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TOWARDS AN INTEGRATED APPROACH TO COLLEGE HEALTH AND HEALTH PROMOTION Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State University Pat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon State University ACHA May 30, 2012
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T OWARDS AN I NTEGRATED A PPROACH TO C OLLEGE H EALTH AND H EALTH P ROMOTION Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State University Pat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon.

Dec 23, 2015

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Page 1: T OWARDS AN I NTEGRATED A PPROACH TO C OLLEGE H EALTH AND H EALTH P ROMOTION Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State University Pat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon.

TOWARDS AN INTEGRATED APPROACH TO COLLEGE HEALTH AND HEALTH

PROMOTION

Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State UniversityPat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon State University

ACHA May 30, 2012

Page 2: T OWARDS AN I NTEGRATED A PPROACH TO C OLLEGE H EALTH AND H EALTH P ROMOTION Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State University Pat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon.

OBJECTIVES: FOCAL POINTS

Foundational principles of the field that reflect the the value and necessity of integrated practice

Terminology issues Focus on public health approaches linking

substance abuse prevention and mental health promotion

Consideration of a “continuum” of integration Barriers and opportunities for success

Page 3: T OWARDS AN I NTEGRATED A PPROACH TO C OLLEGE H EALTH AND H EALTH P ROMOTION Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State University Pat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon.

WHAT ARE OUR HEALTH PRIORITIES?

Page 4: T OWARDS AN I NTEGRATED A PPROACH TO C OLLEGE H EALTH AND H EALTH P ROMOTION Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State University Pat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon.

TERMINOLOGY OF INTEREST

o Integration Incorporation as equals into society or an

organization of individuals of different groups.o Alignment

The proper positioning or state of adjustment of parts in relation to each other; forming a line.

o Collaboration To work jointly with other, especially in an

intellectual endeavor.

Page 5: T OWARDS AN I NTEGRATED A PPROACH TO C OLLEGE H EALTH AND H EALTH P ROMOTION Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State University Pat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon.

TRANSFORMING HEALTH ON CAMPUS

o Multi-disciplinary nature of college health• Complexity of “health” as a construct

o An integrated approach expands traditional and historical perspectives of health on campus.

o Approaching health as building health-supporting communities.• Making the healthier choice the easier choice.

Page 6: T OWARDS AN I NTEGRATED A PPROACH TO C OLLEGE H EALTH AND H EALTH P ROMOTION Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State University Pat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon.

FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPALS OF HEALTH PROMOTION

o Maintaining fidelity to the guiding definitions and principles for the field of health promotion• WHO definition

o Standards of Practice for Health Promotion in Higher Education

o Establishing common goals that are inclusive of individual disciplines and priorities within college health and student success.

o Health promotion professionals as instigators of integrated efforts.

Page 7: T OWARDS AN I NTEGRATED A PPROACH TO C OLLEGE H EALTH AND H EALTH P ROMOTION Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State University Pat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon.

WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATIONOTTAWA CHARTER ON HEALTH PROMOTION

“Health Promotion is the process of enabling people to increase control over the determinants of health.”

Build healthy public policy

Create supportive environments

Strengthen community actions

Five Health Promotion Actions:

Develop personal skills

Reorient health services

1

2

3

4

5

Page 8: T OWARDS AN I NTEGRATED A PPROACH TO C OLLEGE H EALTH AND H EALTH P ROMOTION Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State University Pat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon.

Optimal health is the dynamic balance of physical, emotional, social, spiritual and intellectual health. Lifestyle change can be facilitated through a combination of learning experiences that enhance awareness, increase motivation and build skills, and most importantly, through the creation of opportunities that open access to environments that make positive health practices the easiest choice.

Michael P. O’Donnell, American Journal of Health Promotion

Page 9: T OWARDS AN I NTEGRATED A PPROACH TO C OLLEGE H EALTH AND H EALTH P ROMOTION Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State University Pat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon.

SPHERES OF INFLUENCE

Page 10: T OWARDS AN I NTEGRATED A PPROACH TO C OLLEGE H EALTH AND H EALTH P ROMOTION Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State University Pat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon.

SPHERES OF INFLUENCE

Page 11: T OWARDS AN I NTEGRATED A PPROACH TO C OLLEGE H EALTH AND H EALTH P ROMOTION Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State University Pat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon.

WHY USE A PUBLIC HEALTH APPROACH TO ADDRESS MENTAL HEALTH?

o Suicide declared a public health problem by the Surgeon General in 1999.

o Mental health is a complex issue associated with multiple factors: • Individual (biological, psychological)• Environmental (physical, interpersonal, community,

societal)

o Interventions require multidimensional approaches: • Social-ecological approach• Comprehensive and collaborative approach• Continuum of prevention

Page 12: T OWARDS AN I NTEGRATED A PPROACH TO C OLLEGE H EALTH AND H EALTH P ROMOTION Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State University Pat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon.

