Protection against a disease before signs and symptoms occur.
What is primary prevention?
A foundational population health promotion strategy.
What is building public policy?
physician's offices, community health centers, and home care are examples of this sector of health care settings.
What is community sector?
A purposeful process whereby the patient is learning health-related information to support healthy lifestyle or behaviour change.
What is health education?
From this perspective, personal health is not solely an individual, self-serving act. Rather, the consequences of an individual lifestyle behaviors have deep and wide consequences extending to the global contexts.
What is a global citizenship?
Age, ethnic background, and family history. These are all what type of risk factors.
What are non-modifiable risk factors?
Community gardens and collectives kitchens targeted to enhancing food security are examples of this population health promotion strategy.
What is strengthening community action?
_____ is rooted in societal responsibility and fairness.
What is social justice?
_____ is a goal of patient education.
What is maintaining and promoting health and preventing illness? or what is restoring health? or what is optimizing quality of life with impaired functioning?
What are non-communicable diseases?
A positive state of health.
What is wellness?
Tobacco-free policies are examples of this health promotion strategy.
What is creating supportive environments?
Improving the health and quality of life of those facing life-altering conditions due to chronic illness, disability, frailty, and aging.
What is rehabilitation?
In planning to teach range-of-motion exercises to a patient after surgery, a nurse should consider this mode of learning.
What is psychomotor learning?
Culturally based care and health knowledge expressed in sensitive, creative, and meaningful ways refers to this type of care.
Trevor is assisting the nurse to comfort children when they receive their immunization. Immunizations are an example of _______ and _________ prevention.
what is primary and illness/disease?
A theoretical model that emphasizes the interaction between an individual and their environment.
What is the socioecological model?
Teams, Access, _______ and ______ are the four pillars of primary health care.
what is information and healthy living?
The term used when the nurse describes a patient's perceived ability to successfully complete a task.
What is self-efficacy?
A theoretical perspective regarding the influence of different characteristics.
An approach to health that favors health promotion strategies such as education and social marketing.
What is a behavioral approach?
The focus of this population health promotion strategy in the Ottawa Charter is to move beyond provision of healthcare to reducing health inequities through action on the determinants of health.
What is reorient healthcare services?
Early detection and routine care, as well as prevention.
What is primary care?
What is cognitive domain of learning?
Leading to stereotypes, discrimination, and racism against other people.
What is ethnocentrism?