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Module assessment. Students are required to develop a health promotion tool for a group or individual with learning disabilities or their family/carers.Identify a priority area for health promotionPlan a strategyDevelop a tool (leaflet, game, poster, CDROM, etc.)Evaluation of tool. Previous hea
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1. Developing a health promotion tool for people with a learning disability or their carers/family Louise Mellen March 04
Farrah Owen Sept 04
Venessa Thorpe Sept 04
2. Module assessment Students are required to develop a health promotion tool for a group or individual with learning disabilities or their family/carers.
Identify a priority area for health promotion
Plan a strategy
Develop a tool (leaflet, game, poster, CDROM, etc.)
Evaluation of tool
3. Previous health promotion tools Dementia
Testicular and breast cancer
Exercise
Healthy eating
Epilepsy
Positive image
4. TRAC - Service user group TRAC is a service user group who advise, teach and work with students and staff at the University of Glamorgan.
5. Interventions to promote oral hygiene needs in people who have a learning disability. By Venessa Thorpe& Louise Mellen Student Learning Disability Nurses
6. Aims of the HP Tools To improve the oral hygiene of people with learning disabilities
To improve the knowledge of clients, carers and family regarding oral hygiene
7. Background information Good oral health is to be free from pain and disease (DoH, 1994)
Fulfilling the Promise (WAG, 2001)
Valuing people (DoH, 2001)
Oral Health Guidelines (BSDH, RCS, 2001)
Role of the LD nurse (DoH, 1996)
Why this topic?
8. Epidemiological data Compared to the general population, people with learning disabilities have an higher incidence of unmet oral health needs.
(Scott et al., 1998; Cumella et al., 2000)
Clinical pathways for oral health care of people with learning disabilities
(BSDH, RCS, 2001)
9. Risk factors Medication
Down Syndrome - dry mouth
(BSDH & RCS, 2001; Gates, 2004)
Communication deficits
Lack of skills/knowledge (both client and carer)
Oral hygiene not viewed as a priority
Carers give oral health care a low priority
(Cumella et al., 2000; Rawlinson, 2001; Tiller et al., 2001; and Stanfield et al., 2003)
10. Target population Considering the barriers found.
Target group - carers.
Aim - raise awareness
11. Intervention Educational approach
Secondary intervention (Tones and Green, 2004)
leaflets are suggested to be effective in raising awareness (Humphris et al., 1999; Andermann et al., 2002)
12. Producing a leaflet Following the recommendations of the audit of health promotion leaflets
(RPSGB, 1998)
Actively provided
Contain some pictures
SMOG readability test (Basic skills Agency)
Larger text for easier reading
13. Evaluation Resources.
Evaluation team.
Action plan.
Questionnaires.
Ethics.
Recommendations for future.
14. References Andermann AAJ, Austoker J, Watson EK. Lucassen AM and Mackay J (2002) Development and evaluation of a general information leaflet for women with a family history of breast cancer, Journal of cancer education, 17 (3) 155-60.
BSDH and RCS (2001) Clinical Guidelines and Integrated Care Pathways For The Oral Health care Of People With Learning Disabilities, British society For Disability and oral Health, The Royal College of Surgeons of England.
Cumella S, Ransford N, Lyons J, Burnham H (2000) Needs for oral care among people with intellectual disability not in contact with community dental services Journal of Intellectual Disabilities 44, 1, 45-52.
DoH (1996) Continuing the commitment: The report of the learning disability nursing project, London, HMSO.
DoH (2001) Valuing People: A New Strategy for Learning Disability in the 21st Century, Department of health.
DoH (2005) Oral Health strategy Group Department of Health.
Gates B (2004) Learning disabilities: Towards Inclusion 4th Ed London, Elsvier.
Humphris GM, Duncalf M, Holt D and Field EA (1999) The experimental evaluation of an oral cancer leaflet, Oral Oncology, 35 (6) 575-82.
RPSGB (1998) Audit of Health Promotion Leaflets The Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain, on line at www.rpsgb.org.uk/pds/leaflet.pdf accessed on 11.12.05.
Scott A, March L and Stokes ML (1998) A survey of oral health in a population of adults with developmental disabilities: Comparison with a National Health survey of the general population, Australian Dental Journal, 43 (4) 257-61.
15. Healthy eating and keeping fitin Children withLearning Disabilities By Farrah Owen
16. Objectives Obesity
Explore the evidence that shows the need for my health tool
Aims of the health tool and how I will meet them
Limitations
Evaluating my health tool
17. Obesity Sharkey (1990) stated that:
Obesity is an excessive accumulation of fat beyond that considered normal for the age, sex and body type.
