Activities that maintain or enhance well-being and improve quality of life.
What is Health Promotion?
These are used in healthcare as organizational frameworks to promote understanding of how individuals, families and communities select and adopt health promotion behaviors.
What is a Health Model?
Used to prevent symptoms of disease before they occur (ex. Immunizations).
What is Primary Prevention?
_____ is a basic level of care which includes programs directed toward health promotion and illness prevention, early diagnosis of disease or complex illness, patient self-management and improving team-based approaches to care delivery.
What is Primary Health Care?
Created due to the desire to make care more cohesive and easier to access.
What are Single Health Authorities?
"Health begins at home, in schools, and in factories. It is there, where people live and work..."
What is "Health for All"?
Explores how individuals use available resources to promote health.
What is the Resource Model?
Two examples of health promotion in Canada at the national and provincial levels are _____ & _____.
What is the Heart and Stroke FAST campaign and Narcan Kits?
The 3 ______ to PHC include utilization, delivery, and leadership.
What are barriers?
Autonomous organizations responsible for health care administration in a defined geographical area.
What is regionalization?
OR
What are health regions?
Health promotion is an essential element of ______.
Framework that seeks to understand how people's beliefs about health influence their behaviors, especially in terms of preventing and managing illnesses.
What is the Health Belief Model?
Screening to identify presence of disease and stop its spread or prevent complications (ex. Mammogram).
What is Secondary Prevention?
Primary Health Care is largely based on this declaration.
What is the Declaration of Alma-Ata?
Improving Canada's health care system requires ______.
What is Primary Health Care reform?
This charter outlined 5 Major Strategies to Promote Health:
1. Building health public policy.
2. Creating supportive environments.
3. Strengthening community action.
4. Developing personal skill.
5. Reorientating health services.
What is the Ottawa Charter?
A key focus of this model is to promote optimal health through the creation and maintenance of balance between the physical, emotional, social, intellectual, and spiritual dimensions of health.
What is the Awareness, Motivation, Skills and Opportunity (AMSO) Model?
Avoiding illness or disease.
What is Disease Prevention?
Primary Health Care is people-centered rather than disease-centered. It is a _____ approach that includes health promotion, disease prevention, treatment, rehabilitation, and palliative care.
What is Holistic?
_____ is a model for delivering primary care with a goal of improving delivery of health services at the local level, tailored to the needs of the community. This includes interprofessional teams coordinating care at numerous levels- primary care providers, pharmacists, public health, home care, to long-term care, etc.
What are Health Networks?
This report identified 3 major health challenges:
1.Reducing inequities.
2.Increasing prevention.
3.Enhancing coping mechanisms.
What is the Epp Report?
Framework that focuses on what motivates an individual to make decisions that result in healthy behavior changes. There are 6 stages of the model: pre contemplative, contemplative, decision making, action, maintenance, and termination.
What is the Transtheoretical Model of Change?
Helps minimize residual disability and limitations from disease (ex. Living Well Program for those with chronic diseases).
What is Tertiary Prevention?
Primary Health Care bridges the gap between the _____ and the health care system.
What is Community?
3 challenges of PHC in Canada include ______, teamwork, and equity.
What is Physician Engagement?