals?
A. Television
B. GATHER approach
C. Conferences
D. Delphi method
ANS
DELPHI
Demonstration
- Two-way Communication
- Socratic method used for interaction.

- Principle
- Relies on:
- "Seeing is believing"
- "Learning by doing"
- Examples
- ORS preparation/demonstration
- Scabies ointment application
- Hand washing technique
Communication approaches:
- GATHER: Interview tool.
- Adopted for contraceptive counselling
- Greet → Ask → Tell → Help → Educate → Review.
- Cafeteria approach:
- We give menu and options like cafeteria
- Earlier used to promote family planning.
- Choice of contraceptive lies with the individual.
- SPIKES protocol: Delivering bad news.
- Roleplay:
- Asha worker and mother
- Type of group communication
Learning
- Psychomotor learning:
- Involves learning motor skills through practice and repetition
- Example: Intern performing knee reflex test
- Cognitive learning:
- Involves understanding and knowledge
- Affective learning:
- Related to attitudes, emotions, values
Family

- Family cycles:
- Formation: Couple meets
- Extension: Birth of 1st child
- Complete extension: Birth of 2nd child
- Contraction: 1st child leaves home
- Complete contraction: 2nd child leaves home
- Dissolution: Death of 1 parent
- Extinction: Death of both parents
- Types of families:
Type | Description |
Nuclear family | Children live with their parents. |
3 generation family | Children live with parents and grandparents. |
Joint family | All children and grandchildren live with grandparents |
Socioeconomic Scales
ㅤ | Kuppuswami scale | Uday Pareekh scale | B.G Prasad scale |
Area distribution | urban | Rural | urban & rural |
Criteria | Income, occupation, education | 10 variables | Income only |
ㅤ | Kuppathotti nnu vannu padich, joli vangi, shambalam vangi → Urbanil ayi | Uday Pareeksha 10 th std (10 variables) thottu → rural area ayi | Income () undakkan rural and urban () areayil poi → BJ cheythu |
Social Medicine

Opinion vs. Belief
ㅤ | Opinion | Belief |
meaning | Views on point of dispute | Views derived from Family (Permanent) |
Basis | Based on evidence | Learned |
Crowd vs. mob vs. Herd
Crowd | mob | Herd |
People sharing an intent | Emotionally charged crowd | Crowd with a leader |
Attitude vs. Habits
ㅤ | Attitude | Habit |
Permanance | Permanent | Temporary |
Affected by motivation | No | Yes |
Miscellaneous terms
- Folkways: Right way of doing things.
- Mores: Stringent customs.
- Sociology
- Study of human relationships and behavior.
- Society
- A group of individuals sharing common values and interests.
- Leads to a certain way of life.
- Community
- Group of people within a defined geographical boundary.
- Acculturation
- Cultural contact or exchange of culture.
- Examples:
- Marriage
- Conquest
- Migration
- Industrialization
- Socialization
- Process where individuals adopt cultural traits and become part of a society.
- Social Structure
- Pattern of interrelationships among members of society.
- Social Pathology
- Study of social causes that lead to disease.
- Examples:
- Unemployment
- Illiteracy
- Poverty
- Culture
- Learned behaviour patterns and ways of doing things.
- Acquired over generations.
- Customs
- Established pattern of behavior in a society.
Health Propaganda
- Information promoting a health viewpoint or cause,
- often biased or misleading.
Characteristics & Aims
- Appeals to emotions & Persuasive (not reflective)
- Uses fear, urgency, empathy, or hope
- Aims to persuade, not encourage independent judgment or critical thinking
- Influences attitudes and behaviors
- Promotes specific actions such as:
- Exercise
- Balanced diet
- Immunizations
- Smoking cessation
Dissemination
- Active
- Spread by:
- Government agencies
- Non-profits
- Private businesses
- Passive
- Absorbed through:
- Media
- Advertising
- Social influence
Behaviour Change Model
- Ex: Smoking cessation
The stages of change model (cyclical):

