Fr. 164.40

The Health Behavioral Change Imperative - Theory, Education, and Practice in Diverse Populations

English · Hardback

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Description

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Health experts independently state that the most critical urban problems are preventable. This brings an added challenge to public health practitioners working in inner cities with predominately minority communities. In addition to deadly diseases - including transmittable diseases - violence, whether it is physical, sexual or child abuse, is the other predominant morbidity factor that urban areas confront.
Because of these concerns, there is a need for health professionals working with the communities to critically examine health behavior theories and prevention methodologies. Additionally, new prevention practices and programs need to be developed for community-based interventions to better serve the populations in need including programs in: -HIV Prevention;
-Evaluation and Policy Research;
-Cancer Prevention and Screening;
-Urban Public Health Policy;
-Youth Violence Prevention.

List of contents

1 The Health Behavioral Change Imperative: Paradigm Shifts and Prevention Mandate.- 2 Strategies for Health Behavior Change.- 3 Cultural Competence in Behavioral Health Care.- 4 Prevention Science: Theory, Research, and Implications for Practice.- 5 Violence Prevention in African American Youth.- 6 Applying Mental Health Behavioral Change to Ethnonational Conflict Resolution.- 7 Development of Authenticity in Public Health: A Culturecology Model as a Culture Critique.- 8 The Preparation and Scope of Practice for Future Advanced Public Health Practitioners in Doctoral Programs.- 9 The Social Context for Faith and Health.- 10 Healing an Addiction through a Twelve Step Program Ending in Faith.- The Coauthors.

Summary

Health experts independently state that the most critical urban problems are preventable. This brings an added challenge to public health practitioners working in inner cities with predominately minority communities. In addition to deadly diseases - including transmittable diseases - violence, whether it is physical, sexual or child abuse, is the other predominant morbidity factor that urban areas confront.
Because of these concerns, there is a need for health professionals working with the communities to critically examine health behavior theories and prevention methodologies. Additionally, new prevention practices and programs need to be developed for community-based interventions to better serve the populations in need including programs in:
-HIV Prevention;
-Evaluation and Policy Research;
-Cancer Prevention and Screening;
-Urban Public Health Policy;
-Youth Violence Prevention.

Product details

Authors Jay C. Chunn
Assisted by Ja Carrington Chunn (Editor), Jay Carrington Chunn (Editor), Jay Carrington Chunn (Editor)
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 29.06.2009
 
EAN 9780306472732
ISBN 978-0-306-47273-2
No. of pages 181
Weight 594 g
Illustrations XIII, 181 p.
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Medicine > General

Psychologie, MEDICAL / Public Health, MEDICAL / Preventive Medicine, Medical / Nursing, PSYCHOLOGY / Applied Psychology

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