18. Obesity 2 The main reasons for an Increase in obesity are documented by Drummond (2002)-
a high fat diet and a lack of habitual physical activity
A diet high in fat and energy combined with low levels of physical activity promote a positive energy balance (energy intake exceeds energy expenditure);
RESULTING IN WEIGHT GAIN.
19. Evidence behind the health need. People with learning disabilities are at a high risk of obesity and consequent health risks.
Adults with learning disabilities are more likely to be inactive for a variety of reasons, including barriers to leisure and exercise facilities, and the impact of physical and intellectual impairments on their ability to take part in traditional exercise.
Chapman et al. (2005)
20. Barriers Primary barriers:
unclear policy guidelines in residential and day service provision
Leisure opportunities
Resourcing
Transport
Staffing constraints
Income
Expenditure Secondary barriers:
individuals motivation
Support and encouragement
Overprotection
Underestimating persons ability
Staffs interpretations of ordinary living principles
21. My aims To give children with Learning disabilities a knowledge of healthy eating.
To produce a video that will not only help reduce weight and help with cardiovascular fitness, but will be enjoyable.
To make children more aware of the reasons why its important to eat healthy.
22. Who am I aiming my health tool towards? I aimed my tool towards children with mild learning disabilities from around the age of 12 to 15.
I did this because:
Children are our future (please dont sing)
Children are becoming more obese
Children eat a lot of junk food
Overweight kids usually grow up to be overweight adults with high risk of heart disease, diabetes and cancer. (www.healthyeating.net/he_4-01.htm)
23. Also
During my school placement, I took part in the P.E. classes, and found that the children were bored of the same type of exercise every week. When I spoke to some of them about the dance classes that I teach, they were very interested.
Also I feel that children with learning disabilities have more knowledge and potential than people give them credit for.
24. How to meet the need. Leaflet
The leaflet shows good food and bad food to eat with clear diagrams and words.
It also explains why we need to eat healthy, again with diagrams and simple words.
The leaflet is bright and colourful to catch their eye and some words are in bright colours too, to help exaggerate important points.
25.
Video
20 minutes long
consists of a warm up, main dance and a cool down
pictures to show what they should wear
and to insure that the children remember its important to wash and drink plenty of water after exercise there are pictures at the end
The music was chosen after spending a lot of time with the children in my school placement, and listening to the types of music they liked.
26. Why its important to warm up and cool down Warm up
increases body temperature
Increase respiration and heart rate
Guard against muscle, tendon and ligament strains Cool down
just as important
Abrupt cessation of vigorous activity leads to pooling of blood, sluggish circulation and slow removal of waste products
To stop cramping, soreness or more serious problems
Lowers body temperature
27. Why I chose a leaflet and a video The video can be played over and over
The leaflet gives just enough information
I felt that to meet the health need I could not do one without the other as if you dont eat the right diet, physical activity will not be effective and vice versa.
You need to balance energy input and energy output.
28. Fact! 300 Kcals in a chocolate bar take only 30 seconds to consume but 30 minutes to exercise away
Carr and Decheemaeker (2002)
29. Limitations Leaflet
Limited on the information I could give
Making them aware without scaring them
Video
Background noise
Room- lighting and background
Not an expert on making videos and editing them
Teaching a camera how to dance!
30. Evaluation and Recommendations The tool is yet to be evaluated but I intend to:
Send out the leaflet and video to schools to either do in P.E. lessons or for the children to take home
Also send out a simple evaluation form to gain feedback from the teachers and the pupils.
31. References Chapman M.J. Craven M.J. and Chadwick D.D. (2005) Fighting fit? An evaluation of health practitioner input to improve healthy living and reduce obesity for adults with learning disabilities, Journal of intellectual disabilities, 9 (2), pp131-144.
Drummond S. (2002) The management of obesity, Nursing Standard, 16 (48), pp 47-52
Fox K.R. (2002) Physical activity, exercise and weight control: movement for management? In: Carr T. Descheemaeker K. (2002) Nutrition and Health, London, Blackwell science, p 55.
Lllingworth K. Moore K.A. McGillivray J. (2003) The development of the nutrition and activity knowledge scale for use with people with an intellectual disability, Journal of applied research in intellectual disabilities, Australia, BILD publications, vol.16, pp 159-166.
Sharkey B.J. (1990) Physiology of fitness, 3rd Ed., Leeds, Human Kinetics.
BILD (1998) Worcestershire, BILD publications.
www.healthyeating.net/he_4-01.htm
32. Thank you for listening, now dance your way out!!