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American Public Health Association
133rd Annual Meeting & Exposition
December 10-14, 2005
Philadelphia, PA
APHA 2005
 
Session: How to Make Health Education Work
3217.0: Monday, December 12, 2005: 12:30 PM-2:00 PM
Roundtable
How to Make Health Education Work
The speakers in this session will describe various health promotion interventions, including several that focus on middle-school-aged children. Presentations will detail planning and development strategies but will also describe results of studies of prevalence of risky behaviors. Two of the presentations in this roundtable session will focus on the important issue of health literacy and its implications for health education and health promotion.
Learning Objectives: At the end of this session, participants will be able to:
  1. Describe research focusing on risky behaviors and involvement in physical activity among middle-school aged children;
  2. Explain the current status and implications for health promotion of health literacy in America; and
  3. Discuss strategies for improving community partner satisfaction with community-academic institution collaboration.
Moderator(s):Gerald Fishman
Table 1Health literacy: A national problem, finding a solution through education and empowerment
Jolie Haun, MS, EdS, LMT, Tristan Johnson, PhD
Table 2Health literacy: Perceptions, preferences, and behaviors of individuals receiving and advocating for healthcare
Jolie Haun, MS, EdS, LMT, Tristan Johnson, PhD
Table 3Motivations to participate in physical activity among girls aged 8-11
Rita DiGioacchino DeBate, PhD, MPH, CHES, Yan Zhang, PhD, Ann Marie Kopitzke, MPA
Table 4Racial differences in prevalence of tobacco use and social exposure to tobacco use among middle school students in the rural South
Jessica L. Muilenburg, PhD, Angelic Howell, Lucy Annang, MPH, Stuart Usdan, PhD, CHES, William D. Johnson, PhD
Table 5Measuring the Effectiveness of an Established Sexuality Education Program
Jacqueline Matuza, MPH, Nathalie A. Bartle, EdD
Table 6Prevalence of risky behaviors relating to unintentional injuries in a middle school population in the rural south
Jessica L. Muilenburg, PhD, Lucy Annang, PhD, MPH, Angelic Howell, Stuart Usdan, PhD, CHES, William D. Johnson, PhD
Table 7Development of a brief questionnaire (or instrument) to measure community partner satisfaction in cancer communication research
Keri Jupka, MPH, Elena M. Andresen, PhD, Nancy L. Weaver, PhD, Shanti Parikh, PhD
Table 8Associations between psychosocial factors and structured physical activity involvement in middle school aged girls
Daheia Barr-Anderson, MSPH, Deborah Rohm Young, PhD, Joel Gittelsohn, PhD, Stuart J. Cohen, EdD, Jared B. Jobe, PhD, Dianne Neumark-Sztainer, PhD, MPH, James F. Sallis, PhD, Ruth Saunders, PhD, Larry S. Webber, PhD
Table 9Is perceived athletic competence in children associated with sustained use and improved physical outcomes through participation in an active dance videogame?
Sadye Paez, PT, MS, Angela Rosenberg, PT, DrPH, Ann E. Maloney, MD, T.C. Bethea, MD, Kristine Kelsey, PhD, RD, Julie T. Marks, PhD, Linmarie Sikich, MD
Table 10Safe Routes to School: Expanding a national initiative statewide
Julie A. Sparks, MEd (6/2005)
See individual abstracts for presenting author's disclosure statement and author's information.
Organized by:Public Health Education and Health Promotion
Endorsed by:Community Health Planning and Policy Development

The 133rd Annual Meeting & Exposition (December 10-14, 2005) of APHA