PRAXIS Questions – Health Promotions
- A good description of health would not include one of the following:
- Multidimensional
- Not merely the absence of disease
- Physical component emphasis *
- Vocation as a sixth dimension
- Health Promotion program activities are at three levels:
- Awareness, lifestyle changes, supportive environment *
- Moral, physical, intellectual environments
- Public, private, political environments
- Decision making, motivation, barrier success environments
- One of the following is not considered one of the three focal areas of research concern in Health Promotion:
- Effectiveness of programs for behavior change
- Impact on corporate image and community perceptions*
- Theory and practice of behavior change
- Effectiveness of behavior change on health outcomes
- As impossible as it may seem, the greatest impact on the wellness state of Americans is:
- Heredity
- Environment
- Lifestyle *
- Medical care
- “Cigarette smoking is a hazard to health…” was first published by the Surgeon General Advisory Committee in:
- 1964 *
- 1960
- 1984
- 1980
- The Framingham Study (1978) targeted the:
- Risk factors associated with coronary heart disease *
- Reasons individuals smoke
- Effects of smoking and lung disease
- Adolescent drug use in the U.S.
- “Work Activity and Coronary Heart Disease” (Paffenbarger & Hale) studied the exercise habits of:
- Longshoremen and Harvard alumni *
- Railroad conductors and engineers
- College athletes and intramural participants
- Highway laborers and highway engineers
- Maximization of participation in health promotion programs is an integral part of:
- Excellent budgets
- Quality program content factors *
- Support from health professions
- Sound research
- The first step in gaining success for initiating a health promotion program:
- A good evaluation plan
- Realistic goals and objectives
- Commitment and support from the “top” of the organization*
- Sound educational approaches
- Good health promotion and wellness planning re1uire the following chronological order of events:
- Design, diagnose, deliver, determine
- Diagnose, design, deliver, determine*
- Determine, diagnose, design, deliver
- Deliver, design, determine, diagnose
- To determine cost effectiveness of the wellness program:
- An accurate population sampling is necessary
- Indirect cost factors are least reliable
- Both direct and indirect factors must be included*
- Both a and b
- In predicting the cost of conducting the wellness program:
- The establishment of realistic goals is necessary for measurement
- Accurate prediction of participation is necessary
- The budget of the company is necessary
- All of the above*
- The 4 major sequence of events for establishing a fitness program at the work setting:
- Publicize, plan, evaluate, implement
- Implement, evaluate, plan, publicize
- Plan, publicize, evaluate, implement
- Plan, publicize, implement, evaluate*
- The overall goal of a fitness program in the work setting:
- To relax, reduce stress.
- Encourage lifetime commitment*
- To have fun.
- To increase social interaction among employees
- By using graphs and charts to evaluate participant progress, a staff member is utilizing the technique of:
- Communicating genuine concern
- Capitalizing on support Systems
- Self-evaluation*
- Decreasing participant turnover
- In health behavior changes, motivation is usually strongest when it involves:
- Co-dependents
- Significant support environment
- Knowledge
- Short-term, personal goals*
- Which is the least important question to consider to initiating a health behavior change?
- Do I have the money to participate?*
- How positive in my self-image?
- How much do I love my bad behavior?
- Do I possess the willingness to change?
- Items or factors identified by members of the target group are:
- Subjective needs
- Perceived Needs*
- Objective needs
- Real needs
- Analysis of program components, materials used, staff competence, are examples of:
- Impact evaluation
- Process evaluation*
- Outcome evaluation
- Objective evaluation
- This evaluation is conducted at the end of the program to assess behavior change to the participants as a result of exposure to the intervention:
- Outcome
- Impact*
- Process
- Program