Reference no: EM132953307
PUBH6006 Community Health and Disease Prevention - Laureate International Universities
Presentation- Non-communicable disease prevention
Learning outcome 1: Examine health promotion principle and strategies at global, national and local levels.
Learning outcome 2: Develop health promotion plans based on five strategies of the Ottawa Charter with focus on prevention agenda in diverse communities
Learning outcome 3: Integrate health promotion theories and public health frameworks to translate evidence into practice
Learning outcome 4: Examine concepts of community capacity building and empowerment and level of disease prevention
Learning outcome 5: Demonstrate clear and assertive communication across a range of settings and situations
Instructions
1. Choose one population with non-communicable disease
2. Assess non-communicable disease and needs within chosen population and critically consider health intervention in appropriate level(s)- primary, secondary or tertiary level.
3. Develop a prevention program for specific non-communicable disease in a particular community by applying theory and conceptual framework of health promotion.
4. Explain the proposed prevention program in the following stages:
• Planning (Target group, Aim, Objective, Timeframe, Intervention, Stakeholders, Budget)
• Implementation (Where, When, Who and How, Data collection)
• Evaluation (Monitoring process)
To prepare for this assignment
1. Briefly explain your target group, intervention, and support evidence.
2. Explain how your health intervention addresses primary, secondary, and/or tertiary prevention.
3. Explain the stages of program development with timelines: planning, implementation, and evaluation.
4. Use subheadings to describe what you will do at each of these stages.
5. Explain the implementation plan with resources
• Who needs to be involved in each phase, and what would they need to do?
• Location, equipment/tools
• List of costs and estimated budget
6. Explain how your program will be monitoring and evaluated.
Attachment:- Community Health and Disease Prevention.rar