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Objectives

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Title: Objectives Author: Linda Jimenez Last modified by: Linda Created Date: 1/19/2004 10:20:19 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Objectives


1
Health Wellness
2
Michigan Merit Curriculum
  • Strand 5 Personal Health and Wellness
  • Standard 1 Core Concepts
  • 5.1 Describe how common infectious diseases are
    transmitted
  • 5.2 Explain the importance of regular health
    screening or exams.
  • 5.3 Analyze the importance of rest and sleep for
    personal health
  • Standard 3 Health Behaviors
  • 5.6 Describe health practices that can prevent
    the spread of illness.
  • 5.7 Apply knowledge about symptoms of illness to
    determine whether medical care is required.
  • Strand 4 Social and Emotional Health
  • 4.1 Identify characteristics of positive
    relationships, and analyze their impact on
    personal and community health.

3
Objectives
  • Identify Health Myths and Facts
  • To define the 6 major components of Health
    physical, social, mental, emotional, spiritual
    and environmental
  • To define health, wellness, and lifestyle.
  • Identify the leading causes of death in 1900s
    and today.
  • To explore life expectancy country wide.

4
ASSIGNMENT
  • Complete pages 5 6 in your workbook. (Go to
    next slides for answers)

5
Health Facts
  • 1. False - Going outside in the cold with wet
    hair can make you sick. (bacteria or virus)
  • 2. False Eating chocolate will cause acne.
    (stress cause body to produce more oil and dirt)
  • 3. False If you get a black eye, you should
    put a raw steak on it. (cold is good, but
    bacteria in the eye, cold frozen peas is better)
  • 4. True Sweat is what causes body odor.
    (bacteria loves warm, moist area)
  • 5. True Going to concerts can make you deaf.
    (over 90 decibels equal ear damage concerts 100
    decibels) (decibels unit to measure sound)

6
Health Facts
  • 6. False Sitting too close to the TV will
    damage your eyes. (focus better)
  • 7. True A hot bath before bedtime will make
    you sleep better. (30 minutes warm bath warms the
    brain)
  • 8. False You can get a wart from playing with
    a frog. (virus causes cells to multiply)
  • 9. False Reading with dim lights can make you
    go blind. (you get tired easier)
  • 10. False People are more violent when there
    is a full moon. (no change, coincidence)
  • 11. True Eat your carrots, they help your
    vision. (beta carotene is a hydrocarbon found in
    carrots and converted by the liver into vitamin A)

7
12. False Coffee stunts your growth. 13.
False Dont eat spicy food, it causes ulcers
(actually very good for your heart)
8
Health Facts
  • 14. False Cracking your knuckles causes
    arthritis (might weaken though)
  • 15. False You should put butter or peanut
    butter on your burns (cold water for minor burns)

9
Some more interesting facts about HEALTH!
  • 1. Which toy accounts for the most emergency
    room visits? SKATEBOARD 80,242 per year, walkers
    are 2)
  • 2. The only 3 areas of your body where hair does
    not grow are PALMS, SOLES OF FEET, AND LIPS.
  • 3. On the average, your hair will grow about 6
    inches a year. (50 to 100 hairs/day break off)

10
  • The most unsanitary part of your body is your
    MOUTH. (10 billion bacteria).
  • What creature has caused the most deaths to
    animals and people? MOSQUITOS (parasite lives in
    mosquito for a week or so. Malaria, Encephalitis
    swelling of the brain and yellow fever)

11
  • 6. Which school nursery rhyme was written abut
    the Black Death plague in 1350? RING AROUND
    THE ROSY.
  • 7. Which bodily fluid is the cleanest? URINE
    (95 water, 5 used up cells protein, salt, and
    stuff your body does not need)
  • 8. When you sneeze saliva travels out of your
    body at a rate of 100 m.p.h. (airborne for 1
    hour)
  • 9. Which insects are used to treat bone
    infections? MAGGOTS
  • 10. If you play with this animal, it can give you
    up to 20 different illnesses RAT

12
  • 11. The woman who holds the record for the
    greatest number of children born, had how many
    children? 67 (a Russian women gave birth 27
    times in 1800s 16 twins, 7 triplets, 4 quads)
  • 12. What causes the most choking emergencies in
    the US? TOOTHPICKS
  • 13. What is more toxic, indoor pollutions or
    outdoor pollution? INDOOR
  • 14. Does it really take 7 years to digest gum?
    NO

13
  • Drug overdose deaths who are they?

