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Glossary of public health terms
Public Health unfortunately uses an awful lot of acronyms, abbreviations
and unnecessarily complicated and misleading terms. In an effort to
unscramble the code, some of the main offenders are listed below, with links
to further resources.
Click on the letters above to jump to different sections of the glossary,
or press Ctrl-F to search within this page.
Acute Trust An NHS
organisation providing secondary and/or
tertiary care, often based in hospitals
Links:
Structure of
the NHS
Bronze (Operational) Command
Operational level of command during a major incident. Bronze command
centres are usually based on-site at the incident and will feed back up to
Silver and Gold Commands
Links: Health protection
(internal) |
NHS Emergency planning guidance 2005 (DH, October 2005)
CCDC Consultant in
Communicable Disease Control. A health protection consultant usually
employed in a local HPU. The CCDC receives formal
'notifications' of diseases
Links: Health protection page
(internal) | Public Health training
(internal)
CDC Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the US
equivalent of the HPA
Links: CDC |
Health protection page (internal)
CfI Centre for Infections, Health Protection
Agency
Links: HPA CfI
pages | Health protection page
(internal)
CHaPD Chemical Hazards and Poisons
Division. A division of the Centre for Radiation, Chemical and
Environmental Hazards (CRCEH) at the Health Protection Agency
(HPA). Also sometimes known as DCHP (Division of Chemical Hazards
and Poisons)
Links: HPA
CHaPD pages | HPA CRCEH
pages | Health protection page
(internal)
Choose and Book IT-based system designed to allow NHS
patients a choice in who provides their secondary care if
they are referred by their GP to hospital. In time should allow
patients to access and alter their booking by telephone and internet.
Part of the 'NHS Connecting for Health' IT strategy.
Links: DH Choose and Book
site | NHS Connecting
for Health
CMO Chief Medical Officer. A Government-appointed
doctor who acts as principal medical adviser to the DH and
professional head of medical staff in the UK Accompanied by Chief Nursing
and Chief Dental Officers.
Links:
CMO page
Commission Design, purchase and
implement a service, usually tailored to a local population's needs, e.g. by
first conducting a health needs assessment.
Commissioning has in the recent past been done by PCTs
but will soon be shifted to GP practices under Practice-based
Commissioning
DCHP See CHaPD, above
DH Department of Health,
a department of the English Government. There has recently been
devolution of health departments in the UK so each individual nation
(England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland) have semi-autonomous
departments
Links: Department of Health |
Scottish Executive
Health Dept |
National Assembly for Wales Health & Social Care Dept |
NI Dept of Health, Social Services and
Public Safety
DIPC (pronounced 'dip-see') Director of
Infection Prevention and Control. A doctor or nurse appointed in an
NHS Trust to oversee infection control. Often
takes some legal responsibility along with the hospital Board for any
hospital-acquired infections
DPH Director of Public Health. A
local Public Health consultant, usually employed in a PCT
(although SHA-level DPHs also exist) to oversee Public
Health issues in the local population
Links: Public Health training
(internal)
EHO Environmental Health Officer. An
employee of the local authority, involved in food-borne disease outbreaks
amongst other things. Works closely with the local HPU
Links: Chartered Institute of
Environmental Health | Public Health
training (internal)
Epidemic Disease in a population which
gives rise to a higher than expected number of cases of that disease or
which is clustered in space or time
Links: Health protection page
(internal)
F1, F2 etc See
Foundation training
Foundation training New training
grades of junior doctor described in the Modernising Medical
Careers programme. The first year of work after medical school is
F1, and the second (replacing the SHO grade) F2.
Also sometimes referred to as FHO (foundation house officer) or FY
(foundation year) 1 or 2.
