Through the course, I learned a lot about the physical and mental health of the community and how to improve it. Based on the knowledge I gained, I will design a community that I think is healthy and explain how it looks. For beginners, I learned a few factors that can build a healthy community. These are physical factors: geography, the environment, the scale of the community, and the development of the industry. Social and cultural factors are beliefs, traditions, prejudice, economics, politics, religion, social norms and socio-economic status. Community organizations and individual behavior also have factors. (McKenzie) Because I understand these factors, I am healthy.
In order to build a successful healthy community, you need to promote your community. Some of the ways that I can do this is to force a healthy diet and physical activity, to provide healthy food, and to create and implement a healthy community design. I can do these promotions in the following way: Increase nutrition and nutrition education at school, increase or improve school physical activity, provide safe routes to schools, and local shops And increased supply of farmers' market and health food at grocery stores. And sex. Advertising is also a good way to promote the community. This is done through a variety of media means such as community meetings, community and organization newsletters, social media, targeted e-mails, announcements of conferences and religious gatherings, and simply talking to the community (spreading the word) I can. (Ctb.ku.edu) I hypothesize stakeholders participating in the implementation team to be "secondary stakeholders" because it interferes with you being "ashamed" because of questions and concerns you do not understand I encourage you to make a healthy community to become. They also create social capital for the community, so people of all races and cultures of the community can understand and evaluate each other. Secondary stakeholders also increase opportunities for healthy communities to succeed
Self-image of the community By using the process of a healthy city / healthy community, the community considers itself a healthy community and focuses on maintaining this image by solving problems I will. Perhaps more importantly, it can also see larger pictures. The ultimate goal of achieving a perfectly healthy community, whether achievable or not, means that everyone can work towards this goal, and that the plan is taken for granted. We understand that a healthy community fits the community's self-image and that people can work hard to control their destiny and improve it. As a result, the process itself is an important element in the definition of healthy communities. Citizens cooperate in identifying and solving problems, creating and integrating assets, improving living and improving the quality of life for all people.
Elements of the most frequently cited healthy community fall into two categories: function and process (see Figure 1). In some cases, the elements are presented as qualities of a healthy community or a healthy community. For example, a healthy community has strong economic opportunities and employment opportunities. In other cases, healthy community factors are identified as principles or practices for implementing community health improvement processes. This means how the community will be healthy. For example, a healthy community involves several divisions in its plan. The organization examined several factors as function and process. For example, citizen participation is a feature of a healthy community in some organizations, and for other organizations, a mechanism for community members to participate in the health improvement process.
Organizations involved in healthy community activities cite the various elements necessary to create a healthy community. Indeed, organizations that participated in this survey discussed 88 different factors (see Appendix D for a complete list). There are few organizations mentioning specific elements. Healthy community elements specified by more than 12 organizations are shown in the list below. It is presented in the order of the most frequently mentioned ("fair" quoted by 34 organizations), in the order of not being mentioned most frequently (until "use of data to guide and measure efforts") I will.