Map showing the interrelationship between functional health patterns and functional, potentially dysfunctional, and dysfunctional categories of behavior for the individual
Full Answer Section
Relationships (Lines and Colors):
- Solid Green Lines: Directly promote functional health patterns.
- Dashed Yellow Lines: May or may not be problematic depending on context or frequency. Need monitoring.
- Solid Red Lines: Directly hinder functional health patterns.
Overall Shape:
- The concept map resembles a flower with the functional health patterns at the center (like the pistil) and the behavior categories branching out like petals.
Note: This is a general concept map. Specific examples of behaviors within each category can be tailored to different health patterns.
Sample Solution
Concept Map: Functional Health Patterns & Behavior Categories
Center (Orange Oval): Functional Health Patterns (List inside)
- Health Perception-Health Management
- Nutritional-Metabolic Pattern
- Elimination Pattern
- Activity-Exercise Pattern
- Sleep-Rest Pattern
- Cognitive-Perceptual Pattern
- Self-Perception-Self-Concept Pattern
- Role-Relationship Pattern
- Sexuality-Reproductive Pattern
- Coping-Stress Tolerance Pattern
Right Side (3 Sections):
- Functional Behaviors (Green Hexagon): Behaviors that promote health and well-being (connected to center with solid green lines)
- Examples (written inside hexagon): Balanced diet, regular exercise, adequate sleep, positive self-talk, healthy relationships
- Potentially Dysfunctional Behaviors (Yellow Diamond): Behaviors that could become problematic depending on context or frequency (connected to center with dashed yellow lines)
- Examples (written inside diamond): Skipping meals occasionally, occasional social media breaks, napping on weekends, occasional negative self-talk
- Dysfunctional Behaviors (Red Square): Behaviors that significantly impair health and well-being (connected to center with solid red lines)
- Examples (written inside square): Restrictive eating, excessive social media use, chronic sleep deprivation, constant self-criticism