Links: NHS Modernising
Medical Careers | Public Health training
(internal)
FPH Faculty of Public Health, a Faculty
of the Royal College of Physicians. Sets the specialist exams (MFPH)
in Public Health training
Links: Faculty of Public Health |
Public Health training (internal)
FTSTA Fixed term specialty training appointment. A
one-year post equivalent to ST1 or ST2, but outside a
formal training scheme. Any subsequent ST programme entered into is
reduced by the number of years' (max 2) FTSTA undertaken. Part of the
MMC programme, equivalent to the old LAT
post.
Links: Public Health training
(internal) | A day in the life of a PH trainee
(internal)
Gold (Strategic) Command Strategic
level of command during a major incident. Usually sits physically far
removed from an incident, in a regional or national centre. Members of Gold
Command include the health advice team (HAT). Sits above
Silver (Tactical) and Bronze
(Operational) commands
Links: Health protection
(internal) |
NHS Emergency planning guidance 2005 (DH, October 2005)
Green Book Common name for DH book
entitled 'Immunisation against infectious disease' which describes the UK
immunisation schedule
Links:
Green Book | Health protection page
(internal) | My version of UK
immunisation schedule (internal, pdf, 41kb)
H5N1 The subtype of influenza A causing
avian influenza in the early 21st century
Links: Flu pandemic planning
(internal)
Health advice team (HAT) Team which sits
at Gold command during a major incident to provide
expert advice on health issues to a multidisciplinary command group.
Superseded JHAC and superseded itself by the
STAC in April 2007 (just to keep you on your toes).
Links: Health protection
page (internal) |
NHS Emergency planning guidance 2005 (DH, October 2005) |
STAC advice (DH, April 2007)
Health equity audit (HEA) An assessment
of equity of provision of, and access to, healthcare within a population.
For example, are individuals living within a particular town less likely to
have access to cardiac investigations than those in a similar, neighbouring
town? Do local deprived populations access healthcare as readily as more
affluent populations?
Links: Smoking cessation HEA
(Internal) | Public Health
datasets - neighbourhood profiling (Internal link) |
DH HEA page |
ERPHO HEA page |
Community health profiles
Health promotion The practice of attempting to improve the
health of a population, through methods such as education or legislation
Links: Health promotion page
(internal)
Health protection The practice of
preventing or reducing disease in a population, e.g. by controlling
outbreaks of communicable disease
Links: Health
protection page (internal)
HIA Health impact assessment. An assessment made on an
intervention (e.g. the building of a large chemical plant) to look at the
immediate and chronic impacts on health of the local population
Links:
NICE HIA
website (archive - no longer maintained)
HNA Health needs assessment. An
assessment made on a population to ascertain if and how health could be
improved within that population
Links:
HNA at
Huntercombe (internal) |
HNA: a practical
guide (NICE, June 2005)
HPA Health Protection Agency. An
independent government-funded agency in England with responsibility for
health protection functions. Independent of
the NHS, but still receives most of its funding from the Department of
Health. In Ireland, refers to the Health Promotion Agency
Links: Health
protection page (internal) | HPA website
HPU Health Protection Unit. A local
Unit of the Health Protection Agency
HRG Healthcare resource group. A
system of coding used in health service data to identify and group similar
healthcare interventions. It is designed to help service planning by
providing relatively detailed statistics on interventions provided at
secondary and tertiary centres, and
will thus underpin the move to practice-based commissioning
and payment by results
Links: Public
Health datasets - health service activity (Internal link) |
HRG pages (NHS
Information Centre) |
HRG statistics (HES online)
Index of multiple deprivation (IMD)
A
quantitative measure of deprivation for a specific geographic area, e.g. a
super output area (SOA). The deprivation index is measured in certain
'domains' such as employment deprivation
Links:
Public Health datasets - neighbourhood profiling (Internal link) |
DCLG IMD pages
(Dept for Communities and Local Govt) |
National Statistics
site: SOA
JHAC Joint Health Advisory Cell.
