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CM1.1-10 | Foundations of Health, Disease and Prevention — Graded Quiz

Graded 10 questions · Untimed · 2 attempts

Click any question card to reveal the correct answer.

Q1 CM1.5 1 pt

A state health department notes that in several districts, tobacco use has not yet become common. Rather than targeting existing smokers, they launch a school-based programme to prevent adolescents from ever starting to smoke. This is an example of:

A Primary prevention — specific protection via behavioural counselling
B Primordial prevention — stopping risk factors from establishing in the population
C Secondary prevention — early detection of nicotine dependence
D Health promotion without a specific level designation

Correct. Preventing tobacco from ever becoming established in an adolescent population is primordial prevention — upstream of primary prevention.

Primordial prevention acts before a risk factor has become established in a population — it prevents the emergence of behavioural or social risk factors (tobacco initiation), not just their consequences. This is distinct from primary prevention, which acts after a risk factor exists to prevent disease.

Primordial = stop risk factors from emerging (before anyone smokes). Primary = prevent disease in people already at risk (existing smokers). Secondary = detect early dependence. The school programme acts before tobacco use is even established — primordial.

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Q2 CM1.7 1 pt

The Crude Death Rate (CDR) is expressed as deaths per 1,000 mid-year population. A district with CDR = 12 and IMR = 50 is being compared to a district with CDR = 6 and IMR = 70. Which statement is MOST accurate?

A District 1 has worse overall health since its CDR is higher
B District 2 has worse child survival despite a lower CDR
C CDR and IMR measure identical phenomena — both indicate overall mortality
D District 2's CDR is lower because it has better healthcare facilities

Correct. A low CDR can reflect a young population, not necessarily good health. District 2's higher IMR reveals poor child survival despite a lower CDR.

CDR is affected by age structure — a young population has a lower CDR even if health services are poor. IMR specifically measures child survival. District 2's low CDR may reflect a younger population, while its high IMR reveals poor child health outcomes — demonstrating that multiple indicators must be interpreted together, not in isolation.

CDR is heavily influenced by age structure — younger populations have lower CDRs regardless of healthcare quality. IMR is a more specific indicator of child health and care quality. District 2's high IMR despite low CDR suggests a young demographic masking poor child survival.

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Q3 CM1.7 1 pt

The Total Fertility Rate (TFR) is defined as:

A Total live births in a year divided by mid-year population × 1,000
B Average number of children a woman would bear if she experienced current age-specific fertility rates throughout her reproductive life
C Number of live births per 1,000 women aged 15–49 years per year
D Number of pregnancies (including stillbirths) per married woman per year

Correct. TFR is the sum of age-specific fertility rates across the reproductive age span — representing lifetime births per woman at current fertility levels.

TFR is a synthetic period measure — it estimates the average number of children a hypothetical woman would have if she experienced the current age-specific fertility rates (ASFRs) at each year of her reproductive life (15–49). India's TFR (NFHS-5) is approximately 2.0, just at replacement level.

TFR is not a simple annual count or ratio. It is a synthetic measure using current ASFRs to project lifetime fertility per woman. Option A describes the Crude Birth Rate; Option C describes the General Fertility Rate; Option D incorrectly includes stillbirths and limits to married women.

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Q4 CM1.4 1 pt

A 35-year-old man has known hypertension but feels well and takes no medication. He has no symptoms. In the natural history of disease framework, he is currently in which phase?

A Prepathogenesis — before the agent acts on the host
B Subclinical (inapparent) disease — pathological change without symptoms
C Clinical disease — symptomatic and in need of treatment
D Outcome phase — disability or recovery after clinical disease

Correct. Known hypertension without symptoms = subclinical disease. Pathological change is present but the disease has not become clinically apparent (no symptoms, complications, or disability).

Hypertension in an asymptomatic individual represents the subclinical phase — measurable pathological change (elevated BP, early vascular remodelling) exists, but the patient has no symptoms. This phase is the target for secondary prevention (screening, early detection) — the man would benefit from BP measurement and treatment initiation.

Prepathogenesis is before hypertension develops. Clinical disease requires symptoms or complications. Outcome phase follows clinical disease. Asymptomatic documented hypertension = subclinical — the phase where screening makes the most difference.

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Q5 CM1.6 1 pt

The Ottawa Charter for Health Promotion (1986) identified five action areas. Which of the following is NOT one of them?

A Building healthy public policy
B Reorienting health services
C Providing free universal healthcare insurance
D Strengthening community action

Correct. Universal health insurance is not an Ottawa Charter action area. The five areas are: healthy public policy, supportive environments, community action, personal skills development, and reorienting health services.

The five Ottawa Charter action areas are: (1) Build healthy public policy, (2) Create supportive environments, (3) Strengthen community action, (4) Develop personal skills, (5) Reorient health services. Universal health insurance is not one of them — it may follow from healthy public policy, but is not itself one of the five action areas.

Ottawa Charter (1986) five areas: healthy public policy + supportive environments + community action + personal skills + reorienting health services. Health insurance is a financing mechanism, not one of the five charter action areas.

