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| What is health promotion? |
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Definition
| Refers to the process of enabling people and communities to increase their control over various determinants of health |
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Term
| What can oral health promotion increase? |
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Definition
-Demand for care -Use of dental services -Preventive self-care measures |
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Term
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Definition
| a set of interrelated concepts, definitions, and propositions that present a systematic view of events or situations by specifying relations among variables, in order to explain and predict the events or situations |
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Term
| What are other words for theories? |
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Definition
-conceptual frameworks -models |
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Term
| What are the three levels of health promotion? |
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Definition
1. intrapersonal level 2. interpersonal level 3. community level |
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Definition
-Stages of Change Theory -Health Belief Model |
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| Community Organization Theory |
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| What is the community organization theory? |
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Definition
| Involving/activating members of a community to identify a common problem or goal |
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| Diffusion of Innovations Theory |
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Definition
-Assesses how new ideas, products, or services spread within a society -Point out benefits (monetary, convenience, time-saving) |
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Term
| Organizational Change: Stage Theory |
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Definition
-Involve management in awareness-raising activities -Initiate action by consulting with decision makers -Innovation is implemented -New goals and values are internalized |
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Term
| Health communication process (1-4) |
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Definition
1. Planning and strategy development 2. developing and pretesting concepts 3. implementing the program 4. Assessing effectiveness |
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Definition
| relates to specific cues used to make messages meaningful for a specific individual |
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Term
| What are the stages of change? |
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Definition
1. precontemplation 2. contemplation 3. decision 4. action 5. maintenance |
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Definition
| thinking about change in the near future |
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| What is the health belief model? |
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Definition
| allows us to assess people's perceptions of health problems, see page 227 in book for table |
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Term
| What are the 4 ways that the social learning theory suggests we learn? |
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Definition
1. direct exposure 2. vicarious exposure 3. judgements voiced by others 4. inferred knowledge |
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