Chapter 2 Health Word Scramble
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| Question | Answer |
| Which method of strengthening your interpersonal communication skills focuses on your emotions rather than placing blame? - | Using "I" messages to express your feelings |
| Which of these-medical skills; communication skills; refusal skills; decision-making skills-is NOT a health skill? - | Medical skills |
| What is the best way to resolve a consumer problem if you are not satisfied with a manufacturer's response to a complaint? - | Seek advice from a consumer advocate group |
| What term refers to the ideas, beliefs, and attitudes that help guide the way you live? - | Values |
| Quackery - | Health fraud |
| True/false? Being a smart shopper is not an important part of your well-being. - | False |
| True/false? You can protect yourself from health fraud when buying a health-related product by checking out the product's claim with a health professional - | True |
| True/false? Advertising has little influence on consumers' decisions to purchase health-related products. - | False |
| True/false? A person's values affect his or her decisions. - | True |
| The process of ending a conflict through cooperation and problem solving - | Conflict resolution |
| Specific tools and strategies to maintain, protect, and improve all aspects of your health - | Health skills |
| The exchange of thoughts, feelings, and beliefs between two or more people - | Interpersonal communication |
| Communication strategies that can help you say no when you are urged to take part in behaviors that are unsafe or unhealthful, or go against your values - | Refusal skills |
| Skills that help you reduce and manage stress in your life - | Stress management skills |
| Name the three health skills that deal with how you give and receive information - | Interpersonal communication; refusal skills; conflict resolution |
| What two questions do you need to answer to decide whether health information is valid? - | Where did the information originate? What is the reliability of the information? |
| What are two useful self-management skills? - | Practicing healthful behaviors and managing stress |
| A multi-step strategy to identify and achieve your goals - | Action plan |
| The ideas, beliefs, and attitudes about what is important that help guide the way you live - | Values |
| To find ways to obtain or accomplish - | Pursue |
| A goal that you can reach in a short period of tim - | Short-term goal |
| The steps that enable you to make a healthful decision - | Decision-making process |
| Something you aim for that takes planning and work - | Goal |
| A goal that you plan to reach over an extended period of time - | Long-term goal |
| How are your values reflected? - | In the way you show respect, loyalty, honesty, truth, and tolerance |
| List the steps of the decision-making process - | State situation; list options; weigh possible outcomes; consider values; make a decision and act on it; evaluate the decision |
| Name the two types of goals - | Short-term goals and long-term goals |
| Can short-term goals be stepping stones to achieving long-term goals? - | Yes |
| List the stages of a well-thought-out action plan for reaching goals - | Set a specific, realistic goal; list steps; identify sources of help and support; set a reasonable time frame; evaluate progress at checkpoints; reward achievement |
| A written or spoken media message designed to interest consumers in purchasing a product or service - | Advertising |
| Someone who purchases or uses health products or services - | Health consumer |
| Gives you important information about what a product contains - | Label |
| A company or store's written agreement to repair a product or refund your money if the product doesn't function properly - | Warranty |
| Judging the benefits of different products by comparing several factors, such as quality, features, and cost - | Comparison shopping |
| What does it mean to be a health-literate consumer? - | Being aware of and knowing how to evaluate hidden messages in advertising so you make informed purchasing decisions |
| List two ways you can make smart health-product purchases - | Read product label; do comparison shopping before you buy |
| What information is found on product labels? - | Product's name, intended use, directions, warnings, manufacturer's information, amount in container, and active and inactive ingredients |
| What kind of people can you turn to for reliable health information? - | Anyone with a medical background |
Created by:
kcopeland27
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