CVD
CVD
Risks and Prevention
Risks and Prevention
Cancer
100

What does CVD stand for?

Cardiovascular disease

100

Name one major type of CVD

CHD /Cerebrovascular disease / Stroke / Peripheral vascular disease

100

What is one modifiable risk factor of CVD and/or cancer?

Smoking, inactivity, diet, obesity

100

What is one protective factor from CVD and/or cancer?

Exercise, screening, balanced diet

100

What is the definition of cancer?

Uncontrolled cell growth

200

Why is prevalence of CVD increasing even though mortality is decreasing?

People are surviving but living with chronic disease

200

Which group has the highest CVD deaths?

Males

200

Name one lifestyle risk factor of CVD

Smoking / Physical inactivity / Poor diet / High BMI

200

Name a government prevention strategy for either CVD or Cancer?

Tax on cigarettes / SunSmart / Screening programs

200

Which screening tool protects against cervical cancer?

Pap smear (or HPV test)

300

Which population group is diagnosed younger and more likely to die from CVD?

Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander peoples

300

Why are remote populations worse off when it comes to CVD?

Limited access to healthcare + more risk factors

300

Choose a group (ATSI, rural, low SES) and list 2 barriers to health

Cost, access, education, geography

300

How does early screening reduce mortality?

Finds cancer early → easier to treat

300

Why do very remote areas have lower survival rates of both CVD and cancer?

Delayed diagnosis + limited specialist treatment

400

Describe two determinants that contribute to high CVD rates in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and how they increase risk.

socioeconomic disadvantage → ↑ smoking/poor diet; remoteness → ↓ health service access

400

Why is focusing on modifiable risk factors more impactful than treating disease?

Prevents onset → reduces mortality + health-care burden, improves quality of life

400

In one sentence: How can public health campaigns reduce chronic disease inequalities?

Targeted behaviour change in high-risk communities

400

Why is it important to prioritise prevention of chronic disease in younger age groups?

Behaviours form young → prevents lifelong risk factors → reduces future burden & healthcare costs

400

Explain how environmental changes can influence chronic disease prevention. Provide an example.

Access to healthy food/active spaces shapes behaviour → e.g. bike lanes increase physical activity & reduce CVD/diabetes risk

500

Explain why reduced smoking rates have led to falling mortality but not necessarily falling prevalence.

Surviving patients continue to live with chronic complications = long-term morbidity

500

Explain how delayed screening participation leads to inequitable outcomes in remote/ATSI communities.

Later stage diagnosis → fewer treatment options → lower survival

500

Describe how data collection (like AIHW cancer registries) reduces the burden of disease overtime.

Identifies trends/inequities → informs targeted prevention & funding

500

Describe a way each party below could reduce a major health risk: Individual, Community, Government (smoking, diet, inactivity).

Example: Individual (quit programs), Community (local exercise spaces), Government (tobacco tax/laws)

500

Why is a “one-size-fits-all” approach ineffective in chronic disease prevention?

Different groups have different barriers & risk profiles → tailored programs improve equity & effectiveness