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Health Promotion Throughout the Life Span

Health Promotion Throughout the Life SpanAuthors: Carole Lium Edelman APRN MS CS CMC, Carol Lynn Mandle PhD RN CS FNP
Publisher: Elsevier/Mosby
Category: Book

List Price: $72.95
Buy Used: $3.50
as of 3/20/2010 17:39 MDT details
You Save: $69.45 (95%)



New (29) Used (164) from $3.50

Seller: BookWorm_THL
Rating: 1.5 out of 5 stars 7 reviews
Sales Rank: 38187

Media: Paperback
Edition: 6
Pages: 720
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.2
Dimensions (in): 10.7 x 8.4 x 1.1

ISBN: 0323031285
Dewey Decimal Number: 362
EAN: 9780323031288
ASIN: 0323031285

Publication Date: November 18, 2005
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Health Promotion Throughout the Life Span (HEALTH PROMOTION THROUGHOUT THE LIFESPAN ( EDELMAN))

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
This comprehensive text provides the most current and accurate health promotion and disease prevention information available. The book addresses health promotion for all ages and all population groups - individuals, families, and communities. It includes extensive coverage of growth and development throughout the life span, with an emphasis on normal development as well as the specific problems and health promotion issues common to each stage. A complete unit is devoted to health promotion interventions. It also offers a unique assessment framework based on Gordon's Functional Health Patterns to provide consistency in presentation and an approach in line with the promotion of health.

  • Extensive coverage of growth and development throughout all stages of the life span.
  • A unit on specific interventions for health promotion.
  • Addresses health promotion for all population groups - individual, family, and the community.
  • Incorporates Case Studies that depict actual clinical situations to give students a "real-life" perspective.
  • Innovative Practice examples highlight unique and creative health promotion programs.
  • Summarizes specific clinical interventions in Health Teaching boxes to provide students with "how-to" nursing actions.
  • Think About It clinical scenarios provide critical thinking questions to help readers grasp important concepts.
  • Multicultural Awareness boxes present cultural perspectives important to care planning.
  • Introduces significant issues, trends, and controversies in health promotion through Hot Topics boxes to engage students in critical discussion and debate about these topics.
  • Research Highlights emphasize current research efforts and research opportunities in health promotion.


  • A new Study Questions section (with answers and rationales) helps you review and assess your understanding of chapter content.
  • Care Plans are presented in a consistent format: Nursing Diagnosis, Defining Characteristics, Related Factors, Expected Outcomes, and Interventions.
  • Healthy People 2010 boxes highlight current national health promotion priorities.
  • A new full-color design helps to highlight important features and content.
  • A new companion Evolve website offers case studies with questions and answers, WebLinks, content updates, and a Glossary with search capability to enhance your learning experience.



Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 7



5 out of 5 stars Delivered Fast   November 18, 2009
Marsha S. Asher (Florida)
0 out of 4 found this review helpful

This book was required for a class. Happy to have found it here and it was delivered fast. Thank you.


1 out of 5 stars Worst Textbook Ever   November 5, 2008
Jennifer Vanderlaan (Albany, NY)
8 out of 8 found this review helpful

This book is required for my Community Nursing course. I have completed more than half the book and am doing well in the class - but not due to actually having read it. To learn anything from this book takes mental acrobatics - seriously.

The organization seems well-defined, but the actual writing is so poorly executed that reading it is slow torture. The authors use as many words as possible to define every concept, turning what should be simple definitions into paragraph long sentences. The chapters drone on and on, making it nearly impossible to simply sit, read and gain an understanding of community health.

Each chapter takes you through Gordon's Functional Health Patterns to demonstrate how at every stage of life countless influences affect a person's health. Rather than taking a internal locus of control approach to health promotion, the book sees individuals as victims of life with little hope of overcoming all the obstacles to good health. As a previous reader noted, there is an overabundance of relying on government programs to ensure personal health.

But the book actually goes beyond describing individuals as helpless and actually characterizes individuals of low social-economic status in ways that can only be described as stupid. For example, in the chapter on infancy, a description of the risks for homeless infants is that they will not have cribs or be held. No explanation of why poor parents will not hold their children, no citation of research on parenting styles of homeless (or even poor) parents. Just the assumption that if you are poor you don't hold your baby. When I showed some of my concerns to my clinical adviser she was actually offended at how ridiculously inept the book claims individuals are simply because they are poor.

