Theme: A track to the evaluation of Global Public Health Nursing modernizations and challenges
Public Health Nursing 2020
ConferenceSeries Ltd extends its welcome to Public Health Nursing 2020 during November18-19, 2020 at Singapore with a theme "A track to the evaluation of Global Public Health Nursing modernizations and challenges".
ConferenceSeries Ltd Organizes 1000+ Conferences Every Year across USA, Europe & Asia with support from 1000 more scientific societies and Publishes 700+ Open access journals which contains over 100000 eminent personalities, reputed scientists as editorial board members.
Scope and Importance
Public Health Nursing 2020 Congress aims to discover advances in Public Health and Nursing practice, Healthcare management and education in relation to health disparities. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), the United States spent more on health care per capita ($8,608), and more as percentage of its GDP 17.2%, than any other nation in 2011. Total U.S. spending on health care increased 5.3 percent last year – topping $3 trillion overall – health care funded by the federal government rose by 11.7 percent, to nearly $844 billion in 2014. According to the reports, The United States spends around $8,700 per capita each year on health care by far the most of any country in the world, more than double the OECD average and well more than second place Switzerland. United States spent 16.4% of its GDP on health care in 2013 and estimated to increase by 2018. The concentration of practicing nurses exceeded the OECD (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development) average in all the 10 countries spending the most on health.
Target Audience
Leading world Doctors, registered Nurses, Professors, Research fellows and many more from leading universities, Directors of Association and Societies, companies and medical research institutions, hospitals sharing their novel researches in the area of Community Nursing, Healthcare & Medicine.
Why to Attend???
A Public Health Nursing conference is an opportunity to meet others within specialty to network and to learn the latest clinical information. It is an opportunity no nurse should overlook. I’ve always embraced the opportunity to attend nursing conferences and have made a point to encourage others to attend whenever the opportunity arises. Public Health Nursing conferences allow nurses of all levels of experience to participate in an area of career and education growth that is not easily found within the structure of the workplace. Some nurses, especially those working at the bedside, may not see the significance of attending a conference. All too often the floor/ bedside nurse believes that conferences are only for management, while others may think that spending one or more days not earning a paycheck may not outweigh the opportunity to clock in some additional overtime. There may be a whole host of other reasons why a nurse would prefer to remain home rather than attending a conference. Despite the plentiful excuses (the top two being cost and time), the benefits far outweigh the costs.
Track-1: Public Health Nursing
All nurses work with patients from the communities surrounding the health care facility. This means that, all nurses deal with public health. However, public health nurses work more specifically in this area, striving to improve the health of the public and educate the community on health issues that are prevalent in the area. Many public health nurses work with specific populations, such as young children living in poverty.
Track-2: Primary Healthcare
Primary Healthcare is the extremely important first care that is based on scientifically well-done and universally acceptable methods and technology, which make health care easy to get to people and families in a community. The International Classification of Primary Care (ICPC) is a standardized tool for understanding and analyzing information on interventions in primary care by the reason for the patient visit. Common long-lasting sicknesses usually treated in primary care may include high blood pressure, pain, Diabetes, breathing disease, COPD, depression and fear and stress, back pain, painful joint swelling or thyroid dysfunction. Driven by population magnification and aging, the total number of office visits to primary care medicos is projected to increment from 462 million in 2008 to 565 million in 2025. Primary care also includes many basic mother-based and child health care services, such as family planning services and vaccinations.
Track-3: Nursing Education
Nursing Education is committed to improving the quality of care for the cancer patient through education of the professional nursing community. Nurses are mastering the complexities of care and advanced technology - allowing them in greater numbers to contribute decisively on teams, understand health policy, analyze information to make critical decisions, and support the well-being of all.
Track-4: Nursing Practice
Nursing Practice provides healthcare across a continuum of services for acute and chronic conditions in hospital, ambulatory, and skilled nursing settings. Nurses share lessons learned, tools, and evidence-based practices across the system. They engage in emergency management and disaster preparedness both in VA and beyond. To improve access to care, nurses help create new models of care like the Primary Care Patient Aligned Care Teams (Patient Centered Medical Home), introduce new nursing roles like the Clinical Nurse Leader (CNL), and advance existing roles, like the use of RN Care Managers to coordinate care.
