1-4, 6, 18, 24, 31. Health Promotion, Wellness, Disease Prevention & Religion

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Criteria for screening programme

*Disease criteria*: -Serious disease -High prevalence of pre-clinical stage -Natural history of disease well understood -Long period b/w 1st signs & overt disease *Diagnostic test criteria*: -Sensitive & Specific -Simple & cheap -Safe & acceptable -Reliable *Diagnosis/Treatment criteria*: -Adequate facilities -Effective, acceptable & safe treatment available

Factors influencing individual response to Health promotion: REINFORCING FACTORS & Appropriate Health promotion response

*Inter*personal (between self and others) factors negatively or positively influencing behaviour -relationships w/ significant others -health literacy among sig. others *Response* -Cultural competence -Involving families -Peace and Security initiatives -Social support network and services -Educational opportunities -Community organisation

Factors influencing individual response to Health promotion: PREDISPOSING FACTORS & Appropriate Health promotion response

*Intra*personal (within self) characteristics influencing behaviour -knowledge -attitudes -beliefs -perceptions -health literacy *Response* -Continual assessment of what these are & how they change based on interventions -Understand and apply behaviour change theories -Build capacity for change & coping

Prenatal & Newborn screening tests

*Prenatal* (antenatal): HIV/HBV, Ultrasound *Newborn*: Sickle cell disease, thyroid disease

Health Literacy dimensions: Cultural Literacy

-Abilities to recognize, understand and use collective beliefs, customs and social identity of diverse individuals to interpret and act on information. -Important at the individual patient provider level eg. Understanding that Hispanics have lowest levels of Flu vaccine, and this can affect entire family. Tell Hispanic patient 'protect your entire family'

Mental health

-Also called psychological health, may include emotional health; may make explicit reference to intellectual capabilities; the subjective sense of well-being -Growth in understanding, reasoning, memory and communication -Emotional growth, involving accepting yourself, making room for others, and having a sense of purpose in life -Ability to cope with the good and bad experiences of life by showing appropriate emotional and practical responses

Health Literacy dimensions: Civic Literacy

-Awareness of public issues and ability to discuss these issues -Judging the sources of information -Judging the quality of information -Knowing when and where to access information -Knowing how to advocate for oneself and others eg. The parent who understands that keeping a child with chicken pox at home is for the greater good of the class and school even though it may be inconvenient to do so.

Common examples of Medical Norms in: Christian Science, Catholicism, Judaism, Jehovah's Witness

-Christian scientists may choose to pray for healing rather than medical treatment. -Jehovah Witnesses do not accept blood transfusion, but non-blood alternatives instead. -Roman Catholics are averse to fertility treatment such as in vitro fertilization. -For some Jewish families, the question of circumcising boys is one of faith and tradition as well as a medical decision.

Primary approach to Health Education

-Effective communication to improve health literacy -Foster motivation, skills & confidence to take action -Mobilize & organize participation in activities that impact health outcomes

Model of Health & Illness: Health Promotion Model

-Emphasises actualisation of health potential and an increase in the level of wellbeing rather than avoidance of disease; -Has been primarily used in nursing -Describes major components and variables that influence health promoting behaviours 3 major components: 1.individual characteristics and experiences 2.behaviour-specific cognition and affect 3.behavioural outcome

Multidimensional Model of Health Literacy: 4 central domains

-Fundamental literacy -Scientific literacy -Civic literacy -Cultural literacy

Health Literacy dimensions: Scientific Literacy

-Skills and abilities to understand and use science and technology -->Basic concepts -->Change in accepted science is possible eg. Woman on Hormone replacement therapy reads that studies have linked HRT to increased risk of ovarian cancer. Poor scientific literacy: She thinks it's no big deal and continues on the therapy Good scientific literacy: She inquires about this with her doctor

Social Health

-The ability to interact effectively with other people and the social environment; satisfying interpersonal relationships; role fulfilment -Ability to integrate and to interact acceptably with others -Optimal social health includes knowing self; establishing, maintaining healthy boundaries and respecting the boundaries of others