Very little useful information is offered, and what is is poorly researched. Citations are few and far between leaving me only to assume most of the information in this book is the opinion of the authors and should not be used for evidence-based practice.



1 out of 5 stars The Worst Textbook Ever   November 3, 2008
d (Haha, USA)
8 out of 8 found this review helpful

As another reviewer observed, this textbook is about health and wellness as much as a cookbook is about farming. It's an insipid mishmash of sociological jargon, a smorgasbord of breathless passages like "A central unifying theme has historically linked definitions, philosophies, and frameworks of nursing, known as holistic attention to pattern recognition during the examination of person-environment relationships throughout the life span." There's enough postmodern hot air in these pages to inflate a fleet of Goodyear blimps.

In this book is an obsession with classifying every phenomena regarding the functioning of the human body as a process within a pattern within society. No connection is too tortured for the various authors; consider this labored definition of food intake as an example of the so-called "individual environmental focus of Gordon's framework. Although reference is made within many patterns to environmental influence, it often refers to the physical environment within and external to the individual. Common to each functional health pattern are environmental influences such as role relationships, family values, and societal mores. Personal preference, knowledge of food preparation, and ability to consume and retain food govern the individual's intake. Cultural and family habits, financial ability to secure the food, and crop availability also influence food intake. Additionally, the person who secures, prepares, and serves the food, such as the mother or father, controls nutritional intake for children."

I dare anybody, including the author of that horrendous passage, to explain to me what in the name of God any of that has to do with actual intake of food by actual persons. To my educated eye it seems that half the paragraph is some sort of convoluted explanation of why the rest of the explanation should be taken seriously!

Within these pages is an apparent attempt to define nursing as some sort of New Age-y, biopsychosocial-holistic-wellness pseudoscience that has little to do with actually improving the health of living people, and everything to do with ensuring its authors and editors get more grant money to blow studying the biopsychosocialspiritual effects of maple tree aesthetics on the anxiety problems of 2nd graders with ADD. You'll read about interpersonal energy flows; you'll read sentences like "blood pressure, for example, is a pattern within the activity and exercise pattern." If you're like me, you'll grow more and more enraged as Brobdingnagian helpings of silly vocabulary and infuriating functional redefinitions of words like "disease" ("The failure of a person's adaptive mechanisms to counteract stimuli and stresses adequately, resulting in functional or structural disturbances") and "health" ("A state of physical, mental, and social functioning that realizes the potential of which a person is capable") are smeared on page after page like so much flung scat.

Woven through the textbook like barbed wire is the assumption that the government, especially the federal government, should be the cure-all for societies ills, especially those of disadvantaged minorities. Paragraph which talk about various federal initiatives to combat various public health issues are too numerous to count. Individual responsibility is most definitely NOT a theme here; in fact, were I a "disadvantaged minority" I'd be frankly upset at the amount of condescending paternalism evinced by the authors.

For any nurse educators who stumble across this review, I beg you to forgo this particular textbook. If you choose to use it, your students are going to spend time laughing at it that they could be spending learning something useful. My study groups have had a great time picking various passages apart (and by doing so discovering just how utterly incomprehensible most of this book really is).


To the authors of this weak-minded nonsense, shame on you. You've no business trying to pass any of this bunk off as the art and science of nursing- in fact, you've got no business taking it anywhere but your sociology classes. The lot of you are preening PC New Age pseudo-intellectuals who wouldn't know scientific method if it crawled down your throat. I've managed to persuade my nursing department to ditch this atrocity, and I hope all other schools follow suit.



1 out of 5 stars I didn't learn a thing.   June 27, 2008
Julie (Pittsburgh)
8 out of 8 found this review helpful

Redundant and boring. I really didn't get much out of this book at all.


1 out of 5 stars This Book is Worst than Illness   October 1, 2007
Leah (NJ)
14 out of 14 found this review helpful

I found this to be the worst text book I have ever had to read, the test questions it offers, are based on one sentence out of each chapter rather than concepts.

It has no underlying themes rather than any one of an ethnic minority
MUST have poor health which is of itself racist and discriminating. I would completely disagree by saying that I know plenty of healthy people who are of minority statuses.

The book is extremely boring to read and I agree with the first review, it just very repetetive and does not explain any concept in its own words.


Showing reviews 1-5 of 7


community  community care  health  health promotion  nursing  
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