Title: HEALTH EDUCATION and HEALTH PROMOTION
1HEALTH EDUCATION and HEALTH PROMOTION
- OEDOJO SOEDIRHAM
- DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH PROMOTION AND BEHAVIORAL
SCIENCES - FKM-UNAIR, SURABAYA
2HEALTH EDUCATION and HEALTH PROMOTION
- HEALTH EDUCATION AND HEALTH PROMOTION
- introduction
- Definitions and Concepts
- Foundation for Practice
- Others
3INTRODUCTION
- OVERVIEW
- Everyone engaged in the tasks of promoting health
starts with a view of what health is. - However, there is a wide variety of these views,
or concepts, of health. It is, important of the
outset to be clear about the concepts of health
which you personally adhere to, and to recognize
where these differ from those of your colleagues
and clients. Otherwise, you may find yourself
drawn into conflicts about appropriate strategies
and advice that are actually due to different
ideas concerning the end goal of health.
4- This lecture does not discuss about health only,
but also to present the process of attempting to
promote health that may include a whole range of
interventions including - Those which foster healthy lifestyle
- Those which encourage access to services and
involvement in health decisions - Those which seek to promote an environment in
which the healthy choice becomes the easier
choice - Those which educate about the body and keeping
healthy
5- Until the 1980s most of these interventions were
referred to as health education and the
practice was almost exclusively located within
preventive medicine or, to a lesser extent,
education. In recent years, the term health
promotion has become widely used. This course
considers whether this change in name signifies a
difference in ideology, policy, and practice.
Using typology first suggested by Bunton and
Macdonald (1992), it describes the development of
health education and health promotion, and shows
their interdependent.
6- The 19th century public health movement informed
the health education of the earlier part of the
20th century which, in turn, informed the
development of health promotion. It shows how
the debate about the meaning of health education
and health promotion has stemmed from a growing
awareness that achieving Health For All
requires not just changes in individual behavior,
but also, social and environmental change.
7- The development of health education
- The origins of health education lie in the 19th
century when epidemic disease eventually led to
pressure for sanitary reform for the overcrowded
industrial towns. Alongside the public health
movement emerged the idea of educating the public
for the good of its health. The Medical Officers
of Health appointed to each town under the Public
Health legislation of 1848 frequently
disseminated everyday health advice on safeguards
against contagion. (Voluntary associations were
also formed including the London Statistical
Society,1839 the Health of Towns
Association,1842 and the Sanitary Institute,
1876).
8- The Temperance Movement held Band of Hope mass
meetings, through schools and churches lectured
to young people on the virtue of abstinence. By
the 1920s health education had become associated
with diarrhoea, dirt, spitting and venereal
disease. The evidence that between 10 and 20
of soldiers in the First World War had contracted
venereal disease led to propaganda, one-off
lectures and the first use of shock-horror
techniques in which soldiers were shown lurid
pictures of diseased genitals to dissuade them
from having sex.
9- Changing patterns of morbidity and mortality
shifted attention away from disease to personal
behavior. The Central Council for Health
Education was established in 1972, paid for by
local authority public health departments and
public health doctors formed the majority of its
membership. An extract from some of the tasks
listed as important reflects an emphasis on
information, and education to bring about change
in personal habits and behavior
10- The provision of better and cheaper posters and
leaflets - The provision of exhibits for exhibition
- The production of readable monthly bulletin
- The provision of a panel of lectures who really
could lecture and hold an audience
11- The Central Council was principally concerned
with propaganda and instruction. During the
Second World War it delivered 3799 lectures on
sex education and venereal disease which were
attended by 340,000 people. - But, according to Sutherland (1979) the two
principal functions or aims of the Central
Council for Health education were
12- First to promote and encourage education in the
science and art of healthy living and, second,
to coordinate the work of all statutory bodies in
carrying out their powers and duties under the
Public Health Acts relating to the promotion
of Public Health.
13- Unfortunately, health education confined itself
in the main to the first, largely lifestyle,
function and neglected the second, largely
structuralist, issue. Health promotion in the
last 20 years or so has attempted to fill that
gap. It is worth noting, however, that health in
turn did not develop in a vacuum but emerged as a
consequence of the public health measures of the
late 19th and early 20th centuries.
