Foundations for Health Promotion - Elsevier eBook on VitalSource (Retail Access Card), 3rd Edition
Elsevier eBook on VitalSource - Access Card
$59.95
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• Fully updated to reflect the many changes in health promotion theory, practice and policy
• Illustrative examples, activities and discussion points encourage interaction and reflection
• Unique, user-friendly approach makes learning easy -
- Fully revised and updated information, guidelines, and reference provide the latest information for clinical practice
- New illustrations clarify important health promotion concepts
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Foreword Acknowledgements How to use this book Checklist for public health and health promotion practice PART 1: THE THEORY OF HEALTH PROMOTION
1. Concepts of health
Defining health; Western scientific medical model; Critique of the medical model; The role of medicine; Lay health beliefs; Cultural health beliefs
2. Influences on health
Factors influencing health; Social class and health; Gender and health; Ethnicity and health; Effects of income, housing and employment on health; Social cohesion; Explanations for health inequalities
3. Measuring health
Sources of health information; Mortality rates; Morbidity rates; Objective health measures; Measuring deprivation; Subjective health measures; Epidemiology and health promotion
4. Defining health promotion
The development of health promotion; Definitions of health education and health promotion; Definition of public health; The role of the World Health Organization
5. Models and approaches to health promotion
Different approaches to health promotion; Aspects of these approaches; The importance of theory in health promotion; Different models of health promotion
6. Ethical issues in health promotion
The philosophy of health promotion; Duties in health promotion; The individual and the common good; Ethical principles
7. The politics of health promotion
Political ideologies; Politics and globalization; Politics of health promotion structures; Politics of health promotion methods; Politics of health promotion content; Radical health promotion
PART 2: STRATEGIES & METHODS8. Developing personal skills
The role of beliefs, attitudes and values in health-related decisions; The influence of social norms on health behaviour; The concept of locus of control; Health promotion strategies to change attitudes or behaviour
9. Strengthening community action
Defining community development; Community development in health promotion; Working with a community development approach; Community development activities; Dilemmas for practice
10. Using media in health promotion
Nature of media effects; Role of mass media; Using mass media; Planned campaigns; Unpaid coverage; Media advocacy; Social marketing; Effectiveness of mass media; Communication tools
11. Re-orienting health services
Reasons for reorienting health services; Principles; Strategies; Service provision; Who promotes health
12. Developing healthy public policy
Defining healthy public policy (HPP); Advantages and drawbacks to using a HPP approach; The history of HPP; HPP at different levels – global, national and organisational; The potential of HPP to promote health; Resources and skills required for HPP; The practitioner’s role; Evaluating the effectiveness of HPP
PART 3: SETTINGS FOR HEALTH PROMOTION13. Health promotion in schools
The school setting; Relationship between schools, education and health; The context for health promotion in schools; The health-promoting school; Effectiveness of health promotion in schools
14. Health promotion in the workplace
The workplace setting; Relationship between work and health; Responsibility for workplace health; Health promotion in the workplace
15. Health promotion in neighbourhoods
Definitions of neighbourhood; Neighbourhoods as settings for health promotion; Different aspects of neighbourhoods; Evaluation of neighbourhood health promotion
16. Health promotion in primary health care and hospitals
The concept of a Health Promoting Hospital; Promoting the health of patients; Promoting the health of staff; Hospitals and their community; Hospitals as a health promoting organisation; Health Promoting Hospital Movement
17. Health promotion in prisons
Prisons as a healthy setting; Reasons for prioritising health promotion in prisons; Barriers to using prisons as health promoting settings; Interventions and evidence of their effectiveness
PART 4: IMPLEMENTING HEALTH PROMOTION18. Assessing health needs
Concepts of need; Needs assessment strategies; Relating needs to strategic planning; Problems in assessing needs
19. Planning health promotion interventions
Systematic planning and its advantages; Different planning models; Quality and audit
20. Evaluating health promotion
Defining evaluation; Why evaluate; What to evaluate; How to evaluate; Cost-effectiveness; Using evaluation to build an evidence base for health promotion
Glossary Index -
Jennie Naidoo, BSc, MSc, PGDip, PGCE, Principal Lecturer, Health Promotion and Public Health, University of the West of England, Bristol, UK and Jane Wills, BA, MA, MSc, PGCE, Professor of Health Promotion, London South Bank University, London, UK