14
Parts of Health Page 7 in WB
  • Health is the state of complete physical,
    mental, emotional, social, spiritual, and
    environmental well being. Not merely the absence
    of disease and illness.
  • Wellness - an overall state of well-being, or
    total health. Being truly healthy in all of the
    6 major components of health.

15
Health is also
  • Multi-dimensional (6 parts)
  • Involves the whole person
  • Different meanings for different people at
    different times
  • It includes emotions, beliefs, experiences, and
    situations
  • It is changing, a dynamic entity requiring on
    going maintenance.

16
The 6 Dimensions of Wellness
  1. Physical Health physical and physiological
    abilities the ability to carry out daily tasks.
  2. Social Health how well you get along with
    others.
  3. Mental Health self-esteem how good you feel
    about yourself.

5.6 Describe health practices that can prevent
the spread of illness.
17
Emotional Spiritual
  1. Emotional ability to feel and express the full
    range of human emotions.
  2. Spiritual high level of faith, hope, commitment
    in relation to a well-defined world view or
    belief system that provides a sense of meaning
    and purpose to existence in general.

18
  • 6. Environmental
  • Do you stay informed about environmental issues?
    Are you aware of organizations and global
    initiatives to protect the environments?
  • Other examples include reducing noise
    pollution, keeping the water and air clean,
    conserving energy and natural resources,
    recycling and being an advocate for the
    environment.

19
  • Environmental your surroundings.

20
The Health Continuum(ILLNESS-WELLNESS CONTINUUM)
  • Death Optimal

5.2 Explain the importance of regular health
screening or exams. 5.3 Analyze the importance
of rest and sleep for personal health 5.6
Describe health practices that can prevent the
spread of illness.
21
Factors Influencing Health
  • Age, Sex and Heredity (genetics) contributing
    but not defining factor in certain
    diseases/illnesses.
  • Heredity is all the traits and properties that
    are passed along biologically from both parents
    to child. Hair and eye color.

22
Factors Influencing Health
  • General socio-economic, cultural and
    environmental conditions
  • Education, work environmental,
  • Water and sanitation
  • Health care services, housing
  • Agricultural and food production
  • Environment -your family, where you grew up,
    where you live now, and all your experiences.
  • It also includes the people in your life-your
    social environment. Peers are people the same
    age who share a similar range of interests.

23
Factors Influencing Health
  • Social and Community networks relationships
    with people
  • Behavior (individual lifestyle factors) taking
    responsibility for your own actions.
  • You have little or no control over your heredity
    and environment, you have control over ONE
    factor, affecting your life YOUR BEHAVIOR!

24
What Are Risk behaviors?
  • Action that a person chooses that threatens
    health
  • Can cause injury, illness and premature death
  • Most risk behaviors
  • Are established early
  • Persist into adulthood
  • Are interrelated (example drugs and sex, violence
    and alcohol)
  • Contribute to poor health, education, social
    outcomes
  • Are preventable

25
6 Categories of Risk Behaviors
  • 1. Behaviors contributing to unintentional/intent
    ional injuries
  • Unintentional injuries caused by accident.
    However 99.9 of what is called an accident could
    be prevented!
  • Intentional injuries involve interpersonal and
    self-directed violence
  • Tobacco use
  • Alcohol and other drug use

26
6 Categories of Risk Behaviors
  • Sexual behaviors resulting in unintended
    pregnancy and STDs
  • Dietary patterns contributing to disease
  • Insufficient physical activity

27
  • Top 10 Leading Causes of Death in America -
    (2010)Heart Disease 616,067 (25.4)
  • Cancer 562,875 (23.2)
  • Stroke 135,952 (5.6)
  • Chronic Lower Respiratory Diseases (Lung
    Diseases) 127,924 (5.3)
  • Accidents 123,706 (5.1)
  • Alzheimer's Disease 74,632 (3.1)
  • Diabetes 71,382 (2.9)
  • Influenza and Pneumonia 52,717 (2.2)
  • Kidney Disease 46,448 (1.9 percent)
  • Septicemia (infection of the blood) 34,828 (1.4
    percent)

