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Hodges' Model: The Sustainable Development Goals and Public Health - Universal Health Coverage Demands a Universal Framework

1 comment
Affiliation

NHS Professionals Special Health Authority (Jones); University College of Teacher Education Tyrol (Wirnitzer)

Date
Summary

"Future sustainable healthcare delivery and systems need reflective practitioners and critical thinkers to engage the public to achieve health policy aims and objectives."

Developed in the United Kingdom (UK) during the early 1980s, Hodges' model (h2cm) is a conceptual framework that is designed to facilitate integrated care, person centredness, and reflective practice and to help bridge the theory–practice gap. The building blocks are health and care concepts that arise clinically in practice. This paper applies H2cm to nutrition, specifically, in exploring how this pragmatic solution focused on the one-to-one relationship of learner–mentor, patient–clinician, public health professional–public, and groups can be applied to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

The h2cm method is a constructivist, practical, and educational exercise; the intended group can be defined/viewed as student, teacher, patient, carer, or member of the public in a health promotion campaign, for example. As shown in the figure below (and as detailed at Related Summaries, below), the model's two axes intersect. The horizontal axis differentiates between HUMANISTIC-MECHANISTIC activities and phenomena. The vertical axis is the INDIVIDUAL–GROUP (population).



The intersection of the axes creates four quadrants, domains within which the user of the model can place keywords as per a situation or context. These domains of care, or contextual, situated knowledge, are not placed arbitrarily, but they can be confirmed through a series of questions (a Socratic dialogue) drawing out the subjects (persons) and agents (formal and informal) and types of activities and interventions that fall under the auspices of health and care. Accordingly, the placement of concepts depends on the specific purpose and situation of the person(s) using the model. This situatedness accounts for the model's simplistic, complex ("rich"), and dialectical potential.

If the figure above is a blank template (an empty set), then - in the context of nutrition - one can develop the list of domains as follows:

  • Sciences: Nutritional data/labelling on foodstuffs
  • Intrapersonal-Interpersonal: Anxiety provoked by thoughts of body image and eating
  • Sociology: Social behaviours and learning based in school regarding nutrition
  • Political: Policies on advertising of high-calorie foods

In this review, the authors use the SDGs as input, deciding where in the aforementioned model the primary concepts in the SDG should be placed. They take each SDG (numbered 1-17, from "No poverty" through to "Partnership for the Goals") and assign it to a domain of Hodges' model. The outputs are presented as figures (two-by-two tables). Type 2 diabetes is an example, whereby application to H2cm highlights that attention needs to be paid to the person's level of (health) literacy, the balance of the individual's existing diet, shopping and factors such as income, health and technology (device) literacy, reading, food labelling, mobility, transport, and accessibility. (Ultimately, "The best way to 'Leave No One Behind' is to ensure individuals have the requisite literacies, so they can advocate for self, family and community...) The results of applying h2cm to this and other cases are not "data bound" but, rather, are found in reflection, critique, and discussion associated with the figures.

In conclusion: "As the SDGs are tracked and measures of progress refined,...Hodges' model can help academics, practitioners to navigate the inevitable complexity encountered to help assure public (mental) health at individual, community and global levels and act as a 'uniqueness preserver'... in delivering person-centred care. A generic, universal assessment and evaluation tool with sufficient conceptual scope and relevance can assist the implementation of the SDGs, achievement of sustainable healthcare systems and universal health coverage: a blueprint-realised."

Source

BMJ Nutrition, Prevention & Health 2022;0:e000254. doi:10.1136/bmjnph-2021-000254 - submitted by Peter Jones to The Communication Initiative on November 25 2022; and h2cm blogspot, November 29 2022.

Comments

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Submitted by h2cmng on Tue, 11/29/2022 - 11:05 Permalink

Thank you for sharing news of our paper and Hodges' model with its local, global and gclocal potential:

Jones P, Wirnitzer K. Hodges’ model: the Sustainable Development Goals and public health – universal health coverage demands a universal framework. BMJ Nutrition, Prevention & Health 2022;0:e000254. doi:10.1136/bmjnph-2021-000254

As mentioned in the paper, the blog below includes in the side bar:

  • a link to a downloadable template of the model;
  • a bibliography;
  • and since 2006 many posts on the model, that demonstrate the scope and application of the model.

Please, also check Dr Wirnitzer's work - my co-author:

The NURMI-Study (NURMI – Nutrition and Running high Mileage)
https://www.facebook.com/nurmistudy

From Science 2 School: Nachhaltig gesund – bewegt & veggie
https://www.science2.school/ ]

If I can help you understand and apply Hodges' model by all means let me know.

The work on Hodges' model is a personal initiative, I am still a mental health nurse on the community in NW England.

Best regards,

Peter Jones

Community Mental Health Nurse and Researcher
Warrington Recovery Team, NW England
Blogging at "Welcome to the QUAD"
http://hodges-model.blogspot.com/
http://twitter.com/h2cm
[ h2cmng AT yahoo.co.uk or peter.jones@h2cm.info ]