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Understanding Health Concepts for Health Promotion | Carcinogens, Goals/Objectives, Health Triangle, Life Skills, Key Te

Learn why comprehending health concepts related to health promotion and prevention is important. Explore topics such as carcinogens, health triangle, life skills, and key terms.

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Understanding Health Concepts for Health Promotion | Carcinogens, Goals/Objectives, Health Triangle, Life Skills, Key Te

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  1. Why is it important to comprehend health concepts related to health promotion and prevention? What is a carcinogen?

  2. Goals/Objectives 1. Draw and label the health triangle. 2. Discuss ten factors that affect health status. 3. Identify seven life skills to practice. 4. Discuss the steps to follow to help you comprehend health concepts related to health promotion and disease prevention. 5. Discuss four kinds of skills needed to be a health-literate person.

  3. Key Terms • health • mental-emotional health • family-social health • health status • health knowledge • risk • random event • wellness • health concept • health-literate person

  4. Your Health • Health is a collective quality of life, that include physical, mental-emotional, and family-social health.

  5. What to Know About the Health Triangle • The Health Triangle shows relationships among: • Physical health is the condition of a person’s body.

  6. What to Know About the Health Triangle • Mental-emotional health is the condition of a person’s mind and the ways that a person expresses feelings.

  7. What to Know About the Health Triangle • Family-social health is the condition of a person’s relationships with family members and with others.

  8. What to Know About the Health Triangle

  9. What to Know About the Health Triangle • If one of the points on the Health Triangle is missing or impaired, it can begin to lose its balance, which can affect the other two points.

  10. Health Status • Health status is the sum of positive and negative influences on a person’s health and well-being.

  11. Factors That Affect Health Status 1. Health knowledge – Health knowledge is the information and understanding a person has about health.

  12. Factors That Affect Health Status 2. Accessing health information, products, and services – When you access useful health information, you help yourself make decisions about products or services and choose behaviors that will keep you healthy. – A health service is help that is provided by a health-care facility or a health-care provider. – A health product is something that is used to restore or maintain health.

  13. Factors That Affect Health Status 3. Behaviors • A person’s behavior is the way a person chooses to act or respond to a situation. • Two types of behavior can affect health: healthful behaviors and risk behaviors.

  14. Factors That Affect Health Status Behavior Choices and Health Status Healthful Behavior • Promotes health • Prevents injury, illness, and premature death • Improves the quality of the environment • Examples: wearing a safety belt, exercising regularly, and eating healthful foods Risk Behavior • Threatens health • Can cause injury, illness, and premature death • Damages or destroys the environment • Examples: playing sports without safety equipment, smoking, and drinking alcohol

  15. Factors That Affect Health Status 4. Influences such as culture, media, and technology  • Many people and circumstances affect your health each day, including: • Culture: the arts, beliefs, and customs that make up a way of life for a group of people at a certain time • Media: various forms of mass communication • Technology: the practical application or use of knowledge

  16. Factors That Affect Health Status 5. Communication skills • Communication skills are the ways in which a person chooses to share feelings, thoughts, and information with others. • Resistance skillsare methods a person can use to say “no” to an action or situation that could damage health status. • Conflict-resolution skills are steps that you can take to settle a disagreement in a responsible way.

  17. Factors That Affect Health Status 6. Decisions involving choices • Many decisions you make have long-term consequences and might cause you to take actions that affect health status.

  18. Factors That Affect Health Status TABLE 1.1 Decisions and Health Status Responsible Decisions Irresponsible Decisions • Promote health • Can harm health • Keep safety in mind • Result in unsafe behaviors • Follow laws • May be illegal • Show respect for self • Show disrespect for self and others and others • Follow guidelines of parents • Show disregard for guidelines and adults of parents and others • Demonstrate good character • Are part of normal character development

  19. Factors That Affect Health Status 7. Health-advocacy skills • Health-advocacy skills are used to influence the health behavior and decisions of others and to advance health-related beliefs and concerns. • A health advocate is a person who influences the health behavior and decisions of others and advances certain health-related beliefs and concerns.

  20. Factors That Affect Health Status 8. Heredity • Heredity is the passing of characteristics or traits from biological parents to their children. • Inherited characteristics may be protective factors or risk factors. • A protective factor is something that increases the odds of a positive outcome, such as healthful traits. • A risk factor is something that increases the odds of a negative outcome, such as a risk factor for some diseases.

  21. Factors That Affect Health Status 9. Your environment • Your environment is everything around you, including the air, the water, and the place in which you live. • An environment can be a protective factor or a risk factor depending on access to basic needs.

