HIS

Subdecks (3)

Cards (351)

  • Educational institution - a place where learners of different ages gain an education. This institution carries out educational activities based on the age grade system that provide considerable diversity pf learning millieus and learning spaces
  • Formal institution - deals with the conventional classroom whereby a governing body administers a structured learning method, and a school or other institution are the usual places for learning
  • Formal education starts around at the age of four
  • Informal education - anything learned more independently outside of conventional classroom. It is not restricted to any certain location usually integrates itself with the surroundings such as home, cultural setting, etc.
  • Vision - the end desire aspiration of an academic institution
  • The shortest vision statement contain only three words
  • mission statement - a one sentence relating to the intention of your institutions existence.
  • value statement - a list of fundamental doctrines that guide and direct the educational institution and its belief
  • Core value - standard structure that is shared by and acted upon the academic community
  • Objectives or goals - short statements that learners should achieve within or at the end of the lesson
  • Bertalanffy - a system is an arrangement of parts, and their interconnections come together for a purpose
  • Roemer - defined health system as the combination of resources, organization, financing, and management that culminate in the delivery of health services to the population.
  • Health system - defined as all the organizations and institutions and resources that are devoted. to producing health actions
  • Health action - any effort, whether in personal health care, public health services, or through intersectoral initiatives, whose primary purpose is to improve health
  • Improving the health of populations - the overarching goal of world health organization
  • Responsiveness - represents the concept that the health system provides services in the manner that people want or desire and engages people as an active partner
  • Public service provision - public and private health service provision is the most visible product of the health care system
  • Health service inputs - is the assembling of the essential resources for delivering health services.
  • Stewardship - sets the context and policy framework for the overall health system
  • Health financing - includes collecting revenues, pooling financial risk, and allocating revenue.
  • Revenue collection - entails collection of money to pay for health care services
  • Risk pooling - refers to the collection and management of financial resources in a way that spreads financial risks from an individual to all pool members
  • Financial risk pooling - the core function of health insurance mechanisms
  • Bismarck model - Named after Prussian Chancellor Otto von Bismarck who invented the welfare state as part of the unification of Germany in the 19th century
  • Beveridge Model - named after British economist William Beveridge who was instrumental in creating the UK National Health Service (NHS) in 1948.
  • Beveridge model - the health care is provided and financed by the government through tax payments, just like the police force or the public library.
  • Strategic purchasing - is the way most risk-pooling organizations or purchasers use collected and pooled financial resources to finance or buy health care services.
  • Service delivery - those which deliver effective, safe, quality personal and non-personal health interventions to those who need them
  • Health workforce - works in ways that are responsive, fair, and efficient to achieve the best health outcomes possible, given the available resources and circumstances.
  • Information - one that ensures the production, analysis, dissemination and use of reliable and timely information on health determinants
  • Medical products, vaccines and technologies - ensure access to essential medical products
  • Financing: - rases adequate funds for health in ways that ensure people can use needed services and are protected from financial catastrophe
  • Leadership and Governance - involve ensuring strategic policy framework exist and are combined with effective stewardship
  • The Philippine Health Agenda - the rally point for its vision for a healthy Philippines by 2020
  • The Philippine Developmental plan 2017-2022 - This includes the four key medium-term plans to translate the vision of aspirations for the filipiinos and the country
  • NEDA AmBisyon Natin 2040 - a collective long term plan which envisions a better life for Filipinos and the country in the next 25 years
  • Sustainable Developmental Goals 2030 - a compilation of 17 developmental goals that targets to end poverty
  • Department of Health - the lead agency for Philippine health care according to the mandate.
  • RA. 11223 - known as the universal health care act of 2019
  • Alma-ata declaration - a fundamental human right that is the attainment of the highest possible level of health