14- This lecture does not to conclude which one come
first, whether health education or health
promotion. Rather, to give information about
what is inside of those two. Is there any real
different, both in concept and in practice? - What do you think about these two tables below,
which one is more useful for you as public health
worker?
15TABLE 1
16TABLE 2
17Definitions and Concepts
18Health in the River of Life
19- The river as a metaphor of health development has
often been used. According to Antonovsky, it is
not enough to promote health by avoiding stress
or by building bridges keeping people from
falling into the river. Instead people have to
learn to swim (Antonovsky 1987).
20- The river of life is a simple way to demonstrate
the characteristics of medicine (care and
treatment) and public health (prevention and
promotion) shifting the perspective and the focus
from medicine to public health and health
promotion towards population health.
21- Cure or treatment of diseases
- The curative perspective on health means that we
save people from drowning using expensive high
technology and well-educated professionals. Up
stream thinking would offer people support and
interventions at an earlier stage.
22- Health protection/disease prevention
- This stage can be divided in two phases, i.e. the
protective and the preventive. The protective
perspective means that the interventions are
limiting the risks of disease. The efforts and
interventions are population-based and passive.
23- In the metaphor of the river, the interventions
are aimed at preventing people from falling into
the river by building fences. The preventive
perspective aims at preventing diseases by active
interventions characterized by an empowering
attitude where people are actively involved.
24- People are here supplied with a life vest. The
rationale is to reduce the negative effects and
risks thus maintaining the health of the public.
The interventions are both population-directed
(protective) and individual-based (preventive).
25- Health education/health promotion
- This stage consists both of health education and
health promotion. Health education has a long
tradition in public health practice. Originally,
it was a question of the professionals informing
people of health risks and giving advice how
people should live their lives.
26- Today it is based on a dialogue, involving people
in their own lives, making their own decisions
supported by the professionals. People are, in
general, more actively involved than in the
previous stages. The interventions are directed
towards both individuals and groups. Improved
health literacy is the key outcome of health
education (Nutbeam, 2000).
27- Returning to the river, the efforts here aim at
teaching people how to swim. In health
promotion, health is seen as a human right. The
focus is on the co-ordination of activities
between professions and professionals in
societies. This is a positive concept emphasizing
social and personal resources as well as physical
capacities.
28- The responsibility of health promotion action
extends far beyond the health sector and health
behavior to wellbeing and QoL. It is a humanistic
approach having the human being, human rights at
focus again. The individual becomes an active
and participating subject.
29- The task for the professionals is to support and
provide options, enabling people to make sound
choices, point out the key determinants of
health, to make people aware of them and able to
use them (Lindström and Eriksson, 2006). Health
education is here replaced by learning about
health referring to the reciprocity of a health
dialogue. The salutogenic perspective can be
applied in all these stages.
30- Improving health perception/wellbeing/quality of
life - Going up-streams towards the source the last
stage deals with health perception and QoL. The
ultimate objective of health promotion activities
is to create prerequisites for a good life.
Perceived good health is a determinant for QoL.
The salutogenic framework can create a fusion of
the complexity of health and QoL development
(Eriksson and Lindström, 2006, 2007).
31- It is necessary to learn how to reflect on the
options of ones life situation, such as what
generates health, what improves QoL and what
develops SOC. Traditionally, the difference
between the biomedical model and public health
has been described through a metaphor of a river
moving from the down river approach where people
already are struck by disease up streams through
the stages described above.
32- However, to explain the shift of paradigm of the
salutogenic framework, the metaphor of the river
is different. This is Health in the River of
Life. Here the river flows vertically across your
view. Along the front side of the river, there is
a waterfall continuously following the whole
stretch of the river. This means the main flow
and direction of the river is not down the
waterfall.
33- At birth, we are dropped into the river and float
with the stream. The main direction is life not
death and disease in the waterfall. Some are born
close to the opposite side of the river where one
can float at ease and the opportunities for life
are good and there are many resources at
disposal, like in a welfare state. Some are born
close to the waterfall, at dis-ease, where the
struggle for survival is harder and the risk of
going over the rim is much greater.
34- The river is full of risks and resources.