Track-5: Nursing Care in Public Health
Nursing care education is an important part of the dignity programme in adapting students for entry into the nursing trade. Student and teacher concept of the relationship between assessment and learning has remained an under-researched area. Data were collected through a series of focus group examination with groups of nursing students, graduates, and teachers. It was revealed that students’ learning during the clinical practicum was, to a large extent, affected by their awareness of the assessment tasks. As a result, they adopted a surface approach to study and target on preparing for the assessment tasks to the drawback of their learning.
Track-6: Nursing Types & Nursing Management
There are about 20380000 registered nurses all over the world, there are about 30,000 professionally activated nurses in CANADA, and in Vancouver there are 3152 registered nurses regarding the statistics of 2015. There are many types of nursing like Cancer Nursing, Heart & Cardiovascular Nursing, Pediatric Nursing, Surgical Nursing, Dental Care Nursing, Clinical Nursing, Critical Care & Emergency Nursing, Women Health Nursing
Processes that are handled by an organization’s nurse management team include staffing, organizing, delegating tasks, directing others, and planning. Registered nurses typically undergo further education in order to move into management-level positions.
Track-7: Community Nursing
Community health nursing, a field of nursing that is a blend of primary health care and nursing practice with public health nursing. The community health nurse conducts a continuing and comprehensive practice that is preventive, curative, and rehabilitative. The philosophy of care is based on the belief that care directed to the individual, the family, and the group contributes to the health care of the population as a whole. The community health nurse is not restricted to the care of a particular age or diagnostic group.
Track-8: Family Nursing
Family Nursing is "The practical science of preventative and remedial support to the family in order to help the family system unit independently and autonomously maintain and improve its family functions. Family nursing is directed to improving the potential health of a family or any of its members by assessing individual and family health needs and strengths, by identifying problems influencing the health care of the family as a whole and those influencing the individual members, by using family resources, by teaching and counselling, and by evaluating progress toward stated goals.
Track-9: Rural Health & Legal Nursing
Legal Nursing is the implicative intimations of nursing practice are attached to licensure, state and government laws, extent of practice and an open prospect that attendants hone at a high expert standard. The medical attendant's illumination, permit and nursing standard give the system by which attendants are relied upon to practice. Moral issues in legal nursing are fundamentally six moral rules that emerge often for the attendant who meets expectations in the remedial setting 1. Concession for persons (self-rule and self-determination) 2. Beneficence (doing great) 3. Nonmaleficence (dodging mischief) 4. Value (reasonableness, evenhandedness, veracity), 5. Veracity (coming clean) 6. Constancy (staying steadfast to one's dedication).
Nurses are the health workers most frequently found providing primary health care services in rural communities throughout the world. In these settings, often with limited resources and far from professional support systems, nurses may encounter ethical dilemmas quite different from those experienced by their colleagues in urban hospital settings. Consider the following example from a remote island community. A young nurse with two years’ experience in an urban hospital is posted to a remote village. In this country there are very few doctors, so nurses diagnose and treat common health problems.
Track-10: Transcultural & Occupational Health Nursing
A Transcultural Nurse helps patients by providing culturally sensitive care to patients all over the world. They treat patients of different cultures, often immigrants and refugees. They work in foreign countries mostly, but also right here in our own cities, applying their knowledge of diverse cultures to their local nursing position.
Occupational health nursing is the specialty practice that provides for and delivers health and safety programs and services to workers, worker populations, and community groups. The practice focuses on promotion and restoration of health, prevention of illness and injury, and protection from work-related and environmental hazards. Occupational health nurses (OHNs) have a combined knowledge of health and business that they blend with healthcare expertise to balance the requirement for a safe and healthful work environment with a “healthy” bottom line.
Track 11: Gerontology Nursing
Geriatric nurses are responsible for helping elderly patients is a comprehensive source for clinical information and management. Geriatric Nurses are provided with routine physical and mental exams. Geriatric Nursing professionals in a variety of healthcare facilities, including Developing and evaluating care plans Performing patient medical tests in-home or in a medical office.Establishing a patient care plan and setting health goals. Administering medications to patients based on a care plan.
