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Thursday 14 January 2016

What is community diagnosis and treatment?



Treating a disease in a patient is the fundamental idea of medicine. Treatment is
based on signs and symptoms of the patient and drawing inference from them.
When this is applied to a community, it is known as community diagnosis.
Community diagnosis may be defined as the pattern of disease in a community
described in terms of the important factors which influence this pattern.
 

The community diagnosis is based on collection and interpretation of relevant
data such as: (a) age and sex distribution of a population; and the distribution of
population by social groups; (b) vital statistical rates such as the birth rate, and
death rates; (c) the incidence and prevalence of diseases of the area. In addition a
doctor must be able to find information on a wide variety of social and economic
factors that may assist him/her in making a community diagnosis. The focus is on
identification of the basic health needs and health problems of the community. The
needs as felt by the community (some of which may have no connection at all with
health) should be next investigated and listed according to the priority for community
treatment.
In the community treatment or in community health action, steps are taken
to meet the health needs of the community by integrating the total account of
resources available and what the people want in the process of community
diagnosis. The actions of community health are reflected in terms of water supply,
immunization, health education, prevention of specific disease, health rights, health
legislations or interventions. Action may be taken at three levels: at the level of
individual, at the level of family, and at the level of community.
A programme of community action must have the following characteristics:
• It must utilize all the available resources
• It must coordinate the efforts of all other agencies in the community, now
termed as inter-sectoral coordination
• It must encourage the full participation of the community in the programme. 


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