DavidsonL. Health promotion in Australia 1978–79, Canberra, Australia, Commonwealth of Australia, 1979.
2.
GreenLW. National policy in the promotion of health. International Journal of Health Education22: 161–168, 1979.
3.
World Health Organization. Health Promotion: A Discussion Document on the Concepts and Principles. WHO Regional Office for Europe, ICP/HSR 602, Copenhagen, 1984.
4.
World Health Organization. The Ottawa Charter for Health Promotion. Canadian Public Health Association, Ottawa, 1986.
5.
GreenLWKreuterM.Health Promotion Planning: An Educational and Environmental Approach. Mayfield Publishing Co., Mountain View, CA, 1991.
6.
WinslowC-EA. The Evolution and Significance of the Modern Public Health Campaign. Yale University Press, New Haven, Conn., 1923 (reprinted in 1984 by the Journal of Public Health Policy).
7.
KickbuschI.Approaches to an ecological base for public health. Health Promotion4: 265–268, 1989.
8.
BronfenbrennerU.The Ecology of Human Development: Experiments by Nature and Design. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1979.
9.
HellerK.Social and community intervention. Annual Review of Psychology41: 141–168, 1990.
10.
SeidmanE.Back to the future, community psychology: Unfolding a theory of social intervention. American Journal of Community Psychology16: 3–24, 1988.
11.
GreenLWKreuterMW. Health promotion as a public health strategy for the 1990s. Annual Review of Public Health, vol. 11. BreslowL, ed. Annual Reviews Inc., Palo Alto, CA, 1990.
12.
BunkerJPGombyDSKehrerBH, eds. Pathways to Health: The Role of Social Factors. The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, Menlo Park, CA, 1989.
13.
LabonteR.Keeping fit in a sick society: The ideology of health promotion. Our Generation16: 35–51, 1983.
14.
TonesBK. Health education and the ideology of health promotion: A review of alternative approaches. Health Education Research1: 3–12, 1986.
15.
WallackLWinklebyM. Primary prevention: A new look at basic concepts. Social Science and Medicine25: 923–930, 1987.
16.
MoriskyDE. Five-year blood-pressure control and mortality following health education for hypertensive patients. American Journal of Public Health73: 153–162, 1983.
17.
MullenPDGreenLWPersingerG. Clinical trials of patient education for chronic conditions: A comparative meta-analysis of intervention types. Preventive Medicine14: 753–781, 1985.
18.
BushPJ. Cardiovascular risk factor prevention in black school children — Two-year results of the Know Your Body program. American Journal of Epidemiology129: 466–482, 1989.
19.
ConnellDB. Summary of findings of the School Health Education Evaluation: Health promotion effectiveness, implementation, and costs. Journal of School Health55: 316–321, 1985.
20.
AllegranteJPGreenLW. When health policy becomes victim-blaming. New England Journal of Medicine305: 1528–1529, 1981.
21.
BreslowL.The future of public health: Prospects in the U.S. for the 1990s. Annual Review of Public Healthvol. 11, BreslowL, ed. Annual Reviews Inc., Palo Alto, CA, 1990.
22.
CrawfordR.You are dangerous to your health: The ideology and politics of victim-blaming. International Journal of Health Services7: 663–681, 1977.
23.
TeshS.Disease causality and politics. Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law6: 369–390, 1981.
24.
WattA.Health education and community development. Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine Supplement79: 20–23, 1986.
25.
FreimuthVSMettgerW. Is there a hard-to-reach audience? Public Health Reports105: 232–238, 1990.
26.
TownsendPDavidsonN. Inequalities in Health: The Black Report. Penguin Books, London, 1982.
27.
RaeburnJBeagleholeR. Health promotion: Can it redress the health effects of social disadvantage? Community Health Studies13: 289–293, 1989.
28.
GreenLWRaeburnJM. Health promotion: What is it? What will it become? Health Promotion3: 151–159, 1988.
29.
YeoM.Toward an ethic of empowerment for health promotion. Health Promotion International8: 225–235, 1993.
