Health education delivers learning experiences on health topics, to provide people with knowledge, skills, and tools to live healthier lives. Health education strategies are tailored for their intended audience. Health education presents information to audiences on different health topics, including the health benefits or threats they face, and provides tools to build capacity and support behavior change in an appropriate setting.
Characteristics of health education strategies include:
Health education can be delivered at the individual, community, or population level. Examples of health education activities at these three levels include:
Health education activities should enhance the overall goal of the health promotion and disease prevention program. Materials developed for health education programs must be culturally appropriate and tailored to the intended audience to ensure cultural competence. In rural communities, this means addressing cultural and linguistic differences, and addressing potential barriers to health promotion and disease prevention in rural areas.
Characteristics of an Effective Health Education Curriculum
Website
Offers an annotated list of strategies emphasizing a health education curriculum that, in addition to teaching scientific facts, it includes teaching researched-based functional health information/knowledge.
Organization(s): Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Society for Public Health Education Resources
Website
Provides a variety of resources to guide health education and health promotion.
Organization(s): Society for Public Health Education (SOPHE)
What Works for Health: Education
Website
Identifies scientifically supported and evidence-based health education strategies aimed at improving health behavior and health outcomes.
Organization(s): County Health Rankings & Roadmaps
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