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Explore the cross-cutting concepts in health promotion and disease prevention across the life span, focusing on biophysical, nurturing, spousehood and parenting, cognition and communication, social relationships, identity, and work and play. This interdisciplinary theme covers family dynamics, biophysical parameters, psycho-social concepts, and socio-cultural variables essential for effective health promotion practices. Delve into genetics, neurophysiology, behavioral theories, moral/spiritual development, cultural influences, and more. Advance your understanding of human development and the importance of holistic health approaches in promoting well-being.
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Themes in Human Development N 4225 Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Across the Life Span
Cross-cutting concepts • biophysical • nurturing • spousehood and parenting • cognition and communication • social relationships • identity • work and play
4 broad domains… • family • biophysical parameters • psycho-social concepts • socio-cultural variables
Family • biologic; family of origin • nurturant • multiple definitions • main agent of socialization • factors influencing functionality
Biophysical Parameters • genetics • neurophysiologic • maturational • nutrition • exercise • rest and sleep • play and leisure
Psycho-social Concepts • behavioral • cognitive • emotional • moral/spiritual • developmental tasks
behavioral • stimulus-response • psychoanalytic • Freud, Erikson • interpersonal • Sullivan, Jung • social learning • Bandura
cognitive • Piaget • sensorimotor • pre-operational • concrete • formal
moral/spiritual [not necessarily the same thing…] • Kohlberg • Pre-conventional • Conventional • Post-conventional • Universal focus • Gilligan • Selfish – responsible • Goodness – truth • Moral equity
developmental • Maslow • hierarchial • physiologic • safety • love and belonging • esteem • self-actualization
Socio-cultural Variables • culture…sum total of learned ways of doing • learned • subject to change but usually stable • common components across every culture • physical welfare, communication, property, human response patterns, family and sexual patterns • manifest culture vs. ideal culture • ethnicity
socio-cultural variables relevant to HPDP activities • cross-cultural variations in perception of health • folk practices, spiritual/psychic healing • ‘good health’ of variable value : proactive vs. reactive • ‘normal’ one place may be ‘illness’ another • culturally sensitive communication practices • non-verbal • silence, distance, eye contact, emotional expression, concept of time • verbal • formality [names, speed of speech], rapport, subjects
HPDP by APNs is the interface of multi-parametric knowledge of individuals and families with evidence-based approaches to interventions!