  22. Factors That Affect Health Status 10. Random events • A random event is an incident over which a person has little or no control.

  23. Factors That Affect Health Status Health Skills to Practice for Life You promote the health of others and the quality of the environment when you: • comprehend health concepts related to health promotion and disease prevention; • access information about health products and services; • analyze influences on health, such as culture, media, technology, and other factors; •practice healthful behaviors; • use communication skills, resistance skills, and conflict-resolution skills; • set goals and make responsible decisions; • advocate for personal, family, and community health.

  24. Factors That Affect Health Status What decisions can you make to protect your health status?

  25. Risks and Random Events • A risk is a chance that has an unknown outcome. • Risks and random events can have positive or negative effects on health status.

  26. How Risks Differ From Random Events • Risks • A calculated risk is a chance that a person takes after carefully considering all possible outcomes. • An unnecessary risk is a chance that, after weighing all the possible outcomes, you decide is not worth it. • Random event • A random event is an incident over which a person has little or no control.

  27. Responsibility for Health • Quality of life is the degree to which a person lives life to the fullest capacity. • Wellness is the quality of life that results from a person’s health status. • The Wellness Scale is a scale that shows the range in quality of life.

  28. How to Use the Wellness Scale • Ten factors (see page 6 in your textbook) can affect your health status and wellness. • Factors that have a positive effect promote optimal wellness. • Factors that have a negative effect increase your risk of illness, injury, and premature death.

  29. How to Use the Wellness Scale

  30. Comprehending Health Concepts • A health concept is a general idea formed from an understanding of health knowledge. • Health concepts help you apply general ideas to real-life situations.

  31. How to Comprehend Health Concepts • There are skills that you can learn and practice that will help you become better at recognizing reliable health information.

  32. How to Comprehend Health Concepts TABLE 1.2 Steps to Comprehend Health Concepts Related to Health Promotion and Disease Prevention

  33. How to Comprehend Health Concepts • You can understand more about any point of the health triangle using the same steps. • Staying informed and asking questions about all aspects of your health will lead to health literacy.

  34. Health Literacy • A health-literate person is a person who demonstrates the skills of effective communication, self-directed learning, critical thinking (and problem solving), and responsible citizenship.

  35. How to Attain Health Literacy • Everyone can learn to be a health-literate person using effective communication, self-directed learning, critical thinking, and responsible citizenship.

  36. How to Attain Health Literacy • Effective communication • Effective communication is expressing your health knowledge, beliefs, and ideas.

  37. How to Attain Health Literacy • Self-directed learning • Self-directed learning is taking personal responsibility for gathering and using health-related information.

  38. How to Attain Health Literacy • Critical thinking • Critical thinking is evaluating the facts and examining possible outcomes before making decisions.

  39. How to Attain Health Literacy • Responsible citizenship • Responsible citizenship is behaving in ways that improve your home, school, community, nation, and world.

  40. Study Guide 1. What are the three parts of the Health Triangle? The three parts of the health triangle are physical health, mental-emotional health, and family-social health.

  41. Study Guide 2. How is a risk different from a random event? A risk is something that you choose whether or not to do. A random event is an incident over which you have little or no control.

  42. Study Guide 3. Can you totally control all factors of your health and wellness? Why or why not? No; some factors, such as heredity and random events that occur, are out of your control. You can work to control many factors, such as behaviors and decisions, that will have long-term effects on your health status.

  43. Study Guide 4. Match the following descriptions to the skills of a health-literate person. ___ self-directed learning ___ critical thinking ___ effective communication ___ responsible citizenship A. evaluating the facts and examining possible outcomes before making decisions B. taking personal responsibility for gathering and using health-related information C. behaving in ways that improve your home, school, community, nation, and world D. expressing your health knowledge, beliefs, and ideas B A D C

  44. End of the Lesson

  45. Lesson Resources Interactive Tutor Web Links Self-Check Quiz www.glencoe.com Go to www.glencoe.com to find Health & Wellness Web resources.

  46. Help To navigate within this Interactive Chalkboard product: Click the Forward button to go to the next slide. Click the Previous button to return to the previous slide. Click the Lesson Resources button to go to the Lesson Resources slide where you can access resources, such as transparencies, that are available for the lesson. Click the Menu button to close the lesson presentation and return to the Main Menu. If you opened the lesson presentation directly without using the Main Menu, this will exit the presentation. You also may press the Escape key [Esc] to exit and return to the Main Menu. Click the Help button to access this screen. Click the Health Online Button to access the Web page associated with the particular lesson you are working with. Click the Speaker button to hear the vocabulary term and definition when available.

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