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Q6 CM1.7 1 pt

Which of the following is a POSITIVE health indicator (measuring wellness rather than illness)?

A Proportional Mortality Rate
B Case Fatality Rate
C Sickness Absence Rate from workplaces
D Life Expectancy at Birth

Correct. Life expectancy at birth is a positive health indicator — it measures longevity, a dimension of well-being, not disease or death directly.

Positive health indicators measure the presence of health (well-being, functionality, longevity) rather than the burden of disease or death. Life expectancy at birth is a positive indicator. Proportional Mortality Rate, Case Fatality Rate, and Sickness Absence Rate are all negative indicators (measuring death or disease burden).

Positive indicators measure wellness and longevity (e.g., life expectancy). Negative indicators measure mortality (PMR, CFR) or morbidity (sickness absence). Life expectancy is the key positive indicator to know.

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Q7 CM1.2 1 pt

A weaver's community in a tribal area has been practising unsafe water storage for generations, leading to waterborne disease outbreaks every monsoon. A public health intervention creates covered ferro-cement water tanks and ensures chlorination. This intervention primarily targets which determinant of health?

A Biological determinants — genetic susceptibility of the community
B Behavioural determinants — improving hand hygiene practice
C Physical environmental determinants — safe water supply infrastructure
D Healthcare service determinants — increasing clinic access during outbreaks

Correct. Safe water tanks and chlorination modify the physical environment — removing the waterborne disease vehicle regardless of individual behaviour.

Determinants of health include biological (genetic), behavioural (lifestyle choices), physical environment (water, air, housing infrastructure), social/economic, and healthcare services. Constructing covered tanks and chlorination targets the physical environment determinant — changing the water supply infrastructure to eliminate the vector of disease.

Determinants: biological (genes), behavioural (hygiene habits), physical environment (water/housing), socioeconomic, healthcare access. Infrastructure change (tanks + chlorination) = physical environment determinant.

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Q8 CM1.10 1 pt

Research in primary care found that doctors interrupted patients' opening statements after an average of 18 seconds. The most direct consequence of this pattern documented in studies is:

A Increased patient satisfaction due to shorter consultations
B Patients fail to mention the concern that was actually most important to them
C Improved diagnostic accuracy by focusing on the primary complaint
D Reduced consultation time with no effect on clinical outcomes

Correct. Early interruption means patients don't finish expressing all concerns, including sometimes their primary concern — a direct communication-quality failure with diagnostic implications.

The Beckman & Frankel (1984) study found that early interruption led patients to redirect their narrative to the doctor's focus, often failing to reveal additional concerns — including the main reason for the visit. Studies show that allowing patients to complete their opening statement rarely takes more than 90 seconds and significantly improves diagnostic yield.

Interrupting patients at 18 seconds does not improve accuracy or satisfaction — it causes patients to lose their narrative thread, miss mentioning key concerns, and feel unheard. Allowing the full opening statement (usually <2 minutes) improves diagnostic yield.

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Q9 CM1.3 1 pt

The web of causation model (MacMahon & Pugh) for disease was proposed primarily to address the limitation of which earlier model?

A The natural history of disease model (Leavell & Clark)
B The single-cause (germ theory) model of disease
C The social determinants of health model (Dahlgren & Whitehead)
D The health belief model (Rosenstock)

Correct. The web of causation extended beyond germ theory's one-cause → one-disease model to represent the complex, multifactorial causal network of chronic diseases.

The web of causation acknowledged that most diseases — particularly chronic non-communicable diseases — have multiple, interacting causes rather than a single necessary cause. It addressed the limitation of the germ theory model, which posited one pathogen → one disease. The web captures the complex interplay of genetic, behavioural, environmental, and social factors.

Web of causation (MacMahon & Pugh) challenges single-cause germ theory by showing disease results from interacting networks of causes. Natural history of disease describes disease course over time; social determinants model describes societal layers; health belief model describes individual illness behaviour.

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Q10 CM1.5 1 pt

A MBBS intern at a PHC is conducting a growth monitoring session for children under 5. When a child's weight-for-age falls below -2 SD on the WHO growth chart, the intern plots it and plans follow-up. This activity exemplifies which level of prevention?

A Primordial — addressing societal nutrition policy
B Primary — specific nutritional supplementation
C Secondary — early detection of malnutrition for prompt intervention
D Tertiary — rehabilitation of a severely wasted child

Correct. Growth monitoring to detect early malnutrition using growth charts = secondary prevention (early detection and prompt intervention).

Growth monitoring at PHC is secondary prevention — it uses a screening tool (weight-for-age growth chart) to detect early/subclinical malnutrition before severe complications develop, enabling prompt treatment. Primary prevention would be ensuring adequate diet (supplementation, dietary diversification). Tertiary would be NRC-based rehabilitation for severe acute malnutrition.

Primary prevention prevents malnutrition from occurring (supplementation, dietary diversification). Secondary prevention detects it early before severe complications (growth monitoring). Tertiary treats severe malnutrition and prevents disability (NRC rehabilitation). This intern is doing early detection = secondary.

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