Track-12: Reproductive Health Nursing
The World Health Organization defines sexual health as a state of physical, emotional, mental and social well-being in relation to sexuality; it is not merely the absence of disease, dysfunction or infirmity. Thus, nurses in all areas of health care will benefit from an understanding of the role sexual health has to play in the wellbeing of their clients. A career in sexual and reproductive health nursing offers an excellent opportunity to combine clinical skills with a public health and health promotion focus in a dynamic area of health care. Reproductive health implies that people can have the capability to reproduce and the freedom to decide if, when and how often to do so. One interpretation of this implies that men and women ought to be informed of and to have access to safe, effective, affordable and acceptable methods of birth control; also access to appropriate health care services of sexual, reproductive medicine and implementation of health education programs to stress the importance of women to go safely through pregnancy and childbirth could provide couples with the best chance of having a healthy infant. Individuals do face inequalities in reproductive health services. Inequalities vary based on socioeconomic status, education level, age, ethnicity, religion, and resources available in their environment. It is possible for example, that low income individuals lack the resources for appropriate health services and the knowledge to know what is appropriate for maintaining reproductive health
Track-13: Surgical & Wound Care Nursing
A surgical nurse is a nurse who specializes in perioperative care, meaning care provided to surgical patients before, during, and after surgery. There are a number of different kinds of surgical nurse, and surgical nursing as a career can be very demanding. In pre-operative care, a surgical nurse helps to prepare a patient for surgery, both physically and emotionally. Surgical nurses may explain the procedure to the patient, and ease fears about the upcoming surgery and recovery. They also check the patient's vitals, administer medications, and help to sterilize and mark the surgical site.
Wound care nurses, sometimes referred to as wound, ostomy, and continence (WOC) nurses, specialize in wound management, the monitoring and treatment of wounds due to injury, disease or medical treatments. Their work promotes the safe and rapid healing of a wide variety of wounds, from chronic bed sores or ulcers to abscesses, feeding tube sites and recent surgical openings. Most wound care nurses work in hospitals, nursing homes or travel to patients' homes as home health workers.
Track-14: Epidemiology & Dermatology Nursing
A nurse epidemiologist investigates trends in groups or aggregates and studies the occurrence of diseases and injuries. The information is gathered from census data, vital statistics, and reportable disease records. Nurse epidemiologists identify people or populations at high risk; monitor the progress of diseases; specify areas of health care need; determine priorities, size, and scope of programs; and evaluate their impact. They generally do not provide direct patient care but serve as a resource and plan educational programs.
A Dermatology Nurse helps patients through the treatment of wounds, injuries, and diseases of the skin. They also perform skin cancer and post-plastic surgery treatments. Dermatology is a huge field, and because skin is an organ like the heart and kidneys, it requires specialized care.
Track-15: Pediatric & Cardiovascular Nursing
Pediatric nurses not only work directly with children and their families. pediatric nurses aim to mitigate health problems before they occur A lifetime journey into wellness begins at birth, and the nursing profession is always in need of nurses who devote their skills to caring for the smallest patients as they grow and develop. Pediatric nurses work in a variety of settings with children of all ages. By taking a preventative and proactive approach to providing care.
Cardiovascular Nurses play a key role in the evaluation of Cardiovascular Status, Monitoring the Hemodynamic Functions and Disease Management. This module aims to provide nurses with the knowledge and skills to be competent, safe and effective carers of patients presenting with cardiac health problems. Nurses need to understand of current evidence-based practice and guidelines relating to cardiac disease management.
Track-16: Psychiatric & Dental Nursing
Psychiatry is the medical specialty that diagnoses and treats mental disorders, usually those requiring medication. Psychiatry is now a highly visible activity, lack of care in the community, compulsion, suicide, drug and alcohol abuse are few motivations. Starting with the identification of the major mental illnesses and how they are considered distinction from normality. Flourishing of psychoanalysis and its later transformation into more accessible psychotherapies gave a chance for better understanding. Modern psychiatry too brings with its new controversies such as the medicalization of normal life, the power of the drug companies and the use of psychiatry as an agent of social control.
Dental care is important to prevent dental disease and to maintain proper dental and oral health. Oral problems, including dental and periodontal infections, dry mouth, tooth decay, are all treatable with proper diagnosis and care.
Track-17: e-Medicine & Tele Health Nursing
Telehealth nursing has rapidly evolved into a role that is a key member of the patient care team and a meaningful career with opportunities for growth. Today, telehealth nurses work with cutting-edge therapies and support patients in a variety of rare disease states, giving nurses the opportunity to pursue an area they’re passionate about, and are a resource to patients throughout their therapeutic journey. To do this, telehealth nurses need a deep understanding of clinical specialties and therapies.
