Children's health and health promotion (3) Flashcards
What is health promotion?
Any planned activity designed to enhance health or prevent disease (eg legislation, immunisations, activities)
What 4 factors affect health
- Genetics
- Access
- Environment
- Lifestyle
Give the 3 theories of health promotion
- Educational: provides knowledge and education to enable necessary skills to rate informed choices in health
- Socioeconomic: makes healthy choice the easy choice
- Psychological: complex relationship between behaviour, knowledge, attitudes and beliefs
Define health education
An activity involving communication with individuals or groups aimed at challenging knowledge, beliefs, attitudes and behaviour in a direction which is conducive to improvements in health
Define health protection
Involves collective activities directed at factors which are beyond the control of the individual - tend to be regulations or policies
Define empowerment
The generation of power in those individuals and groups which previously considered themselves to be unable to control situations nor act on the basis of their choices
What benefits does empowerment bring?
- Ability to resist social pressure and utilise effective coping strategies
- Heightened consciousness of action
Give the different levels of reaching a goal eg quitting smoking
- Precontemplation
- Contemplation
- Ready for action - making definite plans
- ACTION
- Either regression or maintenance
Give some examples of healthcare promotion in primary care
Planned = posters, chronic disease clinics, vaccinations
Opportunistic = advice within surgery, suggesting smoking cessation, taking BP
Give some examples of healthcare promotion in the government
Legislation = legal age limits, smoking ban, clean air act, highway code, health and safety
Economic = tax on cigarettes, alcohol and sugar
Education
What is primary prevention
Measures taken to prevent onset of illness or injury - reduces probability and or severity of illness/injury
What is secondary prevention
Detection of a disease at an early preclinical stage in order to cure, prevent, or lessen symptomatology
What is tertiary prevention (screening)
Measures to limit distress or disability caused by a disease
Give the Wilson’s criteria for screening
ILLNESS = Important, natural history is understood, has a pre-symptomatic stage
TEST = Easy, acceptable, cost effective, sensitive and specific
TREATMENT = Acceptable, cost effective, better if early