Preventive healthcare strategies are typically described as taking place at the primary, secondary, and tertiary prevention levels. In the 1940s, Hugh R. Leavell and E. Gurney Clark coined the term primary prevention. They worked at the Harvard and Columbia University Schools of Public Health, respectively, and later expanded the levels to include secondary and tertiary prevention.[9] Goldston (1987) notes that these levels might be better described as "prevention, treatment, and rehabilitation"[9] though the terms primary, secondary, and tertiary prevention are still commonly in use today.
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