Track-18: Clinical, Critical Care & Emergency Nursing
Clinical nurse specialists work to improve patient outcomes by using theory and research to further the success of nursing systems. The CNS is in a leadership role and works closely with the nurse manager of the patient care unit to improve nursing practice. This career is categorized as an advanced practice registered nurse (APRN) role because it requires a master's level education as well as clinical training.
Critical care nursing is the field of nursing with a focus on the utmost care of the critically ill or unstable patients following extensive injury, surgery or life-threatening diseases. Critical care nurses can be found working in a wide variety of environments and specialties, such as general intensive care units, medical intensive care units, surgical intensive care units, trauma intensive care units, coronary care units, cardiothoracic intensive care units, burns unit, pediatrics and some trauma center emergency departments.
Track-19: Oncology Nursing and Cancer Care
The field of Oncology Nursing, in particular, is probably one of the most challenging and rewarding fields in nursing. For those with cancer, oncology nurses are the ones who are there for us during our most difficult and intimate moments in life, the ones at our bedside, educating us, encouraging us. It is often said that nurses are the heart of health care.
Track-20: Innovations and Developments in Nursing
Developments in Nursing Education are collaboration for assessing and empowering the new era for the Nursing Education. Presently a days United States manages an augment deficiency of medical attendants, coordinated in the event that by a winding down development of populace and an absence of accessible spots for the schools of nursing the nation over. Everywhere it worries about the medical caretaker master deficiency is detectable in the reports of articulated nursing associations, also in the exercises of a few state work trouble focuses. As a result of this dedication, it's important to take care of the issue identified with the deficiency of medical caretaker personnel, the point of this collaboration to bolster for such the development of Evaluating Innovations in Nursing Education (EIN) to reserve assessments of nursing instructive mediations.
Global Nursing today has adopted several new technologies, simulation and social media in teaching and practice. They are also responsible for the Curriculum innovation & development in the field of Nursing Education. Some Innovations in Nursing Education be,
- Hand-Held Computers in Nursing Education
- E-Learning
- Service-Learning
- Tele Teaching
- Micro Teaching
- Tele Nursing
Track-21: Public Health
Public health sciences promote health and quality of life, disease prevention and improvement of health systems. Public health is the science of protecting and improving the health of families and communities through the promotion of healthy lifestyles, research for disease and injury prevention and detection and control of infectious diseases. A large part of public health is promoting health care equity, quality and accessibility. Public Health Sciences has a multidisciplinary approach and a specialization in public health epidemiology. Public health professionals try to prevent problems from happening or recurring through implementing educational programs, recommending policies, administering services and conducting research.
Track-22: Epidemiology
Epidemiology is a science rooted in finding solutions to serious public health problems like cardiovascular disease and cancer. The Epidemiology Section fosters epidemiologic research and science-based public health practice and serves as a conduit between the epidemiologic research community and users of scientific information for the development, implementation and evaluation of policies affecting the public's health. Data concerning determinants and distribution are critical to improving the health of entire populations. In other words, epidemiologists identify why some people get sick and others do not. Epidemiology program are a trans disciplinary approach to disease prevention and our research among populations and communities.
Track-23: Midwifery and Women’s Health
Women's health information covers breast, cancer, heart, pregnancy, sexual health, and mature women related conditions. Women’s Health Care aims to keep health and medical research, particularly the Society for Women’s Health Research, including heart disease. Nurse-midwifery offers a wide variety of professional career pathways. Nurse-Midwives provide primary and gynecologic care to women as well as specialty care and support for expecting mothers and their infants. Nurse-midwives are known for their evidence-based care. In addition to the reproductive science, students examine the influences of culture; tradition and the social, economic and political forces that influence the health of women.
Track-24: Social Determinants of Health
As our health system moves toward value-based models which incentivize positive results rather than individual procedures and treatments, healthcare industry leaders increasingly are regarding the social determinants of health (SDOH) as critical components of these efforts. SDOH are the complex circumstances in which individuals are born and live that impact their health. They include intangible factors such as political, socioeconomic, and cultural constructs, as well as place-based conditions including accessible healthcare and education systems, safe environmental conditions, well-designed neighborhoods, and availability of healthful food. The World Health Organization (WHO) offers this definition of social determinants of health: “The conditions in which people are born, grow, live, work and age.” The organization further states that “these circumstances are shaped by the distribution of money, power, and resources at global, national and local levels.”
