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HEALTH

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Biology and Genetic Endowment ... Genetic endowment provides an inherited predisposition to a wide range of ... genetic endowments appears to predispose ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: HEALTH


1
HEALTH
  • HEALTH PROMOTION

2
What are your answers?
  • I feel healthy when..
  • I am healthy because.
  • To stay healthy I need
  • I become healthy when
  • (A person) affected my health when
  • (An event) affected my health when
  • ( A situation) affected my health when
  • ..is responsible for my health.

3
HEALTH
  • Value an ideal that has importance to an
    individual, group or society. They are developed
    through life experiences
  • Beliefs are mental convictions (trust in another
    person). Values influence our beliefs.
  • Behaviours represent or demonstrate our values
    and beliefs

4
Canadian Society
  • Values equality, individual rights, health and
    well being, quality of life and human dignity
  • This is demonstrated in the Canadian health care
    system by the principle of universality. Equal
    access to health care and illness care to all
    Canadians regardless of where they live and their
    socio-economic status.

5
Personal Values
  • Our values and beliefs affect our health
    behaviours. Everyone has different health
    priorities (diet, exercise, stress maintenance,
    hygiene).
  • Our professional values build on our personal
    values. The more one experiences in nursing the
    more ones values are alter, reshaped and
    reordered.
  • Our behaviours will also change as seen in our
    personal strategies for health and in our care of
    clients.

6
Models of Health
  • Clinical model - absence of signs symptoms
  • Role performance model successful performance
    of valued roles and tasks
  • Adaptive model flexible adjusting to change
    through growth expansion and creativity
  • Eudaimonistic model self-actualized, fulfilled,
    exuberant well being

7
HEALTH (PENDER, 1996)
  • Stability-oriented maintenance of equilibrium
    in physical functional and social norms
  • Actualization-oriented high level wellness,
    actualizing ones own potential
  • Health includes affect, attitude, activity,
    aspirations accomplishments and is seen as
    interactions between the person the
    environment.

8
HEALTH (Labonte, 1993)
  • Vital, full of energy
  • Good social relationships
  • Sense of control over ones life living
    conditions
  • Doing things you enjoy
  • Sense of purpose to your life
  • Connectedness to community

9
(No Transcript)
10
HISTORICAL APPPROACH TO HEALTH IN CANADA
11
  • MEDICAL 20th century
  • Disease / body breakdown
  • Focus on treatment of disease infirmity (Tx
    fix it)
  • Scientific advances, hospital construction,
    national health insurance could resolve most of
    societys health problems
  • Health promotion focused on treatment of
    physiological risk factors (hypertension, obesity)

12
BEHAVIOURAL APPROACH
  • Lalonde Report (1974)
  • Lifestyle, environment, human biology, Health
    care organizations
  • Health promotion to decrease behavioural risk
    factors (Participaction)
  • Integrating knowledge from the social sciences to
    motivate people/HP strategies
  • Placing responsibility for health on the
    individual

13
Social Environmental
  • Ottawa Charter (1986)
  • The Epp (1986) Report
  • Increasing awareness of the effect of
    socio-environmental factors on health
  • People dont choose poor health, quite often
    their environment poses obstacles and barriers

14
 Why is Jason in the hospital?Because he has
a bad infection in his leg.But why does he
have an infection?Because he has a cut on his
leg and it got infected.But why does he have a
cut on his leg?Because he was playing in the
junk yard next to his apartment building and
there was some sharp, jagged steel there that he
fell on.But why does he live in that
neighbourhood?Because his parents cant afford
a nicer place to live.But why cant his
parents afford a nicer place to live?Because
his Dad is unemployed and his Mom is sick.But
why is his Dad unemployed?Because he doesnt
have much education and he cant find a job.But
why.? 
15
Ottawa Charter
  • Prerequisites for health peace, shelter,
    education, food, income, stable ecosystem,
    sustainable resources, social justice, equity.
  • Advocacy for health at all levels and areas
  • Enable people by providing opportunities and
    resources
  • Mediate coordinated action by governments, social
    economic sectors, and volunteer organizations

16
WHO Definition of Health
  • Health is viewed as the extent to which an
    individual or group is able , on the one hand, to
    realize aspirations and satisfy needs and on the
    other hand, to change or cope with the
    environment. Health is seen as a resource for
    everyday living not the object of living. Health
    is a positive concept emphasizing social and
    personal resources as well as physical capacities.

