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GLOSSARY

GLOSSARY. DIMENSIONS OF HEALTH. PHYSICAL HEALTH - Relates to the efficient functioning of the body and its systems , and includes the physical capacity to perform tasks and physical fitness .

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GLOSSARY

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  1. GLOSSARY

  2. DIMENSIONS OF HEALTH PHYSICAL HEALTH - Relates to the efficient functioning of the body and its systems, and includes the physical capacity to perform tasks and physical fitness. SOCIAL HEALTH - Being able to interact with others and participate in the community in both an independent and cooperative way. MENTAL HEALTH - ‘State of well-being in which the individual realises his or her own abilities, can cope with the normal stresses of life, can work productively and fruitfully, and is able to make a contribution to his or her community.’ (WHO, 2009)

  3. HEALTH STATUS -‘An individual’s or a population’s overall health, taking into account various aspects such as life expectancy, amount of disability and levels of disease risk factors.’ (AIHW,2008) HEALTH - ‘A complete state of physical, social and mental wellbeing, and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity.’ (WHO, 1946)

  4. BURDEN OF DISEASE A measure of the impact of diseases and injuries, specifically it measures the gap between current health status and an ideal situation where everyone lives to an old age free of disease and disability. Burden of disease is measured in a unit called the DALY. Page 10 textbook

  5. HEALTH ADJUSTED LIFE EXPECTANCY ALSO KNOWN AS “HEALTHY LIFE EXPECTANCY” A measure of burden of disease based on life expectancy at birth, but including an adjustment for time spent in poor health. It is the number of years in full health that a person can expect to live, based on current rates of ill health and mortality. The focus of the HALE is years of healthy life. This is opposite to the DALY, which looks at years lost as a result of disability or death.

  6. DISABILITY ADJUSTED LIFE YEARS A measure of burden of disease, one DALY equals one year of healthy life lost due to premature death and time lived with illness, disease or injury.

  7. MORTALITY = DEATH MORTALITY – Deaths in a population MORTALITY RATE – The number of deaths in a group or population from a particular cause, scaled to the size of that population, per unit time U5 MORTALITY RATE (U5MR) -refers to the number of children who die before the age of 5 years.It is measured per 1000 live births over an average of the past five years. MATERNAL MORTALITY RATE - refers to the number of deaths during pregnancy or childbirth.

  8. LIFE EXPECTANCY Or “PROJECTED LIFE EXPECTANCY” ‘An indication of how long a person can expect live, it is the number of years of life remaining to a person at a particular age if death rates do not change.’ (AIHW, 2008)

  9. MORBIDITY ‘Refers to ill health in an individual and the levels of ill health in a population or group.’ (AIHW, 2008) Morbidity rates are often quoted in terms of prevalence and incidence. PREVALENCE -Prevalence refers to the number of cases of a given disease or condition at a particular time. INCIDENCE - Incidence refers to the number of new cases during a given period. Page 9-Graph

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