- Mnemonic: PC addicted says DARM
- Stages
- Enter
- Precontemplation
- No
- Affected by motivation → can change to maybe
- Contemplation
- Maybe
- Determination (Exit & re-enter at any stage)
- Prepare
- Action
- Action
- Relapse (Exit & re-enter at any stage)
- Maintenance
Disaster Medicine

National Disaster Response Force (NDRF)

- Under Ministry of Home Affairs
- Chairman: Prime minister
Disaster management Cycle


Planning/pre-disaster preparedness phase:
- Disaster mitigation
- Legal action to ↓ impact of disaster
- Long-term measures
- Includes
- structural modifications,
- disaster risk reduction strategies,
- environmental policies.
- Disaster preparedness.
- Ensure readiness
- Training, Mock drills, emergency stockpiling, and early warning systems.
Post disaster response phase:
- Response
- Early response phase (0-6 hrs)
- most crucial
- Rehabilitation.
- Longest phase
- Water supply restoration
- Basic sanitation and personal hygiene
- Food safety measures
- Vector control
Note:
- Haddon matrix: Injury prevention using epidemiological tools.
- m/c type of disaster: Hydrological > Geological.
- m/c disease post disaster: Acute gastroenteritis.
- m/c long-term sequelae post disaster: malnutrition.
- m/c vaccine preventable disease outbreak: measles.
- Vaccine coverage to be ensured: measles & vit. A.
- Vaccine for general population: No vaccine recommended
- Vaccine for health professionals:
- TT, Hep B, Outbreak specific vaccine
Triage
- Red: Immediate attention.
- Yellow: Unlikely to deteriorate for a few hrs.
- Green: Unlikely to deteriorate for a few days.
- Black: Dead persons.
Biomedical Waste Management (BWM)

- Done by Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB).
- Under Ministry of Environment, Forest & Climate Change.

BWM Does Not Cover
- Solid waste.
- E-waste.
- Lead acid batteries.
- Radioactive wastes.
- Construction and demolition waste.
- Hazardous chemicals.
- Hazardous wastes.
- Hazardous microorganisms, genetically engineered microorganisms and cells.
- covid nipa bioterrorism agents
- While normal microbiological agents like staph srep clostridum are biomedical waste
Categories of BWM
Category | Type | Disposal | ㅤ |
Yellow | Infectious, laboratory | Incineration | Non-chlorinated plastic (0.5 micron) bag that is put inside a bin |
Red | Rubber, plastic tube Mnemonic: RePeaT | Recycle, return, re-use (R3) Autoclaving, microwaving, hydroclaving f/b shredding → recovery → not send to landfill | Non-chlorinated plastic (0.5 micron) bag that is put inside a bin |
Blue | Broken glass, metallic ortho implants, pacemakers | ‘’ | Cardboard box/plastic bin |
White | Sharps, metals | Autoclave/dry heat sterilisation → Shredding/ encapsulation → Iron foundries / sanitary landfill waste | Puncture proof translucent white bin |
Yellow Category (Pretreatment Not Required)
ㅤ | ㅤ | ㅤ |
A | Human waste. | ㅤ |
B | Animal waste. | ㅤ |
C | Soiled waste | Dressing waste, cast, plasters (Blood stained). |
D | Discarded medicines | Cytotoxic drugs + consumables. |
E | Chemical waste | ㅤ |
F | Fluid chemical waste: | ㅤ |
ㅤ | ↳ X-ray developer fluid (Silver nitrate) | Returned to manufacturer. |
ㅤ | ↳ Disinfectants (Floor cleaning fluid) | Neutralised & disposed. |
ㅤ | ↳ Body fluids (Except blood) | Disinfected |
G | Gown, line, bedding Mattress | Cut & disinfected with sodium hypochlorite. |
H | Microbiological, laboratory, biotechnological: | Disinfected (mechanical/chemical). • Blood, blood products • blood vacutainers • Blood bag, Syringe with blood • unopened vials • live vaccines |
NOTE:
- A → E
- No pretreatment required
- Incineration
- F, G, H
- Pretreatment required → incineration
- Blood spilled on surface
- Mop with absorbable material, discard in yellow bag
- Decontaminate surface with sodium hypochlorite
- < 10 ml spill → 1:100 dilution
- > 10 ml spill OR culture spill
- 1:10 for first application f/b 1:100 diltution
- Mercury Spill (Broken thermometer)
- Switch off fans
- Remove metallic ornaments
- Do not Broom
- Collect with 2 cardboard piece (Or Xray film)
- Put in tube half filled with water
- Send to Manufacturer
- Wipe floor with Sodium thiosulfate
Black category:
- General waste
- Plastic wrapper of foley’s
Red Category:

- Foley's catheter,
- Urosac bag,
- Blood bag → yellow H
- IV Bottle & Drip Set,
- Heavy duty rubber gloves & surgical gloves,
- With or without blood
- Syringe without needle
- Vacutainer (empty)
- Vacutainer with blood → Yellow H
- Ryle's tube.
Blue Category:

- Broken glass
- Broken ampoules
- Empty vial
- Unopened vial /Live vaccines → Yellow H
- metallic body implants, screws & plates.
- Ortho + Pacemaker
White Category:

- Scalpels,
- Razor blade,
- Suture needle,
- Syringe with fixed needle,
- Syringe without needle → Red
- Lumbar puncture needle,
- Needles from syringe.
Occupational Health
Pneumoconiosis
- Restrictive lung diseases.
- All notifiable except bagassosis.
Range of Dust Particles
Size (micron) | Effect | ㅤ |
5-10 | Lodged in upper respiratory tract | ㅤ |
3-5 | Lodged in lower respiratory tract | Cause pneumoconiosis |
1-3 | Lodged in alveoli | Cause pneumoconiosis |
<1 | Diffusible | ㅤ |
- Note: 1-5 micron sizes cause pneumoconiosis
Types
Disease | Particle | Source |
Silicosis | Silica | • Sand stone, granite, pottery and ceramic industry, • gold, mica and steel industry. |
Asbestosis | Asbestos | • Asbestos cement factory, fireproof textiles. |
Anthracosis (Black lung) | Coal dust | • Coal mines. |
Byssinosis | Cotton dust | • Textile industries. • Cotton business |
Bagassosis | Sugar cane dust (Bagasse) | • Inhalation of Thermoactinomyces sacchari • Bag of sugar |
Silicosis vs Asbestosis
ㅤ | Silicosis | Asbestosis |
Cause | Silica dust | Asbestos fiber |
Affects | upper lung zone | Lower lung zone |
Leads to | Alveolitis | Bronchiolitis |
X-ray | Snow storm appearance | Ground glass appearance |
Association | TB complication | Bronchial Ca → M/C Mesothelioma → Most specific |
ㅤ | silica - snowstorm | AsBastosis - Base, Ground Bronchilolitis, |
Harmful Chemicals
Chemicals | Disease |
Benzene, Ethylene Oxide | Leukemia |
Benzidine | Bladder cancer |
Beryllium, Cadmium, Chromium, Radon, Silica, ionizing radiation, Nickel | Lung cancer |
Arsenic | Skin, lung, liver cancer |
PAH (Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon) | Skin, scrotum and lung cancer Aromatic - skin , scrotum, lungs |
Vinyl chloride (PVC plastic) | Liver cancer |
Wood dust, Nickel, Chromium | Nasal sinus problems Different color() nikker() itt wood() panikk poi sinusitis vann |
Plumbism/Lead Toxicity

- Saturn → Leading planet → 2 rings (cabots, cirum oral pallor)
- Abdominal pain
- Blue gums → Burtonian line
- Drop