An advisory body which used to sit at Gold (Strategic)
Command during major incidents but which has firstly superseded by the
HAT (health advice team) and, more recently, the
STAC (scientific and technical advice cell)
Links:
Health protection
page (internal) |
NHS Emergency planning guidance 2005 (DH, October 2005) |
STAC advice (DH, April 2007)
JSNA Joint Strategic Needs Assessment. Legal duty of
Primary Care
Trusts and Local Authorities in England to formally assess needs in
health and social care, to instruct commissioning of local services.
Introduced in the Commissioning Framework for Health and Wellbeing in 2007
Links: Policy and legislation (internal) |
Commissioning framework for health & well-being (DH, March 2007)
|
JSNA guidance (DH, December 2007)
LA Local Authority, e.g. District Councils
LAT Locum Appointment for Training.
A Specialist Registrar-level post limited in time,
usually to a maximum of 1 year
Links: Public
Health training (internal)
MFPH Member of the
Faculty of Public Health. Exams which must be sat
in order to complete specialist training, consisting of Part A and Part B
(the OSPHE)
Links: MFPH exams
(internal) | MFPH part
A tips (internal) |
Public Health training (internal)
MMC Modernising Medical Careers. A
process being undertaken currently to update medical training structure in
the UK. Will see the end of House Officer grades, replacing them with
Foundation (F1, F2) years instead.
Specialist Registrar grades are being replaced by
Specialist Training (ST) posts
Links: NHS Modernising
Medical Careers |
Public Health training (internal)
MPH Masters in Public Health. A
degree needed to complete specialist training in Public Health, either taken
as part of an SpR or SpT rotation, or
independently. An MSc (Masters in Science) in a similar subject (e.g.
Public Health and Epidemiology) is usually regarded as equivalent
Links: Public
Health training (internal) |
Noticeboard
(internal)
MTAS Medical Training Application Service. System for
applying for Foundation and ST
jobs under the MMC programme.
Links: Medical Training Application
Service website |
Public Health training (internal)
MSc Masters in Science. See MPH for
relevance to Public Health
NHS The National Health
Service, the publicly funded healthcare system in the UK. Run by the
Department of Health
Links: Main NHS website |
Structure of
the NHS
NHS Direct Telephone and internet advice service run by the
NHS, available 24 hours a day (0845 46 47)
Links: NHS Direct
NICE National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence.
A Government-funded (but theoretically independent) organisation set up
primarily to assess the efficacy and value-for-money of treatments provided
by the NHS. Issues guidelines on specific areas of clinical care.
Has recently merged with the Health Development Agency (HDA), so should also
provide Public Health guidance in the future
Links: NICE
Notifiable Disease A disease which the diagnosing clinician
has a statutory (legal) responsibility to notify to the correct authority
(the local CCDC in the UK). They are
generally diseases which have significant public health implications, such
as highly infectious diseases
Links:
HPA
list of notifiable diseases |
Health protection
page (internal)
Operational planning Detailed,
practical plans. An operational plan should give details on exactly
what actions individuals should take and how something should be carried out
in practice (cf strategic plans)
Links: Flu
pandemic planning (internal)
OSPHE Objective Structured Public
Health Exam. A structured exam, similar in style to a medical
Objective Structured Clinical Exam (OSCE), which now forms Part B of the
MFPH exams
Links: MFPH exams
(internal) | Public
Health training (internal)
Outbreak An epidemic
Pandemic An epidemic
occurring over a very large area
Payment by results (PbR) A system to set
tariffs for the purchase of healthcare in the NHS, currently care purchased
from secondary care providers by PCTs,
although GP practices may take over this purchasing role in the
practice-based commissioning (PBC) reforms
Links:
DH PbR pages |
2006/7 tariff
PCT Primary Care Trust. An NHS
Trust responsible for commissioning and providing
primary care for a local population. Their role is due to change
following recent DH recommendations
Links:
Structure of
the NHS |
Reconfiguration details (DH)
Performance management Assessment of the state of completion
of pre-specified objectives. In practice, performance management often
involves an active role in encouraging completion of the objectives e.g. by
setting and monitoring 'targets', rewarding for successful completion, or
fining for non-completion
Practice-based commissioning (PBC)
A new
system currently being phased in whereby individual or groups of GP
practices directly commission healthcare using their own
budgets. PCTs will oversee this process.
