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Volume 31, Issue 4: August, 2004
Abstract
Application of Health Promotion Theories and Models for
Environmental Health
Edith A. Parker, DrPH, MPH, Grant T. Baldwin, PhD, MPH, CHES,
Barbara Israel, DrPH, MPH, Maria A. Salinas
The field of environmental health promotion gained new prominence
in recent years as awareness of physical environmental stressors
and exposures increased in communities across the country
and the world. Although many theories and conceptual models
are used routinely to guide health promotion and health education
interventions, they are rarely applied to environmental health
issues. This article examines how health promotion theories
and models can be applied in designing interventions to reduce
exposure to environmental health hazards. Using the Community
Action Against Asthma (CAAA) project as an example, this article
describes the application of these theories and models to
an intervention aimed at reducing environmental triggers for
childhood asthma. Drawing on the multiple theories and models
described, a composite ecological stress process model is
presented, and its implications for environmental health promotion
discussed.
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