The Role of The Health Educator
From the late nineteenth to the mid-twentieth century, the aim of public health was controlling the harm from infectious diseases, which were largely under control by the 1950s. By the mid 1970s it was clear that reducing illness, death, and rising health care costs could best be achieved through a focus on health promotion and disease prevention. At the heart of the new approach was the role of a health educator A health educator is “a professionally prepared individual who serves in a variety of roles and is specifically trained to use appropriate educational strategies and methods to facilitate the development of policies, procedures, interventions, and systems conducive to the health of individuals, groups, and communities” (Joint Committee on Terminology, 2001, p. 100). In January 1978 the Role Delineation Project was put into place, in order to define the basic roles and responsibilities for the health educator. The result was a Framework for the Development of Competency-Based Curricula for Entry Level Health Educators (NCHEC, 1985). A second result was a revised version of A Competency-Based Framework for the Professional Development of Certified Health Education Specialists (NCHEC,1996). These documents outlined the seven areas of responsibilities which are shown below.
Responsibility I: Assessing Individual and Community Needs for Health Education
* Provides the foundation for program planning * Determines what health problems might exist in any given group * Includes determination of community resources available to address the problem * Community Empowerment encourages the population to take ownership of their health problems * Includes careful data collection and analysisResponsibility II: Plan Health Education Strategies, Interventions, and Programs
* Actions are based on the needs assessment done for the community (see Responsibility I) * Involves the development of goals and objectives which are specific and measurable * Interventions are developed that will meet the goals and objectives * According to Rule of Sufficiency, strategies are implemented which are sufficiently robust, effective enough, and have a reasonable chance of meeting stated objectivesResponsibility III: Implement Health Education Strategies, Interventions, and Programs
* Implementation is based on a thorough understanding of the priority population * Utilize a wide range of educational methods and techniquesResponsibility IV: Conduct Evaluation and Research Related to Health Education
* Depending on the setting, utilize tests, surveys, observations, tracking epidemiological data, or other methods of data collection * Health Educators make use of research to improve their practiceResponsibility V: Administer Health Education Strategies, Interventions, and Programs
* Administration is generally a function of the more experienced practitioner * Involves facilitating cooperation among personnel, both within and between programsResponsibility VI: Serve as a Health Education Resource Person
* Involves skills to access needed resources, and establish effective consultive relationshipsResponsibility VII: Communicate and Advocate for Health and Health Education
* Translates scientific language into understandable information * Address diverse audience in diverse settings * Formulates and support rules, policies and legislation * Advocate for the profession of health educationRead more about this topic: Health Education
Famous quotes containing the words role and/or health:
“A few [women] warrant our attention not because they have the answer but because they have rejected the mentality that insists there must be one answer. What makes them role models is not how much or how little they work, how many or how few hats they wear, but rather how well they understand, and accept, that for all rewards there will be commensurate sacrifice; for all gains, some loss; for any pleasure, some pain.”
—Melinda M. Marshall (20th century)
“Even though I had let them choose their own socks since babyhood, I was only beginning to learn to trust their adult judgment.. . . I had a sensation very much like the moment in an airplane when you realize that even if you stop holding the plane up by gripping the arms of your seat until your knuckles show white, the plane will stay up by itself. . . . To detach myself from my children . . . I had to achieve a condition which might be called loving objectivity.”
—Anonymous Parent of Adult Children. Ourselves and Our Children, by Boston Womens Health Book Collective, ch. 5 (1978)