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Health Protection: Principles and practice [Minkštas viršelis]

Edited by (Consultant in Health Protection, Director ), Edited by (Consultant in Health Protection, Cheshire and Merseyside Public Health England Centre, Liverpool, UK), Edited by , Edited by , Edited by , Edited by (Consultant in Communicable Disease Control and Deputy Director for Health Protection)
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 474 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 246x171x25 mm, weight: 842 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 25-Aug-2016
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0198745478
  • ISBN-13: 9780198745471
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 474 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 246x171x25 mm, weight: 842 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 25-Aug-2016
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0198745478
  • ISBN-13: 9780198745471
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
A practical guide for practitioners working at all levels in public health and health protection. It is aimed at individuals training in health protection and public health including those with a non-specialist background.

Health Protection: Principles and practice is a practical guide for practitioners working at all levels in public health and health protection, including those with a non-specialist background. It is the first textbook in health protection to address all three domains within the field (communicable disease control; emergency preparedness, resilience and response (EPRR); and environmental public health) in a comprehensive and integrated manner. Written by leading practitioners in the field, the book is rooted in a practice-led, all-hazards approach, which allows for easy real-world application of the topics discussed.

The chapters are arranged in six sections, which begin with an in-depth introduction to the principles of health protection and go on to illuminate the three key elements of the field by providing: case studies and scenarios to describe common and important issues in the practice of health protection; health protection tools, which span epidemiology and statistics, infection control, immunisation, disease surveillance, and audit and service improvement; and evidence about new and emerging health protection issues.

It includes more than 100 health protection checklists (SIMCARDs), covering infections from anthrax to yellow fever, non-infectious diseases emergencies and environmental hazards. Written from first-hand experience of managing communicable diseases these provide practical, stand-alone quick reference guides for in-practice use.

Both the topical content of Health Protection: Principles and practice, and the clearly described health protection principles the book provides, makes it a highly relevant resource for wider public health and health protection professionals in this continually evolving field.

Recenzijos

Overall, I would recommend [ Health Protection: Principles and Practice] as an introduction, easy refresher and handy quick reference. * Anil Adisesh, Occupational Medicine * Health Protection: Principles and Practice is likely to be of value to a wider, global audience because of its all-hazards scope: it covers communicable disease surveillance/control, emergency preparedness, resilience and response, and environmental public health activities that in many countries are the responsibility of different organisations. * Health Protection Report, Public Health England * This book is easy both to read and to use as a day-to-day reference. Use of sub-sections and bullet points makes it easy for the reader to quickly locate the desired information. In many chapters scenarios are used to put the reader into real life situations. I think that these would be particularly valuable as a teaching aid for trainees, but they are relevant to all readers. * Philip Milner, Journal of Hospital Infection * The book contains useful case studies on dealing with outbreaks and more than a hundred health protection checklists crossing the gamut of injections disease from avian influenza to viral haemorrhagic fevers. It would be more than worth its price for these alone. * William Hatchett, Environmental Health News * This book was really well thought out. To an impressive degree, because many textbooks are dense, wordy, appealing to an enthusiast for the subject, but a slog for non-experts. By contrast, this one seems designed precisely to meet all the needs of someone on their first day in a health protection job, worried they will be faced with a really difficult scenario. * Andy Beckingham, Public Health Today *

