1. Healthy |
Longevity, by preventing accidents, illness, and progression of early stages of disease |
Physicians' offices, health clinics, occupational health, and health information available to the public |
Staying healthy |
2. Maternal and infant health |
Healthy babies, low maternal risk, control of fertility |
Prenatal services, delivery, and perinatal care; fertility control and enhancement |
Staying healthy |
3. Acutely ill, with likely return to health |
Return to healthy state with minimal suffering and disruption |
Emergency services, hospitals, physicians' offices, medications, or short-term rehabilitative services |
Getting well |
4. Chronic conditions, with generally “normal” function |
Longevity, limiting disease progression, accommodating environment |
Self-management, physicians' offices, hospitalizations, and ER visits |
Living with illness or disability |
5. Significant but relatively stable disability, including mental disability |
Autonomy, rehabilitation, limiting progression, accommodating environment, caregiver support |
Home-based services, environmental adaptation, rehabilitation, and institutional services |
Living with illness or disability |
6. “Dying” with short decline |
Comfort, dignity, life closure, caregiver support, planning ahead |
At-home services, hospice, and personal care services |
Coping with illness at the end of life |
7. Limited reserve and serious exacerbations |
Avoiding exacerbations, maintaining function, and specific advance planning |
Self-care support, at-home services, 24/7 on-call access to medical guidance, and home-based care |
Coping with illness at the end of life |
8. Long course of decline, from dementia and/or frailty |
Support for caregivers, maintaining function, skin integrity, mobility, and specific advance planning |
Home-based services, mobility and care devices, family caregiver training and support, and nursing facilities |
Coping with illness at the end of life |