17
Epp Report Achieving Health For All A Framework
For Health Promotion
  • Health Challenges
  • Reducing inequities, increasing prevention, and
    enhancing coping
  • Mechanisms
  • Self-care, mutual aid, healthy environments
  • Strategies
  • Fostering public participation, strengthening
    community health services, coordinating healthy
    public policy

18
Strategies for population Health (1994)
  • Three more determinants of health are added
    Gender, culture and social environments.
  • Determinants are viewed at both the individual
    level AND the population level

19
Determinants of Health
  • Income Social Status
  • Social Supports Networks
  • Education
  • Employment/Working Conditions
  • Social Environments
  • Physical Environments
  • Personal Health Practices Coping Skills
  • Healthy child Development
  • Biology and Genetic Endowment
  • Health Services
  • Gender
  • Culture

20
Income Social Status
  • Health Status improves at each step up the income
    and social hierarchy. High income determines
    living conditions such as safe housing and
    ability to buy sufficient good food. The
    healthiest populations are those in societies,
    which are prosperous and have equitable
    distribution of wealth.

21
Social Supports Networks
  • Support from families friend and communities is
    associated with better health. The importance of
    effective responses to stress and having the
    support of family and friends provides a caring
    and supportive relationship that seems to act as
    buffer against health problems

22
Education
  • Health status improves with the level of
    education.
  • Education increases the opportunities for income
    and job security, and equips people with a sense
    of control over life circumstances key factors
    that influence health

23
Employment/Working Conditions
  • Unemployment, underemployment and stressful work
    are associated with poorer health.
  • People who have more control over their work
    circumstances and fewer stress related demands of
    the job are healthier and often live longer than
    those in stressful or riskier work and
    activities.

24
Social Environments
  • The array of values and norms of society
    influence in varying ways the health and
    well-being of individuals and populations.
  • In addition, social stability, recognition of
    diversity, safety, good working relationships and
    cohesive communities provide a supportive society
    that reduces or avoids many potential risks to
    good health. Studies have shown that low
    availability of emotional support and low social
    participation have a negative impact on health
    and well-being.

25
Physical Environments
  • Physical factors in the natural environment (e.g.
    air, water quality) are key influences on health.
    Factors in the human built environment such as
    housing, workplace safety, community and road
    design are also important influences.

26
Personal Health Practices Coping Skills
  • Social environments that enable and support
    healthy choices and lifestyles, as well as
    peoples knowledge, intentions, behaviours and
    coping skills for dealing with life in healthy
    ways, are key influences on health.
  • Through research in areas such as heart disease
    and disadvantaged childhood, there is more
    evidence that powerful biochemical and
    physiological pathways link the individual
    socio-economic experience to vascular conditions
    and other health events.

27
Healthy child Development
  • The effect of prenatal and early childhood
    experiences on subsequent health, well-being,
    coping skills and competence is very powerful.
  • Children born in low income families are more
    likely than those born to high income families to
    have low birth weights, to eat less nutritious
    foods and to have more difficulty in school

28
Biology and Genetic Endowment
  • The basic biology and organic makeup of the human
    body are fundamental determinant of health.
  • Genetic endowment provides an inherited
    predisposition to a wide range of individual
    responses that affect health status. Although
    socio-economic and environmental factors are
    important determinants of overall health, in some
    circumstances genetic endowments appears to
    predispose certain individuals to particular
    diseases or health problems.

29
Health Services
  • Health services, particularly those designed to
    maintain and promote health, to prevent disease,
    and to restore health and function contribute to
    population health.

30
Gender
  • Gender refers to the array of society-determined
    roles, personality traits, attitudes, behaviours,
    values, relative power and influences that
    society ascribes to the two sexes on a
    differential basis.
  • Gendered norms influence the health systems
    practices and priorities. Many health issues are
    a function of gender based social status or
    roles. Women for example are more vulnerable to
    gender based sexual or physical violence, low
    income, lone parenthood, gender based causes of
    exposure to health risks and threats (e.G.
    Accidents STDs, suicide, smoking, substance
    abuse prescription drugs, physical inactivity).
    Measures to address gender inequity and gender
    bias within and beyond the health system will
    improve population health.

31
Culture
  • Some persons or groups may face additional health
    risks due to a socio-economic environment, which
    is largely determined by dominant cultural values
    that contribute to the perpetuation of conditions
    such as marginalization, stigmatization, loss or
    devaluation of language and culture and lack of
    access to culturally appropriate health care and
    services.

32
Health Promotion
  • Increasing the level of well being and self
    actualization
  • Disease Prevention
  • Decreasing the probability of experiencing health
    problems

33
Levels of Prevention
  • Primary Prevention protection of disease before
    the occurrence of Signs Symptoms
  • Secondary Prevention activities that promote
    early detection of disease so that prompt
    treatment can halt or decrease it.
  • Tertiary Prevention activities that minimize the
    residual disability from the disease and help to
    live productively

34
Health Promotion Strategies
  • Build Healthy Public Policy
  • Create Supportive Environments
  • Strengthen Community Action
  • Develop Personal Skills
  • Reorient Service

35
People must
  • Develop an understanding of the complex factors
    influencing health.
  • Consider the root causes of health situations.
  • Consider a variety of strategies.
  • Realize enhancement of health takes EVERYONE not
    just health professionals.
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