PUBLIC HEALTH APPROACH TO MENTAL HEALTH: GUIDING PRINCIPLES

o Success requires a comprehensive network of support.

o Problem is the responsibility of the entire campus and communityo mental health is a shared responsibility: creating a

“Caring Community”

o Integrated strategies include prevention and treatment: addresses problems at multiple levels.o clinical services are necessary but not sufficient.

o Requires strategic thinking and planning.o Utilizes best practices, incorporating the most

current theory and data.

Page 13: T OWARDS AN I NTEGRATED A PPROACH TO C OLLEGE H EALTH AND H EALTH P ROMOTION Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State University Pat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon.

MENTAL HEALTH PROMOTION CONTINUUM

oEnhancing and promoting healthoPrimary preventionoEarly recognition and interventionoTreatmentoMaintenanceoPostvention

Page 14: T OWARDS AN I NTEGRATED A PPROACH TO C OLLEGE H EALTH AND H EALTH P ROMOTION Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State University Pat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon.

TJF/SPRC COMPREHENSIVE APPROACH

Page 15: T OWARDS AN I NTEGRATED A PPROACH TO C OLLEGE H EALTH AND H EALTH P ROMOTION Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State University Pat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon.

SAMHSA: “WE’RE ON AN INTEGRATION ROLL”o August 2011: “An Integrated response to Public

Health Issues on College Campuses: Mental Health Promotion, Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse Prevention and Suicide Prevention.” How campuses are integrating the public health issues of

mental health promotion, AOD prevention and suicide prevention.

Examination of current data linking substance abuse and mental health.

o Barriers to integration: Campus readiness for change, including leadership

roadblocks (e.g., fear of negative attention to a problem) “Turf” issues – fear that integration will mean losing

status, identity, influence, resources Increasing complexity of student behavioral health issues Ongoing “culture” that supports problem behaviors “Strategy of the week” approach

Page 16: T OWARDS AN I NTEGRATED A PPROACH TO C OLLEGE H EALTH AND H EALTH P ROMOTION Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State University Pat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon.

SAMHSA: “WE’RE ON AN INTEGRATION ROLL”

o Strategies for success Tie efforts into broader academic outcomes,

i.e., student success, retention, long term health outcomes (making the “business case”).

Incorporate a coalition approach. Consider shift focus from “health” to well-being

– consideration of students as whole beings. Expand work to assume the role of instigator

to encourage collaboration and sharing of expertise.

Start small – cultural change is complex, incremental, opportunistic, and will include inevitable failures.

Page 17: T OWARDS AN I NTEGRATED A PPROACH TO C OLLEGE H EALTH AND H EALTH P ROMOTION Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State University Pat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon.

CONTINUUM OF INTEGRATION…

FROM

TO

Page 18: T OWARDS AN I NTEGRATED A PPROACH TO C OLLEGE H EALTH AND H EALTH P ROMOTION Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State University Pat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon.

CONTINUUM OF INTEGRATION

Page 19: T OWARDS AN I NTEGRATED A PPROACH TO C OLLEGE H EALTH AND H EALTH P ROMOTION Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State University Pat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon.

KEY QUOTES

“…the nation is now well positioned to equip young people with the skills, interests, assets, and health habits needed to live happy, healthy and productive lives in caring relationships that strengthen the social fabric.”

Kathryn Power, Director of the Center for Mental Health Services, SAMHSA

“…it is no longer possible to separate individual from environmental approaches. You don’t have the luxury of doing only one type of intervention. That’s why we talk about comprehensive programming.”

Fran Harding, Director of the Center for Substance Abuse Prevention, SAMHSA

Page 20: T OWARDS AN I NTEGRATED A PPROACH TO C OLLEGE H EALTH AND H EALTH P ROMOTION Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State University Pat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon.

In the confrontation between the stream and the rock, the stream always wins; not through strength, but through persistence.

Author Unknown

THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTION FOR PERSISTENCE

Page 21: T OWARDS AN I NTEGRATED A PPROACH TO C OLLEGE H EALTH AND H EALTH P ROMOTION Jenny Haubenreiser, MA, Montana State University Pat Ketcham, PhD, Oregon.

RESOURCES

SAMHSA http://www.samhsa.gov/“Behavioral Health is Essential to Health, Prevention Works, People Recover, Treatment is Effective”

Suicide Prevention Resource Center http://www.sprc.org/

The Jed Foundation www.jedfoundation.org/ Higher Education Center for Alcohol, Drug Abuse

and Violence Prevention http://www.higheredcenter.org/

Standards of Practice for Health Promotion in Higher Education, Third Edition, May 2012 http://www.acha.org/