The conditions in the environments where people are born, live, learn, work, play, worship, and age that affect a wide range of health functioning, and quality-of-life outcomes and risks
What are the social determinants of health?
Individuals in authority to make a full range of rulings about a health promotion program
What are decision makers?
Predisposing, reinforcing and enabling constructs make up this half of the PRECEDE-PROCEED model.
What is PRECEDE?
True/False--Structural violence is a determinant of health.
What is true?
A group or subset of a group of people who are the focus of an assessment or an intervention due to their identified, common characteristics.
What is a priority population?
The first edition of the 10-year goals and objectives that have helped to define and guide the U.S. health agenda.
What is Healthy People 1990?
A guide that summarizes the findings from systematic reviews of public health interventions covering a variety of topics and is an essential tool for program planning.
What is The Community Guide?
This model is commonly used by local and state health departments to address community/state health assessments and health improvement plans.
What is the MAPP model?
True/False--You must provide references used in preparing a program rationale.
What is true?
The interconnected nature of social categorizations such as race, class, and gender, regarded as creating overlapping and interdependent systems of discrimination or disadvantage; a theoretical approach based on such a premise (Coined by Kimberle Crenshaw, 1989)
What is intersectionality?
Communication efforts to influence the antecedents to behavior change, such as knowledge, attitudes, skills, beliefs and values.
What does health education involve?
This example can be referred to as...
What is social math?
One of the "Three F's of Program Planning", this 'F' reminds us that the outcome of planning is improved health conditions, not the production of a program plan itself.
What is functionality?
True/False--Health education includes strategies such as policy and advocacy, multisectoral support, and community mobilization
What is false?
The six dimensions of this concept include emotional, occupational, intellectual, physical, social, and spiritual.
1) Appropriate prevention strategies can be developed to deal with the identified health problems. 2) Behavior can be changed and those changes can influence health. 3) Initiating and maintaining a behavior change is difficult.
What are the assumptions of health promotion?
All the parties that must make up a Planning Committee once a program rationale has been accepted/approved.
What are representatives of the priority population, doers, influencers, representatives of the sponsoring agency, other stakeholders and good leaders?
Recognition that human behavior is shaped by multiple levels of influence.
What is socioecological approach/ecological framework?
What is false?
Includes the question of: "What type of commitment are decision makers willing to make to the program? along with other questions that must be answered before committee members become too deeply involved in the planning process.
What are planning parameters?
The organization responsible for developing the Code of Ethics for the Health Education Profession.
What is the Coalition of National Health Education Organizations?
Sources of data, often seen as higher quality evidence, derived from a scientific process, which include systematic reviews.
What is objective evidence?
This six-step model incorporates both a logic model of the problem and a logic model of change.
What is the Intervention Mapping model?
True/False--The "Health Field Concept" described in the Lalonde Report includes human biology, healthcare systems, genetics, and lifestyle.
What is false?
Listed as Responsibility V of Responsibilities and Competencies for Health Education Specialists, and has competencies that include engaging coalitions and stakeholders in addressing the health issue and planning (blank) efforts.
What is Advocacy?