28
Leading causes of death among young people
  • Motor vehicle accidents
  • 2. Homicides
  • Suicides
  • Cancer

29
Leading causes of death among young people
continued
  1. Heart disease
  2. Congenital anomalies
  3. Chronic lower respiratory disease
  4. Influenza Pneumonia
  5. Stroke
  6. Blood Poisoning

30
What about HIV?
  • HIV does make the list in the age category 25-44

31
Three Levels of Disease Prevention
  • Primary things we do to decrease the chance
    disease will ever happen. (not smoking)
  • Secondary Things we do to detect disease early
    to get early treatment/intervention (tests)
  • Tertiary specific interventions to assist
    diseased or disabled persons in limiting the
    effects of their diseases or disabilities, which
    may include activities to prevent reoccurrence of
    disease-can sometimes be same things as primary.
    (quit smoking)

32
What can be said about the majority of the
leading causes of death for all ages?
  • All are predominately a result of lifestyles
    behaviors.
  • Where the underlying sources of official causes
    of death.
  • Are tobacco use, diet physical inactivity.

33
What can be said about the majority of the
leading causes of death for teens?
  • Underlying causes/sources alcohol drug use,
  • behavior that leads to unintentional/intentional
    injury,
  • behaviors that lead to STDs, HIV, unintended
    pregnancies.

34
Leading Causes of Death in the 1900
  • 1900s COMMUNICABLE DISEASES leading causes of
    death
  • 1. Pneumonia
  • 2. Tuberculosis (TB) chronic or acute
    bacterial infections that primarily attack lungs
    but can affect kidneys, bones, lymph nodes
  • 3. Diarrhea
  • 4. Heart Disease
  • Stroke
  • Liver disease
  • Injuries

35
Major Achievements contributing to changes in
health status
  • Medical Advances
  • 1. Antibiotics
  • 2. Vaccines
  • 3. Advanced Health Care
  • 4. Identifying Pathogens
  • bacterial single cell microorganism that
    cause disease by releasing toxins
  • viral infections smallest known pathogen
  • 5. Family Planning birth control

36
  • Public Health Measures
  • Better nutrition (refrigeration)
  • a. -nutrition
  • b. -food production
  • Sanitation (hygiene)/Garbage
  • Water treatment
  • Waste treatment
  • Work safety regulations

37
  • 10 Most Deadly Diseases - YouTube
  • Microorganisms that cause disease are called
  • Pathogens
  • The 2 main types of pathogens are bacteria and
    virus
  • The most difficult infections to treat are viral
    because smallest known pathogen
  • Antibiotics are used to treat bacterial
    infections
  • When taking antibiotics you need to take all the
    medicine

38
  • Define vaccine is a biological preparation
    that improves immunity to a particular disease.
  • It contains an agent that resembles a
    disease-causing microorganism, and is often made
    from weakened or killed forms of the microbe, its
    toxins or one of its surface proteins.
  • The agent stimulates the body's immune system to
    recognize the agent as foreign, destroy it, and
    "remember" it, so that the immune system can more
    easily recognize and destroy any of these
    microorganisms that it later encounters.

39
  • Infectious Diseases Causes and Controls
    (excerpt) - YouTube

40
  • LIFE EXPECTANCY
  • Adults in the U.S. 77 years (77.9 in 10
  • Males 74.8 years (75.3 in 09
  • Females 80.1 years (80.4)
  • COUNTRY WITH THE HIGHEST LIFE EXPECTANCY Japan
    Males 79 years Females 86 years.

Life
Expectancy
41
The Longevity Game
GO TO THE NOTE SECTION IN YOUR WORKBOOK The
average life expectancy today ( U.S.) is 78 years
old. How long do you expect to live?
  • At what age do you want to get married?
  • Have children?
  • Have grandchildren?
  • Retire?