Letter | Symptom/Sign |
A | • Anemia with coarse basophilic stippling ↳ ⛔ rRNA degradation • Lead a course NOTE: Fine Basophilic stippling: • Megaloblastic anemia, Thalassemia |
B | • Burtonian lines: ↳ (Bluish lines over gums.) |
C | Constipation, abdominal colic ↳ (AKA painter's colic, Saturnine colic/Dry belly ache) Calcification Bone line (Calcium deposition) ↳ Metaphyseal dense opacity |
D | Drop (Motor nerve palsy) ↳ (wrist drop, foot drop – neuropathy) |
E | Encephalopathy ↳ (infants: ataxia, vomiting, stupor, seizures, coma) |
F | Facial pallor ↳ earliest sign ↳ Most consistent finding ↳ Circumoral |
G | Gout ↳ Saturnine gout |
Sample:
- Blood (Reliable) > Urine
- Mnemonic: Blood Lead
- Single best test
- Serum zinc protoporphyrin
- Most sensitive
- Urinary ALA/coproporphyrin levels
- Screening
- Blood lead levels
- Not more than 10 mcg/dl
- > 70 mcg/dl (Diagnostic).
- CBC and peripheral blood smear
- Bone marrow biopsy
Treatment
- Remove source of lead exposure (primary step)
- Rx: Succimer (DMSA) / Ca EDTA >> BAL (Dimercaprol)
ㅤ | ㅤ | ㅤ |
Mild–Moderate | • 45–69 µg/dL | Succimer (DMSA) |
Severe poisoning | • >70 µg/dL or • with CNS symptoms | EDTA + BAL |
- “Suc-ci-mer for Subclinical, EDTA for Emergency.”
Health Planning, Planning Committees and Health Management Techniques
Health Planning
- An orderly process for:
- Defining community health problems
- Identifying unmet needs
- Surveying resources
- Establishing realistic priority goals
- Projecting administrative action for program purposes
Steps of Planning Cycle
- Analysis of health situation
- Set goals and objectives
- Assessment of resources:
- Manpower
- Money
- Material
- Deciding priorities
- Formulate plan
- Programing and implementation
- Monitoring:
- Analysis of daily routine activities
- Process-directed
- Done by an internal body
- Evaluation:
- Done at the end
- Done by an external body
- Periodic assessment
- Outcome-oriented
Goal vs Objectives vs Target
Objectives | Target | Goal Mnemonic: Ultimate goal |
Planned end point of all activities | A degree of achievement of objectives with time | The ultimate endpoint of all activities directing resources |
SMART (Mnemonic): S - Specific M - Measurable A - Achievable R - Realistic T - Time-bound | ㅤ | Follows all or none phenomenon: can be achieved or not Not constrained by time or resources |
I want that object → Object is an End Point | Target practise → degree of accuracy improve with time | Goal → football → ultimate → Adichal kiitii, illel illa (yes or no) Epzhelum goal adicha mathi |
Monitoring & Evaluation
Monitoring | Evaluation |
Analysis of daily routine activities | Periodic assessment |
Process directed | Outcome directed |
Done by internal audit | Done by external audit |
Evaluation Type | Definition |
Process Evaluation | Examines healthcare delivery actions and adherence to protocols for consistent and efficient service. |
Outcome Evaluation | Focuses on health changes experienced by patients as a result of care. |
Structure Evaluation | Assesses healthcare facility resources and organization. |
Input Evaluation | Concentrates on resources used in healthcare delivery. |
Mental Health Care Act: MHCA 2017
- New legislation for treatment and rights of patients with mental illness.
- Decriminalisation of suicide
- Earlier punished under section 309 of IPC.

National Mental Health Programme

- Covers all types of mental illness.
- National Mental Health Policy: 2014
- Mental health clinics established at district level.
Criteria for Mental Health (IQ)
- Wechsler intelligence scale
- IQ formula: (Mental age / Chronological age) × 100
- Average for child = 90




Wing’s Comprehensive Handicaps, Behaviour and Skills Schedule (HBS)
- Measures:
- abilities
- disabilities

