The Ottawa Charter outlines 5 action areas for health promotion: 1) Build healthy public policy through legislation, taxation, and social/economic policies. 2) Create supportive environments by encouraging healthy communities and workplaces and conserving natural resources. 3) Strengthen community action by empowering communities and supporting self-help and social support. 4) Develop personal skills through health education and enhancing life skills. 5) Reorient health services to embrace health promotion beyond clinical services. The WHO principles emphasize population-wide approaches, multisector collaboration, complementary strategies including communication/education, and public participation in health promotion.
The Ottawa Charter outlines 5 action areas for health promotion: 1) Build healthy public policy through legislation, taxation, and social/economic policies. 2) Create supportive environments by encouraging healthy communities and workplaces and conserving natural resources. 3) Strengthen community action by empowering communities and supporting self-help and social support. 4) Develop personal skills through health education and enhancing life skills. 5) Reorient health services to embrace health promotion beyond clinical services. The WHO principles emphasize population-wide approaches, multisector collaboration, complementary strategies including communication/education, and public participation in health promotion.
The Ottawa Charter outlines 5 action areas for health promotion: 1) Build healthy public policy through legislation, taxation, and social/economic policies. 2) Create supportive environments by encouraging healthy communities and workplaces and conserving natural resources. 3) Strengthen community action by empowering communities and supporting self-help and social support. 4) Develop personal skills through health education and enhancing life skills. 5) Reorient health services to embrace health promotion beyond clinical services. The WHO principles emphasize population-wide approaches, multisector collaboration, complementary strategies including communication/education, and public participation in health promotion.
The Ottawa Charter outlines 5 action areas for health promotion: 1) Build healthy public policy through legislation, taxation, and social/economic policies. 2) Create supportive environments by encouraging healthy communities and workplaces and conserving natural resources. 3) Strengthen community action by empowering communities and supporting self-help and social support. 4) Develop personal skills through health education and enhancing life skills. 5) Reorient health services to embrace health promotion beyond clinical services. The WHO principles emphasize population-wide approaches, multisector collaboration, complementary strategies including communication/education, and public participation in health promotion.
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Ottawa Charter Action Area
• to operationalize the concept of health promotion
Ottawa Charter Action Area
1. Build Healthy Public Policy
• Health promotion beyond health care • Health on agenda of policy makers
Health promotion policy combines diverse but complementary approaches including:
a. Legislation b. Fiscal measures c. Taxation d. Organizational charge • Coordinated actions that leads to healthy income and social policies that foster great equity • Identify obstacles to the adaptation of healthy public policy in non-health sectors and ways of removing them.
2. Create Supportive Environments
• The extricable links between people and their environment constitutes the basis for a socio-ecological approach to health. • The overall guiding principle for all is the need to encourage reciprocal maintenance- to take care of each other, our communities and our national environment. • Conservation of natural resources should be emphasized as a global responsibility. • Health promotion generates living and working conditions that are safe stimulating satisfying and enjoyable. • Systematic assessment of health impact of rapidly changing environment is essential must be followed by actions to ensure positive benefits to public health. • The protection of the natural and built environment and conservation of natural resources must be addressed in any health promotion strategy.
3. Strengthen Community Action
• Health promotion works through concrete and effective community action in setting priorities, making decisions, planning strategies and implementing them to achieve better health. • Empowerment of communities is the heart of this process. • Community development draws an existing human and material resources in the community to enhance self-help and social support and to develop flexible system for strengthening public participation in and direction of healthy ministers. • Requires full and continuous access to information, learning opportunities for health as well as finding support. 4. Develop Personal Skills • Health promotion supports personal and social development through providing information, education for health and enhancing life skills. • Increase the options available to people to exercise more control over their own health and over their own environment and to make choices conducive to health. • Enabling people to learn throughout life, to prepare themselves for all of its stage and to cope with chronic illness and injuries is essential.
5. Reorient Health Services
• The responsibility for health promotion in health services is shared among individual community groups, health professional’s health services, institutions and government. • The role of the health sector must move increasingly in health promotion direction, beyond its responsibility for providing clinical and curative services. • Health services need to embrace and expanded mandate which is sensitive and respects cultural needs. • Requires stronger attention to health research as well as changes in professional education and training.
WHO Principles of Health Promotion
1. Health Promotion involves the population as a whole in the context of their everyday life, rather than focusing on people risk from specific disease. 2. Health Promotion is directed towards action on determinants or cause of health. This requires a close cooperation between sectors beyond health care reflecting the diversity of conditions which influence health. 3. Health Promotion combines diverse but complementary approaches, including communication, education, legislation, fiscal development and spontaneous local activities against health hazards. 4. Health Promotion aims particularly at effective and concrete public participation. This requires the further development of problem-defining and decision-making life skills, both individually and collectively and promotion of effective participation mechanism. 5. Health Promotion is primarily a societal and political venture and not a medical services although health professionals have an important role in advocating and enabling health promotion.