However, the outcome is largely based on our
ability to identify and use the resources to
improve our options for health and life.
35Definitions and Concepts
- BIOMEDICAL
- PSYCHOLOGICAL
- SOCIOLOGICAL (SOCIOCULTURAL)
36Definitions and Concepts
- BIOMEDICAL
- Focuses solely on the individuals physiological
state - Health is defined simply as the absence of
disease or physiological malfunction - It is NOT positive state but the absence of a
negative state
37Definitions and Concepts
- PSYCHOLOGICAL
- Asserts that individual constantly make
subjective evaluations of their own health - Originally, this assessment was assumed to focus
solely on a general feeling of overall well-being - Psychological wellness includes
- Pleasurable involvement
- Long-term satisfaction
- The absence of negative affect
38Definitions and Concepts
- SOCIOLOGICAL (SOCIOCULTURAL)
- Emphasizes on the social and cultural aspects of
health and illness - Focuses on the individuals capacity to perform
roles and tasks and acknowledges that there are
social differences in defining health
39Definitions and Concepts
- Health promotion is the process of enabling
people to increase control over, and to improve,
their health. - To reach a state of complete physical, mental,
and social well-being, an individual or group
must be able to identify and to realize
aspirations, to satisfy needs, and to change or
cope with the environment. - Health is, therefore, seen as a resource for
everyday life, not the objective of living.
40Definitions and Concepts
- Health is a positive concept emphasizing social
and personal resources, as well as physical
capacities. - Therefore, health promotion is not just the
responsibility of the health sector, but goes
beyond healthy life styles to well-being
41Definitions and Concepts
- PREREQUISITIES FOR HEALTH
- Peace
- Shelter
- Education
- Food
- Income
- A stable eco-system
- Sustainable resources
- Social justice
- Equity
42Definitions and Concepts
- HEALTH PROMOTION ACTION MEANS
- BUILD HEALTHY PUBLIC POLICY
- CREATE SUPPORTIVE ENVIRONMENTS
- STRENGTHEN COMMUNITY ACTION
- DEVELOP PERSONAL SKILLS
- REORIENT HEALTH SERVICES
43Definitions and Concepts
These actions are interdependent, but healthy
public policy establishes the environment that
makes the other four
44Definitions and Concepts
45THE FIVE MAJOR AREAS/STRATEGIES IN HEALTH
PROMOTION(OTTAWA CHARTER)
- 1. Healthy Public Policy
- Healthy public policy is a pre-requisite for
successful health promotion. - A Healthy Public Policy is characterized by a
concern for health and equity and an
accountability for health impact. - Health should be made a priority item on the
agenda of policy-makers in all sectors. - Policy-makers should be made aware of the health
consequences of their decisions. They should
create pro-health policies, whether in the area
of development, legislation, taxation etc.
46THE FIVE MAJOR AREAS/STRATEGIES IN HEALTH
PROMOTION(OTTAWA CHARTER)
- Healthy public policy covers a combination of
diverse but complementary measures and approaches
such as legislation, taxation, fiscal incentives
and disincentives, policy analysis and review,
and organizational change - Joint action by all sectors will contribute to
achieving safer and healthier goods and services,
healthier public services, and cleaner and more
healthy environment. - The aim is to make the healthier choice the
easier choice for all people. - HPP should lead to the creation of a supportive
environment to enable people to lead healthy live
47THE FIVE MAJOR AREAS/STRATEGIES IN HEALTH
PROMOTION(OTTAWA CHARTER)
- According to the Adelaide Conference (1988), The
main aim of HPP is to create a supportive
environment to enable the people to lead healthy
lives. Healthy choices are thereby made possible
and easier for citizens. - All relevant government sectors like agriculture,
trade, education, industry and finance need to
give important consideration to health as an
essential factor during their policy formulation.
48THE FIVE MAJOR AREAS/STRATEGIES IN HEALTH
PROMOTION(OTTAWA CHARTER)
- 2. Create Supportive Environment
- A supportive environment is essential for health.
- Supportive environments cover the physical,
social, economic, and political environment. - Supportive environments encompass where people
live, work and play. This is what is envisaged by
the settings approach. - Everyone has a role in creating supportive
environments for health.
