Designing Effective Health Education Programs - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 42
About This Presentation
Title:

Designing Effective Health Education Programs

Description:

... loss frustration with clothes, arthritis)/New Year's resolutions fall here! ... as part of lifestyle habit formation, new self-image, not temptation, solid self ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:2378
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 43
Provided by: srdcMs
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Designing Effective Health Education Programs


1
Designing Effective Health Education Programs
  • Extension Health Institute
  • November 7 and 8, 2002
  • Presenter
  • Dr. Bobbi Clarke, Professor, Extension Health
    Specialist, and Co-Director for The University of
    Tennessee Center for
  • Community-based Health Initiatives

2
Why You Are Here? Participant Outcomes
  • 1. Describe the complex interacting
    factors that influence health.
  • 2. Utilize behavior change models in planning,
    implementing and evaluating health programs.
  • 3. Develop an evaluation plan.

3
  • When you hear the term health education what
    comes to mind?

4
Definition of Health Education
  • Any combination of learning experiences designed
    to facilitate voluntary adoptions of behaviors
    conducive to health.
  • Educate, motivate, refer, follow-up
  • Complex health care system
  • Targets knowledge, attitudes, behaviors

5
What is the ultimate goal of health education?
6
Ultimate Goal of Health Education?
  • Enable people to increase control over their
    health and quality of life.
  • Empowerment Empowered learners feel competent
    and confident about making health decisions that
    are right for them. (Extension goal)

7
Health Education Produces Health Literacy
  • Capacity of individuals to obtain, interpret, and
    understand health information and services.
    (Extension Impart Knowledge)
  • Competence to use such information and services
    in ways which enhance/maintain health of self and
    family members. (Extension Develop Decision
    Making Skills)

8
Health Literate Person Is One Who
  • Can think things through and make health choices
    in solving his/her own problems as well as family
    member problems.
  • Is responsible and makes health choices that
    benefit his/herself and family members.
  • Is in charge of his/her own health learning and
    teaches family members to do the same.
  • Can use communication skills to express needs,
    questions, and concerns to health care providers
    and staff.

9
How Can Extension Develop Health Literate
Clientele?
  • Develop knowledge and skills related to
  • Concepts related to healthy lifestyles, self-care
    and disease prevention/management
  • Accessing health information and health-promoting
    products and services
  • Analyzing the influence of media, technology, and
    other factors on health
  • Using interpersonal skills to enhance or maintain
    health

10
How Can Extension Develop Health Literate
Clientele? (cont.)
  • Develop knowledge and skills related to
  • Using self-assessment, goal-setting and decision
    making skills to maintain and/or enhance health
  • Advocating for personal, family, and/or community
    health
  • Engaging in health enhancing behaviors
  • Engaging in risk reduction behaviors

11
Extensions Goal?
  • Develop Savvy Health Care Consumers (Health
    Literate Consumers) through
  • Health Inservice training of county Extension
    educators and volunteers---Health Literate
    Professionals (multi state, Health Institute,
    National Extension Priester ConferenceApril
    22-24) on health topics, health literacy, and
    cultural health literacy
  • Health education programs
  • Media (radio, TV, exhibits, newspaper
  • Publications
  • Internet information information, interactive
    programs, linking to credible information
  • Community partnerships

12
Is there a difference between health education
and health promotion?
  • Health education learner directed
  • Health promotion broader concept directed
    toward advocating health
  • Individual and community education
  • Environmental change
  • Policy changes
  • Economic changes
  • Shifts in societal norms

13
Source for Professional Updating/Credible
Information
  • UT Extension Health Program Web Site is a source
    designed for Extension educators
  • http//www.utextension.utk.edu/health

14
Key Point The learners actions take place in a
systemthe world they live in---with elements
that are controllable and uncontrollable.
15
Value of Behavior Theory Models?
  • Try to explain why people do what they do.
  • Provide a framework for how the trainer can best
    design a program for learner success and trainer
    accountability.

