Health Promotion Barometer 2009: Member Organisations

Health Promotion Barometer 2009: Member Organisations

Description

The survey focused on the health promotion strategies and activities of Finnish municipalities (local government) at the time of the survey and in the future. The respondents were executive directors and managers of various member organisations of the Finnish Centre for Health Promotion or the Association of Voluntary Health, Social and Welfare Organisations (YTY). The same set of questions was also presented to municipal managers and directors of health services (FSD2438). In this survey, the general situation in health promotion was charted for example from the viewpoints of residential environment, municipal services, and care of alcohol abusers. View were also probed on the visibility and social significance of health promotion, resource allocation in health services, and the development of the Policy programme for the well-being of children, youth and families. In addition, the respondents were asked how they thought leadership and co-operation in health promotion had been realised in their organisations. Background variables included the organisation's area of operation, the number of individual and institutional members in the organisation, and the sector (e.g. social services organisation, public health organisation, organisation for disabled people, sports organisation) of organisation.
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Year of publication

2009

Authors

Finnish Centre for Health Promotion - Creator

Tietoarkisto - Publisher

Terveyden edistämisen keskus - Creator

Other information

Fields of science

MEDICAL AND HEALTH SCIENCES; SOCIAL SCIENCES

Language

Finnish

Open access

Restricted access

License

Other (Not Open)

Keywords

Health care services and policies, health policy, Kansanterveys, public health, terveyden edistäminen, terveys, terveyskasvatus, Terveyspalvelut ja terveyspolitiikka, tulevaisuus, yhteistyö, terveyskäyttäytyminen, future, health, cooperation, järjestöt, organizations, muutos, attitude change, health promotion