49THE FIVE MAJOR AREAS/STRATEGIES IN HEALTH
PROMOTION(OTTAWA CHARTER)
- 3. Strengthen Community Action Community
Participation - According to the Ottawa Charter, health
promotion works through concrete and effective
community action in setting priorities, making
decisions, planning strategies and implementing
them to achieve better health. - There are many ways of defining community.
Factors used are geography, culture and social
stratification.
50THE FIVE MAJOR AREAS/STRATEGIES IN HEALTH
PROMOTION(OTTAWA CHARTER)
- Community action is any activity undertaken by a
community in order to effect change (including
voluntary and self-help services). - Community participation covers a spectrum of
activities - At the low end, it may be token participation in
the form of consultation or endorsing plans drawn
up by the health authorities. At the high end, it
may be in the form of people power where they
have full say in identifying needs, setting
priorities, planning strategies and activities
and implementing the program.
51THE FIVE MAJOR AREAS/STRATEGIES IN HEALTH
PROMOTION(OTTAWA CHARTER)
- Full community participation occurs when
communities participate in equal partnership with
health professionals as stakeholders in setting
the health agenda. - A Definition (Rifkin et al. 1988)
- Community participation is a social process
whereby groups with shared needs living in a
defined geographic area actively pursue
identification of their needs, take decisions and
establish mechanisms to meet these needs
52THE FIVE MAJOR AREAS/STRATEGIES IN HEALTH
PROMOTION(OTTAWA CHARTER)
- According to the Jakarta Declaration (1997),
health promotion improves both the ability of
individuals to take action, and the capacity of
groups, organizations or communities to influence
the determinants of health. - Empowerment is an important strategy, based on
the notion that health is significantly affected
by the extent to which one has control or power
over ones life.
53THE FIVE MAJOR AREAS/STRATEGIES IN HEALTH
PROMOTION(OTTAWA CHARTER)
- 4. Develop Personal Skills
- Strategies for empowering the community include
leadership training, learning opportunities for
health, and access to resources including
material and funding - Empowerment helps people to identify their own
needs and concerns, and gain the power, skills
and confidence to act upon them. It is a
bottom-up strategy which requires the health
promoter to act as a facilitator and catalyst for
change.
54THE FIVE MAJOR AREAS/STRATEGIES IN HEALTH
PROMOTION(OTTAWA CHARTER)
- Skills which can promote an individuals health
include those pertaining to identifying,
selecting and applying healthy options in daily
life. - Health education is life-long, so that people can
develop the relevant skills to meet the health
challenges of all stages of life, and to be able
to cope with chronic illness and disabilities. - Health education should be conducted in all
settings.
55THE FIVE MAJOR AREAS/STRATEGIES IN HEALTH
PROMOTION(OTTAWA CHARTER)
- 5. Reorient Health Services
- Shift of emphasis from provision of curative
services. - Health care system must be equitable and
client-centered. - May necessitate reengineering and organizational
change, especially in the areas of professional
education and training, management, recruitment
and deployment of health personnel, and planning,
development and delivery of services,
56Health Promotion Theory
- Why study health promotion theory?
- Although it is clear why public health
practitioners and students of public health
should learn about how to devise and implement
health promotion interventions, it may be less
obvious why it is necessary to spend time
learning about the theory of health promotion. As
this book makes clear, health promotion is far
from straightforward.
57Health Promotion Theory
- Why study health promotion theory?
- Unless public health practitioners explore and
understand the theory underpinning health
promotion, there is a real risk, at best, of
establishing ineffective interventions and, at
worst, of antagonizing and even harming the very
people you are seeking to help.
58SECTION 1Philosophy and theory of health
promotion
- Health promotion is probably the most ethical,
effective, efficient and sustainable approach to
achieving good health. It was defined initially
by the World Health Organization in 1986, but the
definition has since been refined to take account
of new health challenges and a better
understanding of the economic, environmental and
social determinants of health and disease.
59- Health is the most sought after subject on the
World Wide Web. The problem of definition is
confusing because terms such as health (and
education and promotion) are widely used in
everyday language and, as such, are used to mean
very different things in different contexts.
These are essentially contested concepts, as they
are used and abused, in the familial sense, in
everyday language.
60thank you