Health Promotion: Evidence and Experience

Front Cover
SAGE, Oct 3, 2005 - Medical - 168 pages
'In short, Lloyd and Lucas' approach is challenging in its emphasis on a 'positive' and holistic orientation to health and always humane in its emphasis on quality of life and, in the authors' words, 'the indivisibility of the individual from society' -Professor Keith Tones

Health Promotion is a major focus of government policy and an expanding area of practice involving a range of public health professionals. At the same time, there is much debate about what is meant by "health" and the best strategies for improving, developing and promoting it. In light of these debates, Health Promotion offers a major reappraisal of health promotion activity, examining the evidence for what actually works and highlighting issues for improving efficacy.

The field of health promotion has traditionally drawn from diverse fields including health psychology, epidemiology, political science and educational theory. The authors argue that the effect of this has often been an unhelpfully fragmented view of people and their health. They propose an alternative, more integrated view as means of better understanding people and for making public health strategies more effective.

Health Promotion: Evidence and Experience makes thought-provoking reading for all those involved in public health and those with an interest in finding new ways to improve health outcomes.

 

Contents

the voice of authority
24
Health social indicators and the quality of life
44
Social capital for all?
64
Reasoned action? More theory than evidence
85
Risky behaviour? Judging the odds
104
The indivisibility of the individual from society
120
Human perspectives in health promotion
135
Author Index
159
Copyright

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Popular passages

Page 147 - C. (1985). Exploring the role of personal normative beliefs in the theory of reasoned action: The problem of discriminating between alternative path models. European Journal of Social Psychology, 15, 299-313.
Page 148 - Peto, R. (1997) Dietary lipids and blood cholesterol: quantitative meta-analysis of metabolic ward studies.
Page 147 - JA, & Callero, PL (1988). Role identity and reasoned action in the prediction of repeated behavior. Social Psychology Quarterly, 51, 303-3 1 7.

About the author (2005)

Dr Kevin Lucas is Senior Lecturer in Psychology Applied to Healthcare, School of Health Professions, University of Brighton, UK.

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