Course
Discontinued
No
Course Code
THRT 3504
Descriptive
Managing Stress: Principles and Strategies For Health Promotion
Department
Therapeutic Recreation
Faculty
Applied Community Studies
Credits
3.00
Start Date
End Term
Not Specified
PLAR
Yes
Semester Length
Flexible delivery ranging over 1 to 15 weeks
Max Class Size
30
Contact Hours
60 Hours
Method(s) Of Instruction
Lecture
Tutorial
Learning Activities
- Lecture/discussion
- Group work
- Media
- Health Promotion/Stress Management Interventions
Course Description
This course builds upon previously acquired knowledge of health and offers a mind/body perspective in its examination of the nature of stress and health promotion practices. Principles of integrative and complementary medicine are applied to the design and delivery of individual and group recreation health promotion interventions. Students will have the opportunity to develop depth in one area of health promotion.
Course Content
Holistic Mind/Body Approach to Health
- Holistic approach defined
- Eastern and western medicine
- Integrative and complementary medicine
- Science and energy medicine
- Psychneuroimmunology
The Nature of Stress: Physical
- The nature of stress
- Physiology of stress
- Illness and stress
- Health Body: fitness, nutrition, lifestyle
The Nature of Stress: Psychosocial and Spiritual Dimensions
- Psychology of stress
- Mental health promotion
- Stress resistant personalities
- Social support and psychological health
- Cognitive health: self determination, mindfulness, self esteem
- Spiritual health: theories, models, interventions
- Multicultural approaches to spiritual health
Therapeutic Recreation: Holistic Approach to Health
- Leisure, stress and coping
- Leisure: healthy body, mind and spirit
- Therapeutic recreation: an holistic, systems approach
- Therapeutic recreation: environmental and socioeconomic implications
Health Promotion Interventions: The Breadth
- Journal writing
- Cognitive restructuring
- Humour, laughter, yoga
- Social support, friendship circles, circles of support
- Leisure activities: connections, competence
- Physical activity
- Outdoor activity: nature
- Aromatherapy
- Animal therapy, Equine Apothecary
- Meditation
- Yoga, Tai Chi, Qigong
- Guided visualization
- Autogenics
- Prayer, forgiveness
- Shiatsu, Massage
- Energy Medicine Practice: Reiki, Therapeutic Touch, Healing Touch
Health Promotion: A Specialty
- Depth in a health promotion practice
- Leadership in health promotion
- Specialized area of skill, knowledge, competence
Learning Outcomes
Upon successful completion of this course, the student will be able to:
- analyze health and illness from an holistic mind/body approach
- analyze the nature of stress: the physical dimension
- analyze the nature of stress: the psychosocial and spiritual dimensions
- examine health and health promotion from environmental, socioeconomic, political and global perspectives
- apply holistic approaches to the delivery of therapeutic recreation services
- demonstrate breadth, a range of health promotion interventions
- demonstrate depth, a specialty in health promotion.
Means of Assessment
This course will conform to Douglas College policy regarding the number and weighting of evaluations. Typical means of evaluation would include a combination of:
- Written assignments
- Presentations
- Testing
This is a graded course
Textbook Materials
T.B.A.
Prerequisites