How to understand health information, evaluate health claims, navigate healthcare systems, and make informed decisions about your own and your family's health. Health literacy is one of the most immediately practical skills in the curriculum — it affects every person's life, every day, and it is almost never explicitly taught.
Health literacy at Early Years level is about building the foundational health behaviours and health-seeking dispositions that will protect children throughout their lives. The most important behaviours — handwashing, safe water, adequate sleep, nutrition, and knowing when to seek help — are simple, evidence-based, and within the reach of almost any classroom to teach and reinforce. Handwashing alone prevents a substantial proportion of diarrhoeal diseases, which are among the leading causes of child mortality in low-income countries. Teaching it correctly — with soap (or ash where soap is unavailable), for at least twenty seconds, at the critical times (before eating, after using the toilet, after handling animals or waste) — is one of the highest-impact health interventions available. In many communities, illness is explained through spiritual, traditional, or supernatural frameworks alongside biomedical ones. Teachers should engage with these frameworks respectfully and honestly — acknowledging that traditional healers and community practices often provide genuine support, while being clear about what the biomedical evidence says about specific causes and treatments. The germ theory of disease — the idea that many illnesses are caused by microscopic organisms that pass between people — is one of the most important and most misunderstood scientific ideas in public health. Establishing a basic understanding of this at early years level (tiny living things that we cannot see but that can make us sick) creates the conceptual foundation for understanding infection prevention throughout life. All activities below can be taught without materials beyond what is immediately available in any classroom.
Five drawings representing food, water, sleep, movement, and cleanliness. The completion names the one most personally relevant with a specific reason, and proposes a specific, achievable health action for today — not a vague resolution but something the child can actually do.
Ask: what would make it easier to do the thing you named? Is there anything stopping you? The barrier question often reveals more about health literacy than the health knowledge itself.
Fatima woke up one morning feeling very hot and her head was hurting. She did not want to eat breakfast, which was strange because she was usually hungry. She told her mother, who felt her forehead and said she had a fever. Her mother gave her water to drink and took her to the health worker at the clinic. The health worker tested her for malaria and found she had it, and gave her medicine. After three days of rest and medicine, Fatima felt much better. She learned that telling her mother quickly meant she got treatment before the malaria got very bad, and that going to the clinic was not scary — the health worker was kind and knew how to help.
Award marks for: specific health warning signs that would genuinely prompt concern; health-seeking behaviour that is realistic and positive; and a lesson that connects the health-seeking behaviour to a good outcome. Stories where the child gets better because they told an adult quickly are more valuable than stories where they get better on their own — the behaviour being modelled matters.
Illness is caused by bad luck, cold air, or supernatural causes.
Many common illnesses are caused by specific, identifiable agents — bacteria, viruses, parasites — that enter the body through specific routes (contaminated food and water, insect bites, person-to-person contact through droplets or touch). Understanding the actual routes of transmission makes prevention possible: handwashing prevents illness spread through touch; safe water prevents waterborne illness; mosquito nets prevent malaria; vaccination prevents specific viral diseases. This does not mean that traditional frameworks for understanding illness have no value — many provide important social and psychological support. But the germ theory of infectious disease has been one of the most practically powerful ideas in human history, preventing more deaths than almost any other scientific advance.
If you feel well, you are healthy — and if you feel ill, you must be sick.
Many serious conditions — including high blood pressure, diabetes, HIV, and early cancer — produce few or no symptoms for long periods while causing significant damage. Conversely, many uncomfortable symptoms — soreness after physical work, mild fatigue, normal digestive discomfort — are not signs of illness. Feeling well is generally a good sign but not a guarantee of health, particularly as people age and for conditions that develop slowly over time. Regular health checks — particularly for conditions common in the local population — are valuable even for people who feel well.
Taking medicine makes you better faster, so more medicine is better.
Medicines work within specific dose ranges — too little may be ineffective and too much is dangerous or toxic. The dose and duration of antibiotic treatment, for example, is designed to fully eliminate the specific bacteria causing an infection; stopping early because you feel better allows surviving bacteria to regrow and potentially develop resistance. Taking more than prescribed does not accelerate recovery and can cause serious harm. All medicine should be taken exactly as directed by a qualified health worker.
Health literacy at primary level introduces students to the key concepts underlying personal and community health — the immune system, vaccination, nutrition, and the critical skill of evaluating health claims. In communities where health misinformation is common and access to professional healthcare is limited, these concepts are not academic but immediately practical and potentially life-saving. The immune system: the immune system is the body's defence against infection — a remarkably sophisticated network of cells, tissues, and proteins that recognises and destroys pathogens. The innate immune system provides immediate, non-specific defence (inflammation, fever). The adaptive immune system mounts targeted responses to specific pathogens and retains memory of past infections, providing faster and stronger responses on re-exposure.