Health Literacy dimensions: Fundamental Literacy

-The ability to read, write, speak and work in numbers -Is the cornerstone to health literacy -->Written and spoken health info contains complex language -->Finding the right educational materials to reinforce learning is often difficult

Disease Classification according to Duration or Onset (Acute)

-Usually has a short duration and severe. -The signs and symptoms appear abruptly, are intense and often subside after a relatively short period. -Following an acute disease process a person may return to normal level of functioning

Disease Classification according to Aetiology

1. Hereditary 2. Congenital. Due to a defect in the development, hereditary factors, or prenatal infection; present at birth. (e.g. cleft lip, cleft palate) 3. Metabolic 4. Deficiency. Results from inadequate intake of absorption of essential dietary factors. 5. Traumatic. Due to injury. 6. Allergic 7. Neoplastic. Due to abnormal or uncontrolled growth of cells. 8. Idiopathic. Cause is unknown; Self-originated; of spontaneous origin. 9. Degenerative. Results from the degenerative changes that occur in tissue and organs. 10. Iatrogenic. Results from the treatment of a disease.

Stages of Illness

1. symptom experience 2. assumption of sick role 3. contact medical care 4. dependent patient role

Leavell's 3 levels of disease prevention

1° - Before person gets disease → *Lower incidence & prevalence of disease* 2° - Disease process started, but asymptomatic → Find & treat disease early; reduce morbidity; may be able to cure 3° - Person has symptoms → Cure disease; slow disease; prevent complications; treat disability; rehabilitate; *prevent death*

Health Education Defn.

A combination of learning experiences designed to achieve VOLUNTARY actions supportive of health; Any combination of planned learning experiences based on sound theories that provide individuals, groups and communities the opportunity to acquire information and the skills needed to make quality health decisions.

Complication

A condition that occurs during or after the course of an illness

Cultural awareness

A deliberate recognition of cultural beliefs, practices and values as a necessary part of the approach health care providers need to possess, in order to be more sensitive to their patients

Disease Classification: Pandemic

Epidemic diseases which is extremely widespread involving an entire country or continent.

5 Models of Health and Illness

Agent-Host-Environment Health/Illness Continuum High-Level Wellness Model Health Belief Model Health Promotion Model

Common major childhood illnesses: Adolescent

Accidents & injuries STI / HIV Teenage pregnancy Depression - suicide Substance abuse

Spiritual Health

Also called "personal health"; associated with the concept of self-actualization; sometimes reflects a concern for issues related to one's value system; alternatively ,may be concerned with a belief in a transcending, unifying force.

Disease Classification: Epidemic

Attacks a large number of individuals in a community at the same time

Sensitivity vs Specificity

Both *measures of accuracy* of tests *Sensitivity* is proportion of people *with disease* who correctly *test positive*; [THINK: Sensitive enough to detect the disease] *Specificity* is proportion of people *without disease* who correctly *test negative*

Based on the information given about Dawn and in light of the stages of change theory at what stage would you say she is, in her readiness to change her behaviour A. Pre-contemplation B. Action C. Preparation D. Contemplation

C. preparation She has already made plans to make the changes. She now is preparing to follow through with these plans.

Health Education Operative Words: Voluntary Actions

Change is more lasting when it is self imposed

Disease Classification according to Duration or Onset (Chronic)

Characterized by: Remission - Period during which the disease is controlled symptoms are not obvious Exacerbation - The disease becomes more active again at a future time, recurrence of pronounced symptoms; -Slow onset. -Persists, usually longer than 6 months and can also affect functioning in any dimension. -The client fluctuates between maximal functioning and serious relapses that may be life threatening

Behavioural Change (Basic factors)

Communication strategies Building relationships

Morbidity & Morbidity rate

Condition of being diseased; The proportion of disease to health in a community

Public Health Policy by World Health Organization

Defines a vision for the future Outlines priorities and expected roles of different groups Builds consensus and informs people

Common major childhood illnesses: Infant

Diarrhoeal illnesses Respiratory infections Nutritional problems Injuries

Disease vs Illness

Disease: Biological and/or physiological malfunctioning (the 'clinical' perspective); Illness: The experience and perception of disease within the sociocultural context; includes spirituality and religion; a personal or subjective state in which the person feels unhealthy or unwell; Illness may or may not be related to disease; Illness is a state in which a person's physical, emotional, intellectual, social, developmental or spiritual functioning is diminished or impairment compared with previous experience.