Tariffs paid are based on the Payment by Results system.
Links:
DH PBC pages |
2006/7 tariff
Primary care First tier of healthcare
provided in the UK, including General (family) Practice, District Nursing,
Pharmacists, Dentists and other care providers, usually local to the
population served. Currently organised by local Primary
Care Trusts (PCTs)
Primary immunisations ('imms') Immunisations carried out
routinely in the first few months of life
Links:
Green Book |
Health
protection page (internal) |
My version
of UK immunisation schedule (internal, pdf, 41kb)
QOF (Quality and Outcomes Framework)
A
system to measure and reward quality of primary care
provision through extensive data collection from GP practices.
Links: Public
Health datasets - health service activity (Internal link) |
DH QOF pages | QOF
statistics
Secondary care Second
tier of healthcare provided in the UK, involving emergency and specialist
referral and treatment (usually located in hospitals), provided by
Acute Trusts
SHA Strategic Health Authority.
Regional authorities which oversee the work of Primary Care
Trusts and Acute Trusts within their area and link
more directly with the Department of Health. SHAs
are in the process of being restructured to cover larger areas
Links:
Structure of
the NHS |
Reconfiguration details (DH)
Silver (Tactical) command Middle level
of response during a major incident. The silver command centre is
usually local to the incident, but not on site, thus in theory protecting it
from any physical risk posed by the incident itself. Sits between
Gold and Bronze commands
Links:
Health protection (internal) |
NHS Emergency planning guidance 2005 (DH, October 2005)
SHO Senior House Officer. Grade of junior doctor,
above (Pre-registration) House Officer, and beneath
Specialist Registrar. Being replaced by Foundation (F2) posts as
part of Modernising Medical Careers
Links: Public
Health training (internal)
SpR Specialist Registrar.
Intermediate grade of junior doctor undertaking specialist training, just
beneath Consultant level. There are SpRs in all major medical
disciplines, including Public Health. Due to be phased out and
replaced by Specialist Training (ST) posts under MMC
Links: Public
Health training (internal) |
A day in the life of a PH
trainee (internal)
SpT Specialist Trainee. In Public
Health, refers to non-medical trainees undergoing specialist training
Links: Public
Health training (internal) |
A day in the life of a PH
trainee (internal)
ST/StR Specialist Training/Trainee. New
training scheme for medical specialties, including public health, for jobs
starting August 2007 onwards, as part of the MMC
programme. Replaces SpR and SpT
posts.
Links: Public
Health training (internal) |
A day in the life of a PH
trainee (internal)
STAC Scientific and technical advice cell. Group
of specialists at Gold command, usually including a public health consultant, during a
major emergency. Replaced the Health Advice Team (HAT) and, before that, the
Joint Health
Advisory Cell (JHAC).
Links: Health protection (Internal) |
NHS Emergency planning guidance 2005 (DH, October 2005) |
STAC advice (DH, April 2007)
STI Sexually transmitted infection
Links: Health
promotion page (internal) |
Health
protection page (internal)
Strategic planning A type of planning
which looks at the broad concepts and structures involved in meeting
particular objectives (cf operational plans)
Links: Flu
pandemic planning (internal)
Tertiary care Third
tier of healthcare provided in the UK. Provide specialist care over and
above that available in secondary care centres, e.g. renal transplantation.
Usually located in large regional hospitals
Trust An NHS
organisation
Links:
Structure of
the NHS
WHO World Health Organization. A
United Nations-funded international health organisation. Many of its
roles are related to public health
Links: WHO