By exposing the immune system to a harmless version of a pathogen (killed, attenuated, or represented by specific proteins), vaccination triggers the adaptive immune response and creates memory without causing disease. Vaccines are among the most evidence-based and cost-effective medical interventions in human history — smallpox has been eradicated, polio is close to elimination, and millions of deaths from measles, tetanus, and other diseases are prevented annually. Vaccine hesitancy — the refusal or delay of vaccination despite access — is driven by misinformation and is a genuine public health threat. Health literacy education that clearly explains how vaccines work is one of the most direct available responses.
Food provides the body with energy (carbohydrates, fats), building materials (protein), regulators (vitamins, minerals), and hydration. Malnutrition — both undernutrition and overnutrition — is a major contributor to disease burden globally. In low-income communities, the most common nutritional deficiencies include iron (causing anaemia), vitamin A (causing blindness and immune suppression), iodine (causing cognitive impairment), and protein (causing stunting). Simple, locally available foods often provide these nutrients when dietary diversity is maintained.
In a context of widespread health misinformation — on social media, in community networks, from informal health providers — the ability to evaluate health claims is essential. The key questions: who is making this claim and what are their qualifications? Is there evidence from peer-reviewed research? Does the claim conflict with scientific consensus? Does the information provider benefit financially from my belief in this claim? Is the treatment registered and approved by health authorities?
The health claim I am evaluating is that drinking water with salt and lime juice can prevent cholera. The claim is made by community members passing it on from person to person — no one knows the original source, and there is no professional health authority behind it. The scientific evidence on cholera prevention is clear: cholera is prevented by safe water, sanitation, and handwashing — not by drinking salty lime water, which has no antimicrobial properties against Vibrio cholerae, the bacterium that causes cholera. This claim contradicts the scientific consensus from the WHO and national health authority on cholera prevention. The harm from believing this claim is significant: people who believe it might feel protected and therefore not take the actual preventive measures — safe water storage, handwashing, avoiding contaminated food — that would genuinely protect them. There is no plausible biological mechanism: lime juice is mildly acidic but is not consumed in quantities sufficient to have antimicrobial effect in the gut. My verdict: this claim is contradicted by evidence and potentially harmful.
Award marks for: a genuine and locally known claim; honest application of all five questions rather than just the ones that support the conclusion; a verdict that follows from the analysis; and an explanation of the specific harm that believing the claim could cause. Strong answers will acknowledge when aspects of a claim are plausible or partially true, rather than dismissing everything associated with traditional or informal health practice.
Antibiotics are effective against all infections, including viral ones.
Antibiotics kill or inhibit bacteria and have no effect on viruses. Most common respiratory infections — colds, flu, most coughs and sore throats — are caused by viruses and will not be helped by antibiotics. Taking antibiotics for viral infections does not shorten the illness, causes side effects including disruption of the gut microbiome, and contributes to antimicrobial resistance — one of the most serious global public health threats. Antibiotics should only be used for confirmed or strongly suspected bacterial infections and always for the prescribed duration.
Vaccines contain live viruses and can cause the diseases they prevent.
Most vaccines do not contain live, fully active viruses. They may contain killed (inactivated) pathogens, weakened (attenuated) versions that cannot cause disease in healthy people, specific proteins from the pathogen surface, or (in newer mRNA vaccines) instructions for the body to produce those proteins temporarily. None of these can replicate in the body and cause the full disease. Some live attenuated vaccines (such as the oral polio vaccine or MMR) can very rarely cause mild symptoms in immunocompromised individuals — this risk is monitored and weighed against the much larger benefits of vaccination.
Traditional medicine and biomedical medicine are completely opposed — you must choose one.
Traditional medicine and biomedical medicine often address different needs and have different evidence bases. Some traditional treatments have been scientifically validated and are the source of important pharmaceuticals — artemisinin for malaria came from traditional Chinese medicine; many antibiotics derive from soil bacteria used in traditional remedies. Others have not been systematically tested. The appropriate stance is evidence-based evaluation of specific treatments rather than wholesale acceptance or rejection of either system. For serious, acute, or life-threatening conditions, biomedical treatment with the strongest evidence base is generally the safest choice. Many people use both systems, which requires care about interactions between treatments.
Healthy people do not need regular health checks.
Many serious conditions — including hypertension, diabetes, HIV, tuberculosis, and some cancers — are asymptomatic in their early stages but much easier to treat when caught early. Regular health checks, particularly for conditions with high prevalence in the local population, can identify these conditions before they become advanced. The specific checks recommended depend on age, sex, family history, and local disease epidemiology — a health worker can advise on what is most important locally. In resource-limited settings, targeted screening for the highest-burden conditions is the most practical approach.
Health literacy at secondary level engages students with the deeper scientific, social, and political dimensions of health — how medical knowledge is produced and evaluated, why health is so unequally distributed, the specific domains of mental health and sexual and reproductive health, and the structure and justice questions of health systems.
