This behavior is the leading cause of preventable disease and death in the US
What is tobacco use
Your surroundings and financial conditions contribute to this health determinant.
What is Social & Economic Environment?
This public health function tracks community health status.
What is "Monitor Health"?
This social determinant affects income, employment, and well-being.
What is Economic Stability? (predisposing factor)
This dimension of quality includes facilities, equipment, and staffing.
What is Structure?
Excessive Use of this substance is linked to liver disease and accidents
What is alcohol use?
What is Genetics?
This involves identifying and responding to public health threats.
What is "Diagnose & Investigate"?
Pollution, safety, and resources describe this social factor.
What is Neighborhood & Physical Environment (predisposing factor)?
This dimension of quality refers to how care is delivered.
What is Process?
This type of lifestyle, often involving prolonged sitting, increases chronic disease risk.
What is sedentary lifestyle
Access to this system includes treatment, procedures, and preventive services.
What is Medical Care?
This strategy increases health knowledge and promotes positive behavior change.
What is "Inform, Educate & Empower"?
This reflects how easily someone can see a provider or get services.
What is Access to healthcare (enabling factor)?
This dimension of quality reflects the results of healthcare services.
What is Outcome?
Your food choices and eating patterns fall under this concept.
What is diet & nutrition
Choices like smoking, diet, and exercise fall under this category.
What are Health Related Behaviors?
This function brings together groups to improve public health.
What is "Mobilize Community Partnerships"?
Without this, patients may struggle to reach providers.
What is Access to transportation (enabling factor)?
This metric helps ensure improvements in one area don’t negatively impact another.
What is Balancing Measure?
These types of interventions address root causes before health problems occur.
What is Upstream Intervention?
This model focuses primarily on diagnosing and treating illness.
What is Medical Model?
This activity leads to health-supporting laws and regulations.
What is "Develop Policies"?
This kind of security helps people access health services and essentials.
What is Financial Stability (enabling factor)?
This approach uses analytics and evidence to guide health initiatives.
What is Use data to drive decisions?
These interventions target behaviors and environments after risk factors are established.
What is a midstream intervention?
This model emphasizes outcomes for groups rather than individuals.
What is Population Health Model?
This involves making sure public health regulations are followed.
What is "Enforce Laws"?
This physical characteristic supports stable, healthy lives.
What is Safe & affordable Housing (enabling factor)?
This principle emphasizes using proven medical practices.
What is "Know what works clinically"?
These interventions occur after a health problem has developed.
What is Downstream Intervention?
This term describes when the assumed cause-and-effect relationship is actually backward.
What is Reverse Causality?
This process determines whether health interventions are working.
What is "Evaluate Effectiveness of Programs"?
This kind of security helps people access health services and essentials.
What is Financial Stability (enabling factor)?
This aim is central to providing high-value, reliable healthcare.
What is Prioritize Quality & Safety?