Disease (defn.)

Disturbance of structure or of function of the body or its constituent parts; Lack of or inadequate adaptation of the organism to his environment; Failure of the adaptive mechanism to adequately counteract the stimuli or stresses to which it is subject, resulting in disturbances in function and structure of any part, organ or system of the body

Declaration of Human Rights Article 25(1)

Everyone has a right to a standard of living adequate for the health and wellbeing of himself, and of his family , including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services

Factors influencing individual response to Health promotion: ENABLING FACTORS (*Health Services & Social Conditions*) & Appropriate Health promotion response

Factor: *Health Services* -Activities organized for *p*romoting health, *p*reventing disease and restoring or maintaining *p*opulation health. {*P*'s} Factor: *Social conditions* -Income and social status -Equity -Employment and working conditions *Response* -Know population & needs -Plan with communities -Promote services -Include non-traditional services -Use modern technology -Public Education -Supportive actions

Factors influencing individual response to Health promotion: ENABLING FACTORS (*Natural & Man Made environment*) & Appropriate Health promotion response

Factor: Natural/Made-made Environment -Environmental Engineering -air, water, soil -vectors -natural hazards, waste -road signs *Response* -Impact assessments & interventions -Public education and protective measures -Community Services

Challenges of preventative care that persist in Jamaica

HIV/AIDS Violence & its impact

Examples of 1° prevention of common illnesses/injuries in children

Hand washing Wearing seatbelt Pool fences Stairway gates Keep guns/weapons in secure location

WHO Definition of Health (1948)

Health is a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity.

Health on a Continuum

Health on a continuum is [a person's] degree of wellness at any point in time, ranging from: an optimal wellness condition, with available energy at its maximum to: death, which represents total energy depletion

Multiple risk reduction strategies (Behavioural)

Identify knowledge, attitudes & risk behaviours Understand effects on health Plan change

Key successes in childhood illness preventative initiatives so far in Jamaica

Immunisation Breastfeeding initiative Use of oral rehydration solutions Fluoridation - decrease tooth decay Seatbelt legislation Antiretroviral prophylaxis

Health engineering strategies for behaviour change

Include activities that seek to change the structure or types of services or system of care to promote health • Referrals to specialists for focus on educational inputs (eg nutritionists, counselors, health educators) • Changes in the environment to influence awareness, knowledge, attitudes (eg posters, videos, pamphlets, no smoking signs, removal of ash trays, placement of bins, food choices) • Lower prices on healthy snacks • Combination of strategies

Wellness (Ministry of Health of New Zealand defn. & National Wellness Association of Singapore)

New Z: A dimension of health beyond the absence of disease or infirmity, including social, emotional and spiritual aspects of health Singapore: Wellness is an active process of becoming aware of and making choices toward a more successful existence.

Incentives and Disincentives for health promotion

Often used in workplace health programmes to encourage or discourage behaviours; *Social reinforcers*: • Attention or recognition • Praise/verbal reinforcements • Encouragement *Material reinforcers*: • Tokens • Certificates etc • Cost sharing eg reduced fees for engaging in some activities *Health Insurance*

Etiologic Agent

One that possesses the potential for producing injury or disease (eg virus or bacteria etc)

Disease Classification: Sporadic

Only occurs occasionally

Community services & organisational strategies for Health promotion

Outreach programmes to: *Remove barriers to obtaining service*; *Help persons who do not use the health services*: • screening • Provide follow-up/referrals • Explain or demonstrate alternatives in treatment *Support groups*: • Having a knowledge of existing groups • Establishing groups • Encourage networking • Encourage family support

