Health Promotion
Behavior Change Theories
Planning Theories
Evaluation
Needs Assessment
Miscellaneous
100

This is an example of what type of prevention: increasing physical activity among individuals who follow a sedentary lifestyle to prevent heart disease

What is primary prevention?

100

During this stage of TTM, people are ready to take action in the next 30 days

What is preparation?

100

This step of the Generalized Model of Program Planning is about putting the intervention into action

What is implementation?

100

These are the outcomes that can be seen right after an intervention has been implemented

What is immediate/impact?

100

This is the first step in creating any health promotion program

What is needs assessment?

100

This is the term used to describe exposures and characteristics that predict high-risk behaviors

What is risk factor?

200

This type of prevention is shown in the following: taking blood pressure medications to control hypertension so condition does not get worse

What is tertiary prevention?

200

This theory defines human behavior as the interaction between personal factors, individual behaviors, and their environment

What is Social Cognitive Theory?

200

What phase of the PRECEDE-PROCEED model identifies the predisposing, enabling, and reinforcing factors that can affect the behaviors, attitudes, and the environmental

What is Stage 3 (Educational & Ecological Assessment)?

200

This refers to the extent to which measurements and/or assessments are consistent

What is reliability?

200

This a small group of individuals who meet to share their views and experiences on some topic

What is focus group?

200

This describes the preventable differences in the burden of disease, injury, violence, or opportunities to achieve optimal health that are experienced by socially disadvantaged populations

What is health disparity?

300

According to the WHO, this is the process of enabling people to increase control over, and to improve, their health.  It moves beyond a focus on individual behavior towards a wide range of social and environmental interventions.

What is health promotion?

300

In the Health Belief Model, this refers to a person's perception of the effectiveness of various actions to reduce the threat of illness or disease

What is perceived benefits?

300

These are the 4 P's to marketing

What are place, produce, price, and promotion?

300

This type of data collection is most likely to be timely and expensive to collect

What is primary?

300

This type of data has been already collected by someone else (for another reason) and available for your use

What is secondary?

300

This type of literacy level describes a person who has the skills necessary to perform more complex and challenging health literacy activities

What is proficient?

400

This term describes the space or social context in which people engage in daily activities in which environmental, organizational, and personal factors interact to affect health and well-being

What is setting?

400

This is a psychological phenomenon which is not directly observable. It is based upon certain characteristics(visible) that make up a phenomena.

What is construct?

400

This is a tool that is used to give you and your health promotion team a visual representation of your entire project from inputs to outcomes

What is a logic model?

400

This type of data usually contains survey questions and responses that are numerical

What is quantitative?

400

This type of assessment includes assessing what resources are available in the setting to address the identified health concerns and problem

What is capacity?

400

This communication channel makes sure that the delivery of, and access to, content is continued or repeated over time, both to reinforce the impact with a given audience and to reach new generations

What is repetition?

500

This is the person who gets credit for bringing an ecological perspective to health promotion programs

Who is Bronfenbrenner?

500

These are the 3 levels of the Theory of Triadic Influence

What is ultimate, distal, and proximal?

500

When describing objectives for a health promotion program, this is what the acronym S.M.A.R.T. stands for

What is specific, measurable, attainable/achievable, realistic, timely?

500

This is the term used to describe how well an intervention program delivers the curriculum, protocol, or guidelines as intended

What is fidelity?

500

This type of assessment assesses the beliefs, values, customs, experiences, and knowledge of target population

What is cultural?

500

This describes the combined efforts of employers, employees, and society to improve the mental and physical health and well-being of people at work

What is workplace health promotion?

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