Health Promotion Flashcards
What is health promotion?
Health promotion is, as stated in the 1986 World Health Organization (WHO) Ottawa Charter for Health Promotion, the “process of enabling people to increase control over, and to improve their health’’
3 basic approaches to health promotion?
- Prevention
- health environment, health services, primary level prevention - health education
- health protection
- laws/policy
Guiding principles of health promotion?
- Empowering individuals and communities
- Participatory
- involving all - Holistic
- all four dimensions of health - Inter-sectoral
- collaboration of all agencies - Equitable
- equity and social justice - Sustainable
- changes are maintained - Multi-strategy
- variety of approaches
5 action areas for health promotion - Ottawa Charter?
- Develop healthy public policy
- Create supportive environment for health
- Strengthen community action
- Develop personal skills
i.e. modifying their life style towards healthy behaviours - Reorient health services
Evaluation of Health promotion activities in a community is done by assessing…?
- Quality of life indicators
- Health knowledge, attitude, motivation and skills
- Social action and influence (community social action and influence (community participation & public opinion)
- Legislation, regulation for public health
What are the effects of health education/communication?
Why do we do health education?
- Increase the intended audience’s knowledge and awareness of a health issue, problem, or solution;
- Influence perceptions, beliefs, and attitudes that may change social norms;
- Prompt action
- Demonstrate or illustrate healthy skills
- Reinforce knowledge, attitudes, or behavior
- Show the benefit of behavior change
- Advocate a position on a health issue or policy
- Increase demand or support for health services
- Refute myths and misconceptions
- Strengthen organizational relationships.
What is a health belief model?
is a theoretical model that is used to explain and predict individual changes in health behaviours and can be used to guide health promotion and disease prevention programs
State the constructs which represent the perceived threat and net benefits?
- the individual’s perceptions of the threat posed by a health problem (susceptibility, severity)
- the benefits of avoiding the threat
- factors influencing the decision to act (barriers, cues to action, and self-efficacy)
Describe the constructs which represent the perceived threat and net benefits?
- Perceived susceptibility
- a person’s opinion of the chances of getting a certain condition; - Perceived severity
- a person’s opinion of how serious this condition is - Perceived benefits
- a person’s opinion of the effectiveness of some advised action to reduce the risk or seriousness of the
impact - Perceived barriers
- a person’s opinion of the concrete and psychological costs of this advised action. Facilitated by - Cues to action
- Self-efficacy
- confidence in self to perform an action
Name the behavioural change models?
- health belief model
- stages of change/transtheoretical model
- precaution adoption model
- theory of reasoned action
- social learning theory or social cognitive theory
What is the stages of change model?
What are the 6 stages is the stages of change model?
- Pre-contemplation
- the person is unaware of the problem or has not thought seriously about change - Contemplation
- the person is seriously thinking about a change (in the near future) - Preparation
- the person is planning to take action and is making final adjustments before changing behaviour - Action
- the person implements some specific action plan to overtly modify behaviour and surroundings; - Maintenance
- the person continues with desirable actions (repeating the periodic recommended steps while
struggling to prevent lapses and relapse - Termination
- the person has zero temptation and the ability to resist relapse
What is the theory of reasoned action?
Function of attitude (positive or negative) towards a behaviour and the subjective norms of the social environment
What is the Social Learning Theory/Social Cognitive Theory?
Personal factors (one’s cognitive processes), behavior, and
environmental influences continually interact in a process of reciprocal determinism or reciprocal causality. These are
very dynamic relationships where the person can shape the environment as well as environment shaping the person
(bidirectional)
What is the diffusion of innovation?
A theory that seeks to explain how, why and what rate new ideas and technology spread