30.
McAlisterA. Theory and action for health promotion —illustrations from the North Karelia Project. American Journal of Public Health72: 43–50, 1982.
31.
SheaSBaschCE. A review of five major community-based cardiovascular disease prevention programs. Part 1: Rationale, design, and theoretical framework. American Journal of Health Promotion4: 203–213, 1990.
32.
PuskaPA. Television in health promotion: Evaluation of a national programme in Finland. International Journal of Health Education24: 2–14, 1981.
33.
PuskaPA. The community-based strategy to prevent coronary heart disease: Conclusions from the ten years of the North Karelia Project. Annual Review of Public Healthvol. 6. Annual Reviews, Inc., Palo Alto, CA, 1985.
34.
FarquharJW. The community-based model of life style intervention trials. American Journal of Epidemiology108: 103–111, 1977.
35.
FarquharJW. Community Education for cardiovascular health. Lancet1 (8023): 1192–1195, 1977.
36.
MacCobyN. Reducing the risk of cardiovascular disease effects of a community-based campaign on knowledge and behaviour. Journal of Community Health23: 100–114, 1977.
37.
FarquharJW. Community studies of cardiovascular disease prevention, in Prevention of Coronary Heart Disease: Practical Management of Risk Factors. KaplanNMStamlerJ, eds. WB Saunders, Philadelphia, 1983.
38.
FortmanSP. Effect of health education on dietary behaviour: The Stanford Three-Community Study. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition34: 565–571, 1981.
39.
FarquharJW. The Stanford Five City Project: An Overview. In Behavioural Health: A Handbook of Health enhancement and Disease Prevention. MatarazzoJD, eds. Wiley, New York, 1984.
40.
FarquharJW. Effects of community-wide education on cardiovascular disease risk factors-the Stanford Five-City Project. Journal of the American Medical Association264: 359–365, 1990.
41.
BlackburnH.Research and demonstration projects in community cardiovascular disease prevention. Journal of Public Health Policy4: 398–421.
42.
FinneganJRJr. Measuring and tracking education programme implementation: The Minnesota Heart Health Programme experience. Health Education Quarterly16: 77–90, 1989.
43.
CarlawRW. Organization for a community cardiovascular health program: Experiences for the Minnesota Heart Health Program. Health Education Quarterly11: 243–252, 1984.
44.
FinneganJRJr. Measuring and tracking education program implementation: The Minnesota Heart Health Program experience. Health Education Quarterly16: 77–90, 1989.
45.
LuepkerR. in press, American Journal of Public Health, 1994.
46.
KreuterMW. PATCH: Its origin, basic concepts, and links to contemporary public health policy. Journal of Health Education23: 135–139, 1992.
47.
TarlovAR. Foundation work: The Health Promotion Program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. American Journal of Health Promotion2: 74–80, 1987.
48.
MittelmarkMB. Balancing the requirements of research and the needs of communities in Health Promotion at the Community Level, BrachtN, ed. Sage Publications, Newbury Parks, CA, 1990.
49.
ParcelGS. Beyond Demonstration: Diffusion of Health Promotion Innovations. In Health Promotion at the Community Level, BrachtN., ed. Sage Publications, Newbury Park, CA, 1990.
50.
RogersEM. Diffusion of Innovations, 3rd ed.The Free Press, New York, 1983.
51.
GreenLW. Diffusion theory extended and applied. In Advances in Health Education and Promotion, vol. 3. WardWLewisFM, eds. Jessica Kingsley Publishers, London, 1991.
52.
GreenLWMcAlisterAL. Macro-intervention to support health behaviour: Some theoretical perspectives and practical reflections. Health Education Quarterly11: 323–339, 1984.
53.
TonesBK. Radicalism and the ideology of health education. Health Education Research8: 147–150, 1993.
54.
GreenLW. The theory of participation: A qualitative analysis of its expression in national and international health policies. In Advances in Health Education and Promotion, vol. 1, part A. WardWB, ed. JAI Press, Greenwich, CT, 1986.