Examples of Social Determinants of Health
The social determinants of health are a subset of determinants of health. Governmental policies, availability of healthcare, individual behavioral choices, and biological and genetic factors are other notable determinants of health. Examples of social determinants of health include:
- Income level
- Educational opportunities
- Occupation, employment status, and workplace safety
- Gender inequity
- Racial segregation
- Food insecurity and inaccessibility of nutritious food choices
- Access to housing and utility services
- Early childhood experiences and development
- Social support and community inclusivity
- Crime rates and exposure to violent behavior
- Availability of transportation
- Neighborhood conditions and physical environment
- Access to safe drinking water, clean air, and toxin-free environments
- Recreational and leisure opportunities
Track-25: Maternal Infant and Child Health
The well-being of mothers, infants, and children determines the health of the next generation and can help predict future public health challenges for families, communities, and the medical care system. Moreover, healthy birth outcomes and early identification and treatment of health conditions among infants can prevent death or disability and enable children to reach their full potential. More than 80% of women in the United States will become pregnant and give birth to one or more children. 31% of these women suffer pregnancy complications, ranging from depression to the need for a cesarean delivery. Each year, 12% of infants are born preterm and 8.2% of infants are born with low birth weight. In addition to increasing the infant’s risk of death in its first few days of life, preterm birth and low birth weight can lead to devastating and lifelong disabilities for the child. Preconception (before pregnancy) and interconception (between pregnancies) care provide an opportunity to identify existing health risks and to prevent future health problems for women and their children. These problems include heart disease, diabetes, genetic conditions, sexually transmitted diseases, and unhealthy weight.
Track-26: Preventive and Personalized Medicine
Preventive Medicine is practiced by all physicians to keep their patients healthy. It is also a unique medical specialty recognized by the American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS). Preventive Medicine focuses on the health of individuals, communities, and defined populations. It is also used for the treatment for obesity, blindness. The Epidemiology Division applies research methods to understand the patterns and causes of health and disease in the population and to translate this knowledge into programs designed to prevent disease.
Personalized Medicine is referred as individualized therapy which means the prescription of specific treatments and therapeutics. Biomarker is a biological characteristic which can be molecular, anatomic, physiologic and chemical change drug development research which turns biomarkers into companion diagnostics. Personalized medicine therapeutics and companion diagnostic market have huge opportunities for growth in healthcare and will improve therapeutic effectiveness and reduce the severity of adverse effects approach to drug therapies. Personalized cancer medicine is self-made samples of translating cancer genetics into medical. Genomic medicine can contribute to personalized medicine Genomics by revealing genomic variations; influence health, sickness and drug response. Predictive medicine is a field of medicine that entails predicting the probability of disease and instituting preventive measures in order to either prevent the disease altogether or significantly decrease its impact upon the patient (such as by preventing mortality or limiting morbidity).
Conference Series LLC Ltd scheduled 1000+ annual scientific conferences, 2000+ International workshops, seminars, exhibitions and symposia for 2020. Public Health Nursing Conference would offer a powerful global forum to encourage dialogue on the advancements related to public health and Nursing.
Global Nursing Market:
The global nursing care market reached a value of nearly $855.9 billion in 2018, having grown at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 6.8% since 2014, and is expected to grow at a CAGR of 8.6% to nearly $1,191.2 billion by 2022.
The nursing care facilities market was the largest segment of the nursing care market in 2018 at 43.6%. The retirement communities’ market is expected to be the fastest-growing segment going forward at a CAGR of 9.7%. North America is the largest market for nursing care, accounting for 38.8% of the global market. It was followed by Western Europe, Asia-Pacific and then the other regions. Going forward, the Middle East and Asia-Pacific will be the fastest growing regions in this market, where growth will be at CAGRs of 15% and 14.6% respectively. These will be followed by Africa and South America where the markets are expected to grow at CAGRs of 13.9% and 11.2% respectively.