Examples of 2° screening

PAP smear Mammogram Penicillin prophylaxis for RHD

Common major childhood illnesses: Child

Poisoning Accidents & injuries Infections Nutritional problems

Health Belief Model

Predicts likelihood of individual health behaviour change; People more likely to comply with recommended health behaviour if: 1.*they perceive themselves vulnerable to a condition they consider to be severe* 2.They perceive the effects of non-compliance to be severe 3.the benefits to be derived from recommended action outweigh the cost of engaging in the behaviour 4.*Barriers to carrying out the action are minimal/ manageable* 5.*There is Self efficacy for performing the behaviour before starting the behaviour* 6.Other sociocultural factors

Common major childhood illnesses: Newborns

Prematurity Jaundice Respiratory distress Congenital anomalies Infection

Disease Classification: Endemic

Present more or less continuously or recurs in the community.

2 Tests for Health Literacy

Rapid Estimates of Adult Literacy in Medicine [REALM] Test Of Functional Health Literacy in Medicine [TOFLA]

Virulence

Relative power or the degree of pathogenicity of the invading microorganism, the ability to produce poisons that repel or destroy phagocytes

Why study health literacy? / Issues with low healthcare literacy?

Research shows that low health literacy increases health expenditures -->Patient provider communication -problems leading improper use of medications & other procedures -->Applications for health care benefits require paper work so benefits are often not accessed by low literate persons. Low literate persons: -->Think in concrete/immediate terms -->Often interpret information literally -->Have insufficient language fluency needed to comprehend and apply information from written materials -->Have difficulty with information processing such as medical instructions, reading labels

Syndrome

Set of symptoms, the sum of which constitutes a disease; a ground of symptoms which commonly occur together; a group of signs and symptoms which when considered together characterise a disease

Stages of Illness: Symptom Experience

Stage 1: believe something is wrong -some symptoms -transition stage 3 aspects: -physical (fever, ache, etc) -cognitive (believing you have the flu) -emotional (worry about consequences)

Stages of Illness: Assumption of Sick role

Stage 2: -Acceptance of the illness -Seeks advice, support for decision to give up some activities.

Stages of Illness: Contact Medical Care

Stage 3: Seeks advice to health professionals for the following reasons: - validation of real illness - explanation of symptoms - reassurance or prediction of outcome

Stages of Illness: Dependent patient role

Stage 4: -The person becomes a client dependent on the health professional for help. -Accepts/rejects health professional's suggestions. -Becomes more passive and accepting. -May regress to an earlier behavioral stage.

Epidemiology

Study of the patterns of health & disease, its occurrence and distribution in man, for the purpose of control and prevention of disease

Symptom vs Sign

Symptom: Any disorder of appearance, sensation or function experienced by the patient indicative of a certain phase of a disease. Manifestation of perceptible changes in the body which indicate the presence of a disease or disorder; Sign: An objective symptom or objective evidence or physical manifestation made apparent by special methods of examination or use of sense

Inadequacy (basic factors)

Tendency to blame the victim Many actions difficult due to lack of resources and opportunities

Physical Health

The absence of disease and disability; functioning adequately from the perspective of physical and physiological abilities; the biological integrity of the individual

Biopsychosocial Definition of Health

The biopsychosocial model is a general model or approach that posits that biological, psychological (which entails thoughts, emotions, and behaviours), and social factors, all play a significant role in human functioning in the context of disease or illness

Susceptibility

The degree of resistance the potential host has against the pathogen

WHO Revised description of Health (1984)

The extent to which an individual or a group is able to realize aspirations and satisfy needs, and to change or cope with the environment; health is a resource for everyday life, not the objective of living; it is a positive concept, emphasizing social and personal resources as well as physical capabilities

Model of Health & Illness: Health Belief Model Basis

This is built on the premise: that disease prevention and curing regimens will eventually be successful and; the belief that health is highly valued. Both premises need to be present in the model to be relevant in explaining health behaviour

