In: Nursing
Fighting disease is an ongoing process. Sanitation inspections are a fundamental part of that fight. In the past a sanitation inspection aimed to identify and cite violations of rules and regulations. The current emphasis is to educate. 1. How do the two approaches differ in the ability to solve sanitation problems? What advantages does education offer? How does this policy shift affect our ability to alter risks?
this is one of the question that changes the mantility of the people towards basic and basic apporach of generation and propogation of a disease...
as we already know that bed hygiene by any means including Sanitation habbit leads to devlopment of many diseases which can be leathel ones as DIARRHOEA...
NOW discusses these 2 mentioned apporach i.e. 1. Sanitation inspections and fines on violations of rules and regulations...2nd ...educate the people towards Sanitation habbit.
in Sanitation inspections and fines on violations.... just seems like other laws as moter vehical act ... pollution act...ect....as if u not apply proper Sanitation law ...you will be punished ....or... Here it is forbidden to urinate if caught pay INR 500ect....and its a mental habbit to break the rules, so people are not following the good Sanitation habbit....
in 2nd apporach... education of the general public gives the vision to see the upcoming outcome of their act... so the do the things with full thoughtful minds with knowing the complications and consequences.... they realise that good sanitaion habbit ultimately leads to good health and good life.
advantages of education is not affect only sanitation habbit but it changes the thought process of a person... he will thing about advantages of natural greenery, global warming, child marrige, presrevation of water, wild life preservation...... all these comes togather and just help to makes the world as a better place.
so ultimately shifting the policy from Sanitation inspections to education....will definately affect our vision and it changes the progression of the disease by altering its natural history and risk factors