Professional Documents
Culture Documents
MAPEH Reviewer Grade 10 First Quarter
MAPEH Reviewer Grade 10 First Quarter
Consumer health aims to develop a person’s ability to evaluate and utilize health
information, products, and services wisely and effectively.
Consumer health has three components: health information, health products, and
health services.
Health Information
is any concept, step, or advice that various sources give to aid the health status of an
individual. The information is critical as it may alter the health conditions of a person.
Another important characteristic of health information is that it is continuously and rapidly
changing.
Health Products
are food, drugs, cosmetics, devices, biologicals, vaccines, in-vitro diagnostic reagents, and
household/urban hazardous substances and/or a combination of and/or a derivative
thereof (FDA Act,2009).
Health Services
This programs aim to appraise the health conditions of individuals through screening and
examinations, cure and treat disorders, prevent and control the spread of diseases,
provide safety, emergency care, and first aid, and ensure a follow-up program for
individuals who have done treatments.
Health Professionals
Individuals who are licensed to practice medicine and other allied health programs.
Healthcare Practitioner
Health Facilities
◦ Hospital
A hospital offers different types of medical care like inpatient and outpatient
care.
It is a facility that offers surgery without the patient being admitted in the
hospital
◦ Health Center
Health Insurance
A financial agreement between an insurance company and an individual or group for the
payment of healthcare costs.
This also may pertain to a “protection that provides benefits for sickness and injury”.
Health insurance may be sourced from both public and private companies.
Example: PhilHealth
Republic Act No. 8423 (Traditional and Alternative Medicine Act of 1997)
Naturopathy
◦ Views diseases as manifestation of an alteration in the processes by which the body
naturally heals itself.
Herbal Medicine
There are 10 herbs that are proven and tested to have medicinal value and approved by
the Department of Health.
ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE
Acupuncture
◦ A form energy medicine where long thin needles are inserted to specific parts of the
body to affect the energy flow. Acupuncture is believed to treat musculoskeletal
dysfunctions.
◦ This procedure is done by placing inverted glasses