Health Education Operative Words: Sound theories

Understanding the process of change for better planning of health behaviour change

Screening

Unrecognised disease identified by tests that can be rapidly applied on a large scale

Disease Classification: Venereal

Usually acquired through sexual relation (HIV/AIDS, gonorrhea)

Health Education Operative Words: Planned learning experiences

Versus incidental or occasional and based on relevant assessment

Dimensions of Wellness

Wellness = optimal health and vitality Dimensions of wellness: 1.Physical wellness 2.Emotional wellness 3.Intellectual wellness 4.Spiritual wellness 5.Interpersonal and social wellness 6.Environmental, or planetary, wellness

Secondary screening (PAP smear, cervix cells tested for cervical cancer)

What level of screening is this?

Secondary screening (Prostate cancer already developed.)

What level of screening is this?

Religion

a matter of faith-belief anchored in conviction rather than scientific evidence. It is founded on the idea of the sacred, that which is set apart as extraordinary and demands submission

Cultural knowledge

a responsibility to develop a culturally sensitive approach to patient care interactions, and to take measures to educate self about the worldview of various cultures.

*Case*: Dawn believes she is vulnerable to diabetes. She believes diabetes is a serious life threatening disease. Risk behaviours: • She likes to eat a lot of sweet foods • She is not physically active Other risk factors: • Her mother and two aunts on her mothers side died from complications of diabetes • She is obese (Thinks this is more appealing to her spouse) She knows she is at risk and plans to reduce her risk. She plans to exercise and has made arrangements with her friend Pam to go walking in the mornings at 5:30. For the last year she has been putting off starting the walking programme. *Question*: What educational approach is more likely to help Dawn modify her bahaviour? a. Give Dawn some reading materials about diabetes and its prevention b. Encourage Dawn to develop a behaviour contract and negotiate for a strong support system c. Have a variety of educational materials displayed in the waiting area of the clinic where Dawn visits for medical care d. Engage in reflective listening and offer material incentives for change

b. Encourage Dawn to develop a behaviour contract and negotiate for a strong support system Dawn already is knowledgeable about her risks. She understands what needs to be done. She needs support in actually starting her new healthy habits.

Web of Causation

de-emphasizes the disease agent and allows for multifactorial causes

Health Policy (define)

decisions, plans, and actions that are undertaken to achieve specific health care goals within a society

Health Promotion Operative words: Social & Environmental

economic, cultural, regulatory, organizational factors which interact with behaviour to influence health status

Culture

learned, shared and transmitted values, beliefs, norms and life practices of a particular group that guides the thinking, decisions and actions in patterned ways

Disease Classification: Functional

no anatomical changes are observed to account for the symptoms, may result from abnormal response to stimuli.

Disease Classification: Familial

occurs in several individuals of the same family (e.g. hypertension, cancer)

Health Promotion Operative words: Educational

provision of learning experiences to facilitate voluntary actions

Disease Classification: Organic

results from changes in the normal structure, from recognizable anatomical changes in an organ or tissue of the body.

Disease Classification: Occupational

results from factors associated with the occupation engaged in by the patient (e.g. cancer among chemical factory workers).

Cultural skills

the ability to collect data and perform physical histories that are both thorough and culturally sensitive

Health Promotion Operative words: Combination

the importance of matching determinants of health with multiple interventions

Health Education Operative Words: Combination

the importance of using a variety of approaches & engaging the senses

Cultural encounter

this refers to direct interactions between the provider and patient, despite their different cultural backgrounds. The more providers interact with patients of different cultures, the more they get the opportunities to refine their approaches to these groups

Sources of resistance to change of health behaviour

• *Ignorance* • *Mistrust* • *Disbelief • *"Power-Cut"*: a fear that sources of influence and control will be eroded. • *Loss*: change has unacceptable personal costs • *Inadequacy*: the benefits from the change are not seen as sufficient • Anxiety • *Comparison*: the way forward is disliked because an alternative is preferred • *Demolition*: change threatens the destruction of existing social networks.


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