The global healthcare services market, of which the nursing care market is a segment, reached a value of nearly $6707.3 billion in 2018, having grown at 7.6% since 2014. It will grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 9.3% to nearly $9581 billion by 2022. The nursing care market was the third largest segment in the global healthcare services market in 2018, accounting for 12.8% of the healthcare services market. The hospitals and clinics market were the largest segment of the healthcare services market, accounting for 55.1% of the total, worth $3693.4 billion globally, and has grown at a CAGR of 8.2% during the historic period. It is expected to grow at a CAGR of 9.9% during the forecast period. The top opportunities in the global nursing care market will arise in the nursing care facilities segment which will gain $126.1 billion of global annual sales by 2022. The nursing care market size will gain the most in the USA at $55.23 billion.
Global Market:
Global health care expenditures are expected to continue to rise as spending is projected to increase at an annual rate of 5.4 percent between 2017-2022, from USD $7.724 trillion to USD $10.059 trillion. There is an exponential increase in the pace and scale with which digital health care innovations are emerging.
Major competitors of the U.S. in the market are medical device manufacturers from Germany and other European economies. The local production in Singapore though is primarily for export or contract manufacturing.
Singapore Market:
Singapore is a renowned regional hub for many healthcare-related sectors, namely pharmaceutical, medical technology and medical tourism. In Singapore, private clinics and hospitals cater to 80% of the primary healthcare needs while government polyclinics provide the remaining 20%. However, the reverse applies for more costly hospitalization care; 80% public, 20% private. Locals tend to visit public healthcare establishments over their private counterparts due to its lower fees and at the same time, comparable medical services. However, this popularity has resulted in a longer waiting time (up to a maximum of 3 hours) for beds in public hospitals, a problem that is not really faced by the private hospitals.
Singapore’s medical tourism industry is something not to be missed with over 850,000 medical tourists arriving in Singapore in 2012 and this number is expected to grow at a rate of 11.9% annually. With upcoming Sengkang General and Community Hospital, Outram Community Hospital, Integrated Care Hub, and Woodlands General Hospital in the next 5 years, there will be an addition of 3,200 acute hospital beds, and 1,050 community hospital beds. Further, Singapore's hospital bed to 1,000 people ratios will incline to 2.6-2.8 during 2020-2030. Healthcare expenditure to triple by 2030 with ageing demographics. Based on the projected Singapore's population growth to 2030, healthcare expenditure is estimated to triple by 2030, rising to SGD 44 billion from SGD 17 billion in 2013. Personal healthcare expenditure would rise to SGD 28 billion from SGS 11 billion in 2013, comprising 64% of total healthcare expenditure, implying the potential growth in private healthcare.
Distinguished speakers from different parts of the world would be delivering vital and thought-provoking information on all key topics at Public Health Nursing 2020, unveiling the recent innovations in cancer research. These presentations are open to all types of research approaches both from academia as well as industries. Significant features of these scientific events are the well-structured scientific sessions, research presentations on recent researches, workshops, symposia and B2B meetings among Academicians, Researchers and Industry key leaders. Besides that, Poster Presentations, Young Researchers Forum and Live streaming of the talks connects the scientific world together and brings them all beneath a single roof.
Conference Highlights
- Public Health Nursing
- Primary Healthcare
- Nursing Education
- Nursing Practice
- Nursing Care in Public Health
- Nursing Types & Nursing Management
- Community Nursing
- Family Nursing
- Rural Health & Legal Nursing
- Transcultural & Occupational Health Nursing
- Gerontology Nursing
- Reproductive Health Nursing
- Surgical &Wound Care Nursing
- Epidemiology & Dermatology Nursing
- Pediatric & Cardiovascular Nursing
- Psychiatric & Dental Nursing
- e-Medicine & Tele Health Nursing
- Clinical, Critical Care & Emergency Nursing
- Oncology Nursing and Cancer Care
- Innovations and Developments in Nursing
- Public Health
- Epidemiology
- Midwifery and Women’s Health
- Social Determinants of Health
- Maternal Infant and Child Health
- Preventive and Personalized Medicine
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To Collaborate Scientific Professionals around the World
Conference Date | November 18-19, 2020 | ||
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Special Issues
All accepted abstracts will be published in respective Our International Journals.
- International Journal of Public Health and Safety
- Primary Health Care: Open Access
- Journal of Community Medicine & Health Education
Abstracts will be provided with Digital Object Identifier by