Medical Safety & Global Health

Medical Safety & Global Health
Open Access

ISSN: 2574-0407

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Commentary - (2023)Volume 12, Issue 1

Role of Health Care Guidance for Quality Life: Outcomes and its Related Interventions

Louis Jo*
 
*Correspondence: Louis Jo, Department of Health Sciences, University of Wuppertal, Wuppertal, Germany, Email:

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Description

One Health is a philosophy that acknowledges the interdependence of environmental, animal, and human health. One Health aims to promote the health of people as well as the animals and plants that make up our common environment by mobilizing researchers, doctors, veterinarians, laboratory scientists, and disease experts.

Researchers are working together to find solutions to some of the most urgent health-related problems facing our planet today, including zoonotic, tropical, and vector-borne illnesses, food safety and security, pollution control, and antimicrobial resistance. For the prevention, detection, and successful response to risks to public health on a worldwide scale like the COVID-19 pandemic, sharing vital research and discoveries is crucial. Public health nurses provide interventions on behalf of people/families, communities, and systems to advance or safeguard health status.

Different healthcare interventions may or may not be used as tools to relieve Quality of Life (QOL), management for children with serious illnesses, such as cancer, at the end of life. As a result, they may be discussed in paediatrician end-of-life training to reduce the frequency of unsuccessful QOL management in this population and cave the one-size-fits-all approach for individual cases.

The encouragement of breastfeeding, zinc supplements, vitamin A fortification, salt iodization, hygiene interventions including hand washing, vaccines, and therapies for severe acute malnutrition are just a few of the international efforts being made to promote child health and survival. The World Health Council offers a list of 32 medical procedures and other measures that have the potential to save several million lives annually. An "outcome gap," or the difference between a population's members who have access to medical treatment and those who do not, affects many populations. Infrastructure that is sustainable is lacking in nations with outcome disparities. The Programa de Accessibilidad a los Medicamentos ("Program for Access to Medicines"), a subset of the public sector in Guatemala, has the lowest average availability (25%) compared to the private sector (35%). In the private sector, the most expensive and least expensive medications were, respectively, 22.7 and 10.7 times more expensive than international reference prices. Treatments were prohibitively most expensive, with a course of the antibiotic ceftriaxone costing as much as 15 days of pay. While the public sector in Pakistan has access to medications at a lower cost than worldwide benchmark prices, it frequently lacks access to and faces a chronic shortage of basic medications. According to journalist Laurie Garrett, there is not a severe funding shortage in the field of global health, but additional funding does not always result in better results. The issue is how these funds are distributed because they are unfairly focused on treating a specific ailment.

The WHO anticipated a global shortfall of over 4.3 million physicians, midwives, nurses, and support personnel in its 2006 World Health Report, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa. According to a 2022 study, there were 104.0 million (with a 95% confidence interval of 83.5 to 128.0) health workers worldwide in 2019. The study found that sub-Saharan Africa, south Asia, and north Africa and the middle east had the lowest densities of human resources for health, including 12.8 million (9.7-16.6) doctors, 29.8 million (23.3-37.7) nurses and midwives, 4.6 million (3.6-6.0) dentistry personnel, and 5.2 million (4.0-6.7) pharmaceutical personnel. However, overall numbers of staff and shortages do not take into account sub-national geographic distribution of different types of health workers, even when simply taking into account current technologies and processes.

Author Info

Louis Jo*
 
Department of Health Sciences, University of Wuppertal, Wuppertal, Germany
 

Citation: Jo L (2023) Effective Health Interventions: Strategies for Improving Physical and Mental Well-being. Med Saf Glob Health. 12:184.

Received: 25-Feb-2023, Manuscript No. MSGH-23-22406; Editor assigned: 27-Feb-2023, Pre QC No. MSGH-23-22406 (PQ); Reviewed: 14-Mar-2023, QC No. MSGH-23-22406; Revised: 21-Mar-2023, Manuscript No. MSGH-23-22406 (R); Published: 28-Mar-2023 , DOI: 10.35248/2574-0407.23.12.184

Copyright: © 2023 Jo L. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

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