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Health Promotion Education, Healthy Life Awareness, Salutogenic Health Indicators and Health Literacy (HeProHeLiSIHL)

G

Gazi University

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Health Status Measures
Health Literacy
Salutogenesis

Treatments

Other: Routine nursing education
Other: Tailored health promotion education

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06693414
24.09.2024/15

Details and patient eligibility

About

Health promotion is a comprehensive process that includes supporting knowledge, skills, and environmental conditions to improve the health levels of individuals and communities. In nursing practice, health promotion plays a critical role in guiding, educating, and raising awareness among individuals about health. Learning foundational knowledge in health promotion allows first-year nursing students to provide more informed and effective health counseling as they gain clinical experience. Enhancing health awareness among first-year nursing students is vital not only for their personal health but also for their future professional competency. Developing awareness of healthy living can positively influence students' health behaviors, empowering them to make more informed health decisions. Awareness of healthy living habits also helps students acquire knowledge in areas such as stress management, nutrition, exercise, and sleep, which can improve their performance in clinical practice. Moreover, nursing students' level of health literacy is crucial for sustaining health behaviors throughout life. Nurses with high health literacy are better equipped to interpret health information effectively, leading to more informed decisions in patient care and healthcare delivery. Therefore, it is essential that nursing students have a high level of health literacy, as it is necessary for their personal development and for maintaining the health of the individuals they serve. Salutogenesis is an approach that focuses on the factors that support and enhance health rather than simply the absence of disease. This approach emphasizes the active role individuals play in maintaining and improving their health. Thus, it is believed that developing salutogenic health perspectives in nursing students from the beginning of their education is important. This study will be conducted to determine the effects of education aimed at health promotion on nursing students' awareness of healthy living, salutogenic health indicators, and health literacy.

Full description

Health promotion is a comprehensive process that includes the support of knowledge, skills, and environmental conditions to improve the health levels of individuals and communities. The World Health Organization (WHO) defines health promotion as the process of enabling people to increase control over and improve their health (WHO, 1986). This approach goes beyond disease prevention and embraces a concept of health that includes physical, mental, and social well-being (Nutbeam, 2000). Health promotion helps individuals adopt healthy lifestyles and positively change their health-related behaviors. It also aims to reduce health inequalities and enables communities to establish sustainable health policies (Green & Tones, 2010). In nursing practices, health promotion plays a critical role in guiding individuals, educating them, and raising awareness about health.

Emphasizing the importance of health promotion at the start of nursing education is crucial for the professional development of nursing students. Health promotion not only encourages individuals to adopt healthy lifestyles but is also an important step in preventing and improving diseases (Pender et al., 2015). Learning the fundamentals of health promotion during their first year will enable nursing students to provide more informed and effective health counseling in their future clinical experiences (Edelman & Mandle, 2018). Furthermore, establishing a strong foundation in protecting and promoting individual and community health supports nurses in providing sustainable health services throughout their careers (Whitehead, 2004). Thus, health promotion not only enhances the quality of patient care but also contributes to the mission of protecting public health.

Developing healthy living awareness among first-year nursing students is of great importance for both their individual health and their future professional competencies. Healthy living awareness positively influences students' health behaviors, helping them make more informed health decisions (Whitney, 2018). Awareness of healthy living habits also enables students to gain knowledge about stress management, nutrition, exercise, and sleep, allowing them to perform better in clinical practice (Lenz, 2017). Therefore, developing this awareness at an early stage is essential for individual health sustainability and professional growth. Additionally, acquiring healthy lifestyle habits during their student years allows nurses to guide their future patients more effectively (Pender et al., 2015). In this context, health literacy is highly significant in maintaining health behaviors throughout life.

Health literacy refers to individuals' ability to understand, evaluate, and use health-related information, and developing this skill is critically important for first-year nursing students (Ayaz-Alkaya & Terzi, 2019; Akca & Ayaz-Alkaya, 2021). Nurses with a high level of health literacy can interpret health information more effectively, making more informed decisions in patient care and health service delivery (Nutbeam, 2008). Developing this skill in the early years of nursing education equips students to be more prepared for future clinical practice and to successfully guide patient education (Berkman et al., 2011; Sorensen et al., 2012). Therefore, a high level of health literacy is necessary for nursing students both for their individual development and to sustain the health of those they serve.

Salutogenesis is an approach that considers health not merely as the absence of disease but focuses on factors that support and strengthen an individual's health. This concept, developed by Aaron Antonovsky, seeks to explain how individuals can protect their health by increasing their resilience to stress (Antonovsky, 1979). The salutogenesis model is based on the idea that health is a continuous process and evaluates individuals' capacity to cope with stressors through their abilities to comprehend, manage, and find meaning (Lindström & Eriksson, 2005). In health promotion, this approach is known to empower individuals to take an active role in maintaining and improving their health. Salutogenesis is particularly used as a guide in nursing for care and education models that promote healthy living habits in individuals (Eriksson & Lindström, 2008). It is considered important to foster the salutogenic health of nursing students starting from their school years.

A review of the literature reveals no studies specifically focused on improving salutogenic health and health literacy levels in first-year nursing students. This study aims to draw attention to the importance of the topic.

Enrollment

232 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • being 18 and older years old
  • studying in nursing department
  • being voluntary to participate in
  • speaking Turkish as a mother language

Exclusion criteria

  • having any visual and/or hearing disorders

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

232 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention group: Health promotion education
Experimental group
Description:
A 14-week health promotion program will be implemented for the intervention group. The training will use lecture, question-and-answer, individual work, and group work techniques. Additionally, activities targeting health-promoting behaviors will be conducted.
Treatment:
Other: Tailored health promotion education
Other: Routine nursing education
Control group: routine nursing education group
Active Comparator group
Description:
Participants in the control group will not receive additional health promotion training apart from vocational training.
Treatment:
Other: Routine nursing education

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Central trial contact

Sultan Ayaz-Alkaya, Professor, PhD; Handan Terzi, Asst. Prof., PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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