Beginning Age 78
Gender Women generally live longer than men.
New born girls will live seven years longer than
newborn boys. Scoring Males add 0 Females
add 7. Updated Age _________________

42
  • FAMILY HISTORY Family history influences
    longevity. Like gender its a factor over which
    you have no control. Knowing youre the medical
    history of your family my help you identify
    potential problems.
  • Cancer in family -2
  • Heart disease -2
  • Stroke -2
  • None of the above 2
  • Updated Age _________________

43
  • EXERCISE An active lifestyle is good insurance
    against heart disease.
  • 30 minutes daily 5
  • Occasionally 2
  • Never -2
  • Updated Age ________________
  • STRESS
  • Stressed out, not managed -3
  • Occasionally stressed, not managed -2
  • Use relaxation technique 2
  • Updated Age __________________

44
  • DRINKING
  • Drink 15 years or younger -4
  • Drink occasionally -2
  • Never 2
  • Updated Age _________________
  • DRUGS
  • Use often -3
  • Occasionally -2
  • Never 1
  • Updated Age _________________

45
  • DRIVING
  • Have a license -5
  • Been in a car with drunk driver -10
  • Seat Belt Yes 2
  • No -2
  • Updated Age ______________
  • SMOKING
  • You smoke -5
  • Second hand smoke -1
  • None of friends smoke 2 Updated Age
    ___________________

46
  • IMMUNITY
  • Get sick easily and often -1
  • Rarely sick 2
  • PETS
  • Have a cat or dog 1
  • RELATIONSHIPS
  • Poor family relations -2
  • Poor peer relations -1
  • Good family relations 2
  • Good peer relations 1
  • UPDATED AGE _________________

47
  • Medical Care
  • Regular exams 2
  • Miss exams -1 Up Dated ______
  • Mental Health
  • Intellectually challenged 1
  • Stagnated -1 Up Dated ______
  • Spiritual Health
  • Have a belief 1
  • No belief system -1 Up Dated ______

48
  • LAUGHTER
  • Frequently 2
  • Rarely -1 Up Dated ______

49
  • NUTRITION
  • High fat -1
  • Monitor fat intake 2
  • 3/5 servings fruit/veggies 2
  • Low fruit and vegetables -1
  • Eat processed food -1
  • Fresh foods, not fried 2
  • Updated age _____

50
  • LOCATION
  • Michigan -3
  • New to Michigan -1 Up Dated ______
  • NUTRITIONAL KNOWLEDGE
  • Good understanding 1
  • Not aware -1 Up Dated ______
  • ATTITUDE
  • Mostly positive 2
  • Mostly negative -2 Up Dated ______

51
  • WEIGHT
  • Under/Overweight -1
  • Obese -3
  • Healthy weight 4
  • Updated Age _______

52
  • Under/Overweight -1
  • Obese 30 -3
  • Healthy weight 4
  • Updated Age _________

53
The Longevity Game
  • The average life expectancy today ( U.S.) is
    78 yrs.
  • Raise your hand if you will live to be over 100
    yrs, 90 to 100, 80 to 90, 60 years
  • What areas are subtracting from your life?
  • Are you going to live to see your children have
    children? Your grandchild?
  • What kind of health will you have when you
    retire?
  • Will you live long enough to retire?
  • What changes do you need to make?


54
  • Get between seven to eight hours of sleep per
    night.
  • Eat nutritious foods from the various food
    groups each day
  • Refrain from smoking and using tobacco products
  • Eat breakfast daily.
  • Do 20-30 minutes of nonstop vigorous activity at
    least three times a week.
  • Do not use alcohol or other drugs.
  • Maintain your recommended weight.

Lifestyle
5.3 Analyze the importance of rest and sleep for
personal health
55
  • A key to your health and wellness is prevention!
  • Practicing healthy habits!
  • Wearing seat belts
  • Applying sunscreen, and
  • Using protective gear while playing sports

Lifestyle
5.6 Describe health practices that can prevent
the spread of illness.
56
QUIZ
  • What are the 6 major components of Health?
  • A. Physical, Mental, Emotional, Spiritual,
    Social, Environmental
  • What is the leading cause of death for adults
    today? For Teens?
  • A. Adults -Heart Disease Teens - Accident
  • Define Lifestyle
  • A. Your behaviors
  • What country has the highest Life Expectancy?
  • A. Japan
  • What are communicable diseases?
  • A. Diseases that can be passed to others
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