The systematic evaluation of medical interventions through clinical trials, meta-analyses, and systematic reviews is the methodological foundation of modern medicine. The hierarchy of evidence — from expert opinion at the base, through case reports, observational studies, randomised controlled trials, and meta-analyses — is essential for evaluating health claims. Understanding concepts like placebo effects, selection bias, publication bias, and statistical significance helps students evaluate health research more critically. The replication crisis in biomedical research — the finding that a substantial proportion of published studies cannot be replicated — is an important caveat that makes the quality of evidence assessment even more important.
Health outcomes are profoundly shaped by social, economic, and environmental conditions — income, education, housing, employment, social connection, and access to healthcare. The social gradient of health — the observation that health outcomes improve consistently at every step up the social hierarchy — is one of the most robust findings in public health. Life expectancy can vary by ten to twenty years between wealthy and poor neighbourhoods in the same city. Understanding this produces more accurate analysis of why some communities are less healthy than others than simply attributing health differences to individual behaviour.
This is an area of significant educational neglect in many contexts, where misinformation causes serious harm — unwanted pregnancy, sexually transmitted infections, maternal mortality, and lack of access to family planning. Accurate, age-appropriate information about contraception, STI prevention, reproductive anatomy, consent, and safe pregnancy is essential health literacy content that students have a right to receive.
If a treatment has been used for generations, it must work.
The longevity of a treatment's use is not evidence of its effectiveness. Many traditional treatments have been used for generations and have been found, when rigorously tested, to work no better than placebo. Others have been validated by systematic research and are now incorporated into evidence-based medicine. Duration of use is a starting point for investigation, not a conclusion. The relevant question is not how long has this been used but is there controlled evidence that it works and that its benefits outweigh its risks? Tradition can produce genuine wisdom — but it can also transmit placebos and harmful practices across generations.
Natural means safe and chemical means dangerous.
This framing is scientifically incoherent — everything is a chemical, including every component of every natural remedy. Many naturally occurring substances are highly toxic (arsenic, ricin, many plant alkaloids). Many synthetic substances are extremely safe and effective. The relevant question for any substance is what evidence exists about its effects at specific doses? — not whether it is natural or synthetic. The marketing use of natural as a synonym for safe exploits this misconception and causes genuine harm when it leads people to use unproven natural remedies instead of evidence-based treatments.
Mental health problems are not real illnesses — they are personal weakness or spiritual problems.
Mental health conditions are real medical conditions with documented neurobiological bases, evidence-based treatments, and significant impacts on quality of life and functioning. Depression involves measurable changes in brain structure and neurotransmitter function. Schizophrenia has both genetic and environmental causes and responds to specific medications. Anxiety disorders involve dysregulation of identifiable neural circuits. This does not mean that psychological, social, and spiritual dimensions of mental health conditions are irrelevant — they are important for understanding and treating these conditions. But the belief that mental illness is personal weakness prevents people from accessing the treatments that could help them.
Comprehensive sexual health education encourages young people to have sex earlier.
Multiple systematic reviews of evidence consistently show that comprehensive sexual health education does not increase rates of sexual activity or age of first intercourse. It is associated with later sexual debut in some studies, reduced rates of unintended pregnancy and STIs, and higher rates of contraceptive use among those who are sexually active. Abstinence-only education, by contrast, has been found in multiple trials to have no effect on delaying sexual activity and is associated with lower contraceptive use when young people do become sexually active — because they have not received accurate information about contraception. The evidence strongly supports comprehensive, accurate sexual health education.
Key texts and resources: the WHO's World Health Report (annual, freely available at who.int) provides the most authoritative global overview of health systems and disease burdens. For evidence-based medicine: Ben Goldacre's Bad Science (2008, Fourth Estate) is the most entertaining and accessible account of how medical evidence is produced, distorted, and misrepresented — essential reading for teachers. His Bad Pharma (2012) extends this to pharmaceutical research specifically. For social determinants: Michael Marmot's The Status Syndrome (2004, Times Books) and his work on the social gradient of health are the most accessible accounts; his UCL Institute of Health Equity (instituteofhealthequity.org) provides free resources. For health equity globally: Paul Farmer's work — particularly Pathologies of Power (2003, UC Press) — provides the most morally serious account of global health injustice. Partners in Health (pih.org) provides free case study resources on health delivery in resource-limited settings. For mental health: the Lancet Commission on Global Mental Health (2018) is freely available and provides the most comprehensive current account of the global mental health burden and the gap between need and provision. For sexual and reproductive health: the WHO's guidelines on adolescent sexual health and the Guttmacher Institute's research on sexual and reproductive health globally are both freely available. For African health contexts: the Africa Health Research Institute (ahri.org), the African Population and Health Research Center (aphrc.org), and the East African Medical Journal provide regionally specific resources. For school-based health education: the International Technical Guidance on Sexuality Education (UNESCO, 2018) is freely available and provides the evidence base for comprehensive sexuality education.
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