What is it about?

This article critically reviews the complex processes that underpin the modification of a client’s health‐related behaviour. This paper also seeks to contextualize the operational differences between health‐educating and health‐promoting activities – as a means of rationalizing current health professionals' practice.

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Why is it important?

The prevalence of a culturally inherent biomedical framework, governing most nursing practice, tends to reduce health‐related client interventions to little more than one‐off, reductionist information‐giving exercises. The expectation on clients to respond to and subsequently modify their health behaviour, when presented with such information, is unrealistic in most cases. Nurses are often unaware of the extremely complex human phenomena associated with modifying health‐related behaviours and the resultant change processes. In nursing‐related health encounters, the planned or unplanned intervention and the subsequent outcomes are mostly viewed within a too simplistic and superficial context.

Perspectives

Where many nurses believe themselves to be health promotionalists, the likelihood is that they are instead more likely to be traditional health educationalists. Not that this is the main problem, in itself – but if nursing is to progress on this issue, it must first become more effective in delivering its current health education initiatives. Armed with further knowledge and understanding of their practices, health educators are far more likely to achieve a degree of success in their behavioural‐change encounters as well as approach the intervention with a far more realistic expectation of outcome. Without this further understanding, it is argued that the integration of health educational initiatives into nursing practice will generally do little or nothing to change the health status of clients.

Dr Dean Whitehead
Flinders University

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: Health education, behavioural change and social psychology: nursing’s contribution to health promotion?, Journal of Advanced Nursing, June 2001, Wiley,
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2648.2001.01813.x.
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