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Related Concept Videos

Primary Healthcare Services01:30

Primary Healthcare Services

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Primary care promotes wellness and prevents disease. This care includes health promotion, education, protection (such as immunizations), early disease screening, and environmental considerations. Settings providing this type of healthcare include physician offices, public health clinics, school nursing, and community health nursing.
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Levels of Health Promotion and Illness Prevention01:26

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Health promotion allows a person to control the determinants of health, resulting in an improved health status. It enhances the quality of life and reduces premature deaths. Health promotion and illness prevention programs help people make beneficial choices to reduce the risk of disease and disabilities. There are three health promotion and illness prevention levels: primary, secondary, and tertiary prevention.
In primary prevention, actions taken before disease onset prevent the disease from...
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Preventive Healthcare Services01:30

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Preventive healthcare services keep people healthy via frequent check-ups, screening, and counseling. They primarily aid in disease prevention rather than treating an acute or chronic illness. Preventive treatment also keeps individuals productive and energetic, allowing them to work well into their retirement years. Examples of preventive care services include:
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Principles of Disease Surveillance01:26

Principles of Disease Surveillance

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Disease surveillance is the systematic collection, analysis, and interpretation of health data essential to the planning, implementation, and evaluation of public health practice. This process integrates data dissemination to entities responsible for preventing and controlling disease, injury, and disability. Surveillance systems provide crucial information for action, helping public health authorities make informed decisions to manage and prevent outbreaks, ensure public safety, optimize...
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Healthcare Agencies II01:17

Healthcare Agencies II

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There are various healthcare agencies in the United States—some of which are managed by religious institutions and others by different government branches.
Parish nursing is a growing specialty nursing profession that focuses on holistic healthcare, health promotion, and illness prevention. It blends professional nursing practice with a health ministry, focusing on health and healing within the context of a Christian community. Parish nurses serve as health educators, referral sources,...
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Methods Of Healthcare Delivery System01:26

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At the different levels of the healthcare system, we see varying methods of healthcare used. These methods include managed care systems, case management, and primary healthcare.
Managed Care System:
The managed care system is designed to control the cost while maintaining the quality of care. The patient's care from admission to discharge is planned by the primary care provider or the case manager, also known as the gatekeeper. In a managed care system, the number of care providers is...
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jan 8, 2026

Determining Soil-transmitted Helminth Infection Status and Physical Fitness of School-aged Children
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Public Health.

Pamela Roach1, Jennifer D Walker2

  • 1University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada.

Alzheimer'S & Dementia : the Journal of the Alzheimer'S Association
|December 23, 2025
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Engaging Indigenous people living with dementia in research requires intentional, multi-level approaches that uphold self-determination. Community-led ethical principles, such as OCAP® for First Nations, Métis, and Inuit, are crucial for respectful and relevant research partnerships.

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Area of Science:

  • Indigenous Health Research
  • Dementia Care
  • Community-Based Participatory Research

Background:

  • Engaging Indigenous individuals with dementia and their families in research and policy requires specific, intentional strategies.
  • Partnerships with Indigenous communities necessitate a different approach to engagement compared to standard research practices.
  • Upholding Indigenous self-determination is paramount throughout the research process.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To outline the importance of rigorous and intentional approaches for engaging Indigenous people living with dementia and their families in research and policy.
  • To highlight the distinctions between federal research requirements and community-led Indigenous ethical principles.
  • To present examples of commitment to Indigenous self-determination in dementia research.

Main Methods:

  • Consideration of federal research requirements (Tri-Council Policy Statement) and community-led Indigenous ethical principles.
  • Application of distinctions-based approaches: OCAP® (Ownership, Control, Access, and Possession) for First Nations, Métis research principles, and Inuit research principles.
  • Inclusion of Indigenous people with lived experience of dementia at all research stages: design, data collection, analysis, and knowledge mobilization.

Main Results:

  • Authentic engagement requires multi-level involvement to preserve self-determination.
  • Community-led ethical principles (respect, reciprocity, relevance, responsibility) guide ethical research relationships.
  • Successful engagement involves ceremony, traditional Knowledge Keepers, protocols, and co-production of research and knowledge.

Conclusions:

  • Genuine relationships, embedded within communities and including people with dementia, are foundational to ethical research.
  • Upholding Indigenous self-determination is critical when conducting research with Indigenous communities.
  • Co-produced and community-owned research ensures relevance and respect for Indigenous knowledge and protocols.