How Children Learn to be Healthy
The goal of this book is to explore the ways in which health behavior develops in childhood, in the context of childhood socialization processes. The book reviews the historical and contemporary perspectives utilized in portraying the dynamics of children's physical health, a developmental analysis of children's and parents' attitudes and behavior concerning children's health, the role of parents, schools, and the media in influencing children's health attitudes and behavior, and how health attitudes, behaviors, and outcomes are affected by the social ecology of children's rearing environments.
- First book to look at children's socialization of health from a developmental perspective
- Interdisciplinary perspective (pediatrics, public health, education, child psychology)
- Detailed chapters on how peers, schools, and the media teach children about health and risk
Product details
February 2003Paperback
9780521524186
198 pages
229 × 152 × 12 mm
0.3kg
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Mechanisms and consequences of socializing children to be healthy
- 2. Children's health understanding and behavior
- 3. Parents' health beliefs
- 4. Parents' promotion of children's health
- 5. Parents' promotion of children's sexual health
- 6. Peers, schools, and children's health
- 7. How television viewing and other media use affects children's health
- 8. The social ecology of children's health socialization
- 9. Summary and conclusions.