Next Level Health: a holistic health and wellbeing program to empower New Zealand women.
Victoria ChinnE NeelyS ShultzR KrugerR HughesR PageJ CoadM ThundersPublished in: Health promotion international (2022)
Improving equity in women's health requires gender-specific and empowering approaches. However, health programs often disempower women by adopting a 'one-size-fits-all' approach that emphasizes diet, exercise and weight loss over other important aspects like sleep and mental wellbeing. This article reports on the design of Next Level Health (NLH), a program that aims to empower women through developing a wide range of health behaviors to support their holistic wellbeing. NLH is grounded by ethics, theory and evidence to support women to make achievable, sustainable changes that are relevant to their everyday lives. Women utilized the NLH framework to develop an integrative health routine across six domains: physical activity, sleep, nutrition, eating behavior, self-care and stress management. The framework guided them to set small, incremental goals that were adaptive to their needs and built from their existing circumstances. Participants reflected on their progress with a facilitator during monthly meetings, accessed a social media support page and received monthly text messages. Health programs remain an essential approach to improving women's health alongside community- and policy-level strategies. The development of NLH exemplifies how evidence may partner with modern health promotion values to inform relevant and ethical program design for women.
Keyphrases
- public health
- healthcare
- mental health
- physical activity
- health promotion
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- health information
- social media
- weight loss
- bariatric surgery
- cervical cancer screening
- machine learning
- quality improvement
- insulin resistance
- breast cancer risk
- human health
- deep learning
- global health
- adipose tissue
- metabolic syndrome
- risk assessment
- body composition
- artificial intelligence
- climate change
- human immunodeficiency virus
- obese patients
- glycemic control