Abbreviations xvi
About the Editors xix
List of Contributors
xxi
Section 1 The basics
1 What is health protection?
3(6)
Sam Ghebrehewet
Alex G. Stewart
Ian Rufus
2 Who is involved in health protection?
9(5)
Sam Ghebrehewet
Alex G. Stewart
3 Key principles and practice of health protection
14(9)
Sam Ghebrehewet
Alex G. Stewart
Ian Rufus
4 The basics of infection microbiology
23(10)
Paul Shears
David Harvey
Section 2 Infectious disease control case studies and scenarios
5 Vero cytotoxigenic Echerichia coli (VTEC) O157
33(10)
Ken Lamden
Sam Rowell
Andrew Fox
6 Hepatitis B
43(12)
Rita Huyton
Sam Ghebrehewet
David Baxter
7 Hospital multi-resistant infections
55(9)
David Harvey
Andrea Ledgerton
8 Influenza
64(9)
Joanna Cartwright
Anjila Shah
Sam Ghebrehewet
9 Legionnaires' disease
73(9)
Nick Phin
Falguni Naik
Elaine Stanford
Sam Ghebrehewet
10 Measles
82(10)
David Baxter
Gill Marsh
Sam Ghebrehewet
11 Meningitis and meningococcal disease
92(13)
Sam Ghebrehewet
David Conrad
Gill Marsh
12 Tuberculosis
105(14)
Musarrat Afza
Marko Petrovic
Sam Ghebrehewet
Section 3 Emergency preparedness, resilience and response (EPRR), and business continuity case studies and scenarios
13 Business continuity: illustrated by hospital ward closures
119(9)
Alex G. Stewart
Sam Ghebrehewet
David Baxter
14 Fire and fear: immediate and long-term health aspects
128(11)
Laura Mitchetn
Henrietta Harrison
Alex G. Stewart
15 Flooding and health: immediate and long-term implications
139(12)
Angle Bone
Alan Wilton
Alex G. Stewart
Section 4 Environmental Public Health practice case studies and scenarios
16 Ambient air pollution and health
151(12)
John Reid
Giovanni Leonardi
Alex G. Stewart
17 Cancer and chronic disease clusters
163(14)
Alex G. Stewart
Sam Ghebrehewet
Richard Jarvis
Section 5 Health protection tools
18 Hospital and community infection prevention and control (IPC)
177(12)
Paul Shears
Andrea Ledgerton
Rita Huyton
19 Immunization
189(15)
David Baxter
Sam Ghebrehewet
Gill Marsh
20 Incidents and outbreak management
204(12)
Sam Ghebrehewet
Alex G. Stewart
21 Health protection surveillance
216(12)
Roberto Vivancos
Giovanni Leonardi
Alex J. Elliott
22 Essential statistics and epidemiology
228(12)
Paul Cleary
Sam Ghebrehewet
David Baxter
23 Conducting epidemiological studies in health protection
240(13)
Sam Ghebrehewet
Paul Cleary
Merav Kliner
Ewan Wilkinson
24 Using evidence to guide practice in health protection
253(6)
Merav Kliner
Ewan Wilkinson
Sam Ghebrehewet
25 Quality assurance and audit
259(12)
Amal Rushdy
Sam Ghebrehewet
Section 6 New and emerging health protection issues
26 New and emerging infectious diseases
271(9)
Alex G. Stewart
Sam Ghebrehewet
Peter MacPherson
27 New and emerging environmental hazards and situations
280(6)
Alec Dobney
Greg Hodgson
28 Global disasters and risk reduction strategies
286(8)
Virginia Murray
Amina Aitsi-Selmi
Alex G. Stewart
29 Sustainability
294(8)
Richard Jarvis
Angle Bone
Alex G. Stewart
Appendices
Appendix 1 SIMCARDs for dealing with infectious diseases
302(81)
Appendix 1.1 Concise SIMCARDs providing information on infections with public health significance in the UK
303(44)
Appendix 1.2 Abridged SIMCARDs providing information on less common infections with potential public health significance in the UK
347(12)
Appendix 1.3 Brief SIMCARDs providing basic information on relatively rare infections with low public health significance in the UK
359(24)
Appendix 2 SIMCARDs for dealing with emergency situations
383(18)
Appendix 3 SIMCARDs for dealing with environmental hazards and situations
401(20)
Appendix 4 Health Protection Legislation (England) Guidance 2010: Notifiable Diseases
421(4)
Appendix 5 The reporting of causative agents from local laboratory to local health protection team (PHE)
425(4)
Glossary 429(8)
Index 437
Dr Ghebrehewet is Director of Health Protection in Cheshire and Merseyside, UK. He graduated from medical school in Ethiopia, where he worked as a GP and Regional Director of Public Health Programmes. Dr Ghebrehewet has extensive experience in communicable disease control and health protection, with specialist interests in immunisation, Emergency Preparedness Resilience and Response (EPRR) and environmental public health practice. He has published widely, presented at regional, national and international conferences and is the lead for Health Protection in the Masters of Public Health at the University of Liverpool and lead public health trainer in Cheshire & Merseyside.



Dr Stewart is a Glaswegian born, bred and educated. Following a successful career of around 20 years in the northern mountains of Pakistan as a rural GP, Alex returned to the UK where he trained in Public Health in Cheshire and Merseyside. He was a Consultant in Health Protection for eleven years, with special interest in the acute and long-term effects of the environment on health. He has investigated and responded to many complex public health issues, and has developed an understanding of how to support local and national agencies and the public in the face of limited information, incomplete understanding and often great uncertainty.

Dr Baxter has been a Consultant in Communicable Disease Control for 20 years, working in the Stockport and Greater Manchester area. Over the last 25 years he has run successfully the UK National Immunisation Conference for Health Care Workers; provided a specialist immunisation clinics at the District General Hospital seeing around 15,000 patients; and led childhood and adult immunisation programmes and training in Stockport. During this time, Dr Baxter contributed to the delivery of a consistently high childhood immunisation uptake rates, and Stockport achieved highest influenza vaccination uptake in pregnant women in the country over the last four years. Dr Baxter has published widely and supervised several PhD theses.



Dr Shears is former consultant microbiologist and Director of Infection Control Arrowe Park Wirral University Hospital, with a special interest in the epidemiology and control of health care associated infections. Dr Shears was previously senior lecturer in medical microbiology at Liverpool University/Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, with postgraduate teaching responsibilities and public health microbiology projects in Sudan and Bangladesh. He was a member of WHO working groups on antimicrobial resistance, and public health laboratory development. He is the author of over 60 peer reviewed publications, has contributed chapters in several books, and is an Assistant Editor of the Journal of Hospital Infection. In the 1980's he was a medical officer in refugee programmes in Somalia, Ethiopia, Rwanda and Lebanon.



David Conrad is a Consultant in Public Health at Hertfordshire County Council. He holds an honorary research post at the University of Liverpool and has published papers in several peer reviewed journals. In collaboration with colleagues from the Centre for Men's Health at Leeds Metropolitan University, he has edited three books: Men's Health: How To Do It (Radcliffe), Promoting Men's Mental Health (Radcliffe) and Sports-Based Health Interventions: Case Studies from Around the World (Springer).



Dr Kliner was born and educated in Glasgow, Scotland. She graduated from University of Leeds with a degree in Medicine, and a BA in Healthcare Ethics. She has an interested in infectious diseases, and in particular TB and HIV, which developed during clinical training, guideline development work with WHO, and academic work within Good Shepherd Hospital in Swaziland, with the University of Leeds. She currently works as a Consultant in Communicable Disease Control in Greater Manchester.