Health Promotion in Multicultural Populations: A Handbook for Practitioners and Students

Front Cover

The thoroughly updated Second Edition of Health Promotion in Multicultural Populations grounds readers in the understanding that health promotion programs in multicultural settings require an in-depth knowledge of the cultural group being targeted. Numerous advances and improvements in theory and practice in health promotion and disease prevention (HPDP) are presented. Editors Michael V Kline and Robert M Huff have expanded the book to include increased attention directed to students and instructors while also continuing to provide a handbook for practitioners in the field. This book combines the necessary pedagogical features of a textbook with the scholarship found in a traditional handbook.

Several new chapters have been added early in the text to provide stronger foundations for understanding the five sections that follow. The book considers five specific multicultural groups: Hispanic/Latino, African American, American Indian and Alaska Native, Asian American, and Pacific Islander populations. The first chapter in each of the five population group sections presents an overview devoted to understanding this special population from a variety of perspectives. The second chapter of each section explains how to assess, plan, implement, and evaluate health promotion programs for each of the specific groups. The third chapter in each section highlights a case study to emphasize points made in the overview and planning chapters. The fourth chapter in each section provides "Tips" for working with the cultural groups described in that section.

New to the Second Edition

  • Devotes a chapter to traditional health beliefs and traditions that can help the practitioner better understand how these beliefs and traditions can impact on Western biomedical practices
  • Contains a new chapter that evaluates health disparities across the U.S.
  • Presents a new chapter that examines ethical dilemmas and considerations in a multicultural context
  • Offers updated citations and content throughout
  • Gives selected Web sites of interest

Intended Audience

This book is ideal for practitioners and students in the fields of health promotion and education, public health, nursing, medicine, psychology, sociology, social work, physical therapy, radiology technology and other allied professions.

From inside the book

Contents

02Kline45556
23
03Kline45556
40
04Kline45556
57
05Kline45556
102
06Kline45556
125
07Kline45556
146
08Kline45556
175
09Kline45556
185
18Kline45556
374
19Kline45556
393
20Kline45556
404
21Kline45556
411
22Kline45556
447
23Kline45556
463
24Kline45556
474
25Kline45556
483

10Kline45556
222
11Kline45556
254
12Kline45556
278
13Kline45556
285
14Kline45556
311
15Kline45556
330
16Kline45556
347
17Kline45556
353
26Kline45556
504
27Kline45556
530
28Kline45556
549
29Kline45556
555
Author IndexKline45556
573
Sub IndexKline45556
598
BMKline45556
617
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2007)

Michael V. Kline (M.P.H., DrPH) is Emeritus Professor of Public Health at California State University, Northridge. He has taught undergraduate and graduate courses that train students and practitioners to design, implement, and evaluate health promotion and education programs within a variety of health settings, population groups, and public sector and community organizations. He received his M.P.H. degree in public health education and behavioral sciences from the University of California, Berkeley School of Public Health. He received his DrPH degree in medical care organization and health administration from the University of California, Los Angeles School of Public Health. Robert M. Huff (M.P.H., California State University, Northridge; Ph.D., University of California, Santa Barbara Graduate School of Education is Emeritus Professor of Public Health at California State University, Northridge. Prior to joining the faculty at CSUN, he was a health education practitioner for the Charles Drew Postgraduate Medical School in Los Angeles and Ventura County Public Health Services and Medical Center. As a professor at CSUN, he has taught graduate courses in public health education in the areas of program planning and evaluation, health behavior change, communication and media, cross-cultural issues in public health, holistic health, and other related courses. His research interests combine his undergraduate training in anthropology with his graduate training in public health and education to focus on multicultural health promotion and disease prevention programs in a variety of settings.

Bibliographic information