Health promotion and the principles within health promotion aim to promote to the community what is being offered within health promotion it allows people in the community to get access to the benefits of health care. How the black dog institute approaches and attempts to overcome the health inequalities that are related to the black dog institute, also what the black dog institute focus on? But how can the black dog institute overcome these inequalities? And also how can the black dog institute try to approach these inequalities? The black dog institute within primary health care and its principles also health promotion and its principles help the community to have access to the benefits of the black dog institute.
Primary health care and the principles of primary health care allow the community to seek and consider their options with primary health care, but how do primary health care and its principles offer to Australia. Primary health is available throughout the world it is also socially proper, but referrals are given then are put in order of priority of who needs it first (Germov 2014). Primary health care has a lot of functions to help the promotion of health and wellness that may encourage people to seek health, primary (first) care and the follow-up functions …show more content…
Health promotion is the means of a process that allows the community to be able to have the control of considering their own health, and ways on improving their health from the view of health promotion there is and to cut social inequalities in health (Cambon, Minary, Ridde & Alla 2013). The fundamentals that health promotion are based on are the approach of focusing on people each lifestyle and the education on the health, but health promotion actually approaches on the focus on educating the structure of lifestyles (Rutter & Gelius 2011). Health promotion has 5 key principles that are clearly outlined as creating supportive environments, strengthening community action of developing personal skills, re-orientating health care services and building healthy public policies (Rutter & Gelius