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Læknablaðið - 01.06.1973, Qupperneq 50

Læknablaðið - 01.06.1973, Qupperneq 50
124 LÆKNABLAÐIÐ almost uniformly fortified to a level of 400 i.u. per litre and has been for 20 years, but no one knows whether it has done any good and no chemical test helps. There is much activity in this area of medicine but too little knowledge. The method could be discredited by indis- criminate use or for lack of challenge it could go on, absorbing more and more professional time of which there is too little available. There are few areas of medicine more urgently reauiring clari- fication. Tertiary prevention is essentially the exercise of limiting disability by timely and effective treatment and complete re- habilitation. It is obvious that time lost before treatment is given is a loss to the patient and if he suffers a long period of disability, it is a loss to societv also. But the prompt completion of treatment and rehabilitation is eaually important. If one takes as an example acute myocardial in- farction, prompt treatment can prevent in some cases an immediately fatal outcome. The method of subseauent care can deter- mine whether the patient, if he survives, becomes a chronic invalid or is restored to a fairly high level of activity. The prac- tice of prolonged immobilisation has been giving way to early rising and active re- habilitation. The same is true of cerebro- vascular accidents. Very earlv rehabilita- tion greatly reduces the risk and extent of permanent incapacity. The point was demonstrated much earlier in rehabilita- tion after physical injury. In Britain dur- ing the second world war methods of re- habilitation of air crew after injury were greatly improved as a means not only of securing a greater recovery of function but also of shortening the period of dis- ability. The same had been demonstrated in physically injured miners even earlier. In psychiatric illness prompt and early treatment, the use of appropriate drugs and return to a normal or near normal life situation at the earliest possible mo- ment has led to a substantial reduction in the number of beds for the mentally ill used at any one time in Britain. In 1954 3.4 beds per 1,000 of the population were used for the mentally ill, in 1971 that number is unlikely to exceed 2.4 although there are many more old people in the population. The number of deaths in men- tal hospitals was 10,000 a year; it is now 1,000. In mental subnormalitv, training centres have been shown to bring about great improvement in those with the less degrees of handicap and even the most severely handicapped have benefited and become much easier to manage in the in- stitutions in which they may still have to stay. I have been traversing verv auickly a wide field of medicine, emphasising points about preventive medicine that are not matters for the specialist in preventive medicine alone. That is surely the key to the future development of prevent.ive medicine. It is not so much a specialism practised only by those specially trained in it, as an aspect of most forms of medical care which needs better organisation than it has been given in the past. The future of preventive medicine lies in the expert in this specialty working with both the hospital specialists and the general prac- titioners in the community. Most of medi- cal teaching is directed toward the treat- ment of the sick, of the episode of illness or injury. What prevention must do in future is to prevent that illness or injury from occurring if it is possible, and if it is not, to bring the patient to treatment at the earliest possible time and to shorten the period of disability as far as that may be. In these last two aspects it is bv secur- ing the collaboration of clinical colleagues that the expert in preventive medicine must work. I do not believe that any specialty in medicine can be independent of the others. The subdivision of medicine into specialties in fact has made those specialties more interdependent than were the d'-.ctors of an earlier generation. The specialist in preventive medicine has his greatest part to play in supporting and in- forming his clinical colleaeues. But preventive medicine will not be fully develooed bv doctors alone. It re- quires an informed public and that wiil only be achieved by Health Education. We have signally failed to convince the public of the dangers of cigarette smoking or the
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