16
Individual Change Models
  • People learn through their own experiences
  • Health Belief Model
  • Stages of Change Model
  • Consumer Information Processing Model

17
Health Belief Model (Table 1, p. 3)
  • Explains noncompliance to health
    recommendations---why people dont act on health
    recommendations.
  • Dont understand the seriousness of disease
  • Dont feel susceptible to disease
  • Dont see benefits/Do see barriers to action
  • Need a cue to action

18
Compliance Occurs If
  • Person is motivated by
  • Individual perceptions factors that affect their
    perception of the illness/problem
  • Perceived susceptibility
  • Perceived seriousness
  • Modifying factors
  • demographic variables (ethnicity, culture, age,
    gender, education, income, etc.
  • Perceived threat of the health problem
  • Cue to action media, friends, relative
  • Compilation of these factors leads to cue to
    action
  • Likelihood of action perceived benefits (less
    pain) minus the perceived barriers (time, cost)

19
Health Belief Model
  • Impact to Trainer Readiness to act by
    self-selecting educational program
  • Design programs that affect the learners
    perceptions
  • People perceive the seriousness of health problem
  • But dont perceive themselves as susceptible
  • Competing with advertising and media that
    promotes negative perceptions (easy fast weight
    loss)
  • Self-assessment tools (level of risk) and action
    plans, group process (sharing experiences)
    problem-solving

20
Action Plan/S.M.A.R.T. Plan
  • Specific state concrete goal(s)
  • Measurable tell when achieved goal
  • Agreed Upon state what you will do and who will
    help you
  • Rewarding Reward for achieving goal(s)
  • Trackable Keep track of progress

21
Stages of Change Model(Transtheoretical/Prochaska
s Model--Table 2, p. 3 )
  • Self-changers follow 6 stages
  • Precontemplation
  • Contemplation
  • Preparation
  • Action
  • Maintenance
  • Termination

22
Six Stages of Change
  • 1. Precontemplation not even thinking about
    changing
  • 2. Contemplation thinking about changing (weight
    lossfrustration with clothes, arthritis)/New
    Years resolutions fall here!
  • 3. Preparation getting ready/planning to do it
    (weight loss---developing a plan/, telling
    others)
  • 4. Action making a change (steps to control
    behavior, avoid barriers, reset realistic goals,
    plan for relapse)
  • 5. Maintenance maintaining the change,
    developing strategies to prevent relapse,
    behavior rewarding, behaviors now automatic
    (weight loss has occurred)
  • 6. Termination establish change as part of
    lifestylehabit formation, new self-image, not
    temptation, solid self-efficacy, healthier
    lifestyle

23
Impact on Trainer
  • Self-changers follow these 6 stages
  • Not linear but spiral---lots of
    recycling/slipping
  • Problem learners in a program are at different
    levels/causes negative learner outcomes
  • Trainer tools
  • Individualize the learning through
    self-assessment and action plans
  • Act for learner expectations and tailor learning
    to match expectations
  • Learner needs time to practice
  • Design time for learner sharing/interaction with
    experiences
  • Multi-sessions which build on previous session
  • Design evaluation for success

24
Consumer Information Processing (Table 3, p. 7)
  • People can handle a limited amount of information
    at one time
  • Process of gaining and using information
  • Information must be user-friendly---easy to use
  • Impact to trainer issues addressed in the
    design of the training program
  • Focus information on most relevant
  • Design information tailored to the audience
  • Place in convenient siteschannels
  • People not empty vessels---exposed to information
  • Pilot testing program (formative evaluation)
    attractive, interesting, understandable, relevant

25
Interpersonal Level Models(Table 4, p. 10)
  • Social Learning Theory Very complex
  • People dont learn in a vacuum
  • People learn by observing actions of others and
    results of those actions
  • Multi-dimensional learning self (personal
    factors and behavior as a result of these
    factors), and the environment
  • Self-efficacy empowerment, build competency and
    confidence
  • Impact on Trainer
  • Lots of interactive activities between learners
    and trainer (case studies, scenarios, sharing of
    experiences, group problem solving)
  • Multi-sessions for reinforcement, support groups

26
Community Level Models(Table 7)
  • Use with comprehensive health promotion efforts
    to solve a health problem or reach underserved
    populations
  • Initiatives planned and led by organizations
  • Diffusion of Innovation Theory share with
    society new research findings, ideas or health
    recommendations
  • Community Organization Theory solve problems
    through community---such as coalitions

27
Four Factors Surface Among These Models
  • Perceptions of expected benefits
  • Perceptions of expected costs/barriers
  • Community-level effect collective
    impact---people will do it if others are
  • Self-efficacy confidence in the ability to take
    action
  • Impact to trainer These forces guide the
    learners ability to change behavior

28
So What! Include These Four Factors in Your
Programs
  • Knowledge facts, controversies, problems
  • Self-efficacy develop competency and confidence
  • Skills practice skills to successfully
  • use them away from the learning environment
  • Environmental support/influence support use of
    skills in daily living

29
How?
  • Needs assessments
  • Diagnosing educational delivery problems/barriers
  • Shaping the design of the intervention
  • Shaping the design of the evaluation

30
Characteristics of the Adult Learner (Andragogy)
  • As a person matures
  • His/her self-concept moves from dependency to
    self-directing
  • Accumulates a growing reservoir of experience,
    which is a rich resource for learning
  • Change in time perspective from future
    application of knowledge to immediacy of
    application---more problem-centered than
    subject-centered in learning
  • Motivated to learn by internal factors rather
    than external ones

31
Health Education Program Planning Models
  • Used for designing, implementing and evaluating
    health education programs.
  • Two models
  • 1. Social Marketing Model
  • 2. PRECEDE-PROCEED Model

32
Social Marketing Model
  • Uses principles of segmentation of target
    audience
  • Four Ps of marketing
  • Right Product (health message) backed by the
    right Promotion (appeal) and put in the right
    Place (go where audience ischannels) at the
    right Price (tangible and non-tangible costs)
  • Examples
  • Food Advertisements
  • Medications Advertisements Over-the-Counter and
    Prescribed

33
Used in Health Promotion Campaigns
  • Effective in producing knowledge change and
    short-term behavior change new medication for
    arthritis pain and get the flu shot
  • Not effective in long-term or major behavior
    change diet, exercise, smoking, alcohol
    consumption

34
Social Marketing Uses Mediaand Follows 7 Steps
  • Segmenting target audience
  • Marketing mix 4 Ps
  • Selecting channels and materials
  • Developing program
  • Pretesting
  • Implementation and Refinement
  • Monitoring and Evaluation

35
Health Program Plan
  • Establish planning group
  • Assess need
  • Identify problem
  • State goals and objectives trainer/learner
  • Create intervention
  • Identify methods
  • Develop evaluation plan
  • Implement plan
  • Evaluate program

36
What is a goal?
  • Broad statement of expectations
  • Short-term measurable, achievable
  • Example Provide influenza vaccine in November
    and December of 2001 to protect the community
    against influenza
  • Long-term idealistic, timeless
  • Examples Improve health status, reduce breast
    cancer, increase influenza rates

37
What is an objective?
  • Map out what learner and trainer need to do to
    achieve goal how it will be done
  • Address specific knowledge, attitudes and
    behaviors
  • Must be Specific, Measurable, assigned to
    specific target Audience, Realistic and reflect a
    specific Timeframe (SMART)
  • Clear objectives map out the evaluation How
    will I know they can do this (or I got there?)

38
How to make objectives measurable?
  • Action verbs discuss, identify, list, state,
    write, demonstrate
  • Vague verbs believe, understand, comprehend, be
    familiar with, acknowledge

39
Using the SMART Rule
  • Upon completion of this session, the participant
    will be able to acknowledge eight sources of
    calcium in her diet.
  • (Specific, Measurable, Audience, Realistic,
    Timeframe)

40
Apply the SMART Rule
  • Specific? ---addresses knowledge of calcium
    sources
  • Measurable? ---acknowledge eight calcium sources
  • Acknowledge is long word, consider using list,
    state, write down
  • Audience? ---assigned to participant
  • Realistic? ---eight sources may not be realistic,
    consider 2 or 3 sources
  • Timeframe? ---upon completion of this session

41
Measurable Objectives?
  • Upon completion of this session, the learner will
  • be able to
  • Believe that influenza is a serious disease
  • Understand what influenza is
  • Be familiar with who is at risk for getting the
    flu
  • Acknowledge the importance of getting the flu
    shot

42
Classification of Educational Objectives
  • Knowledge easiest to measure
  • Comprehension
  • Application
  • Analysis
  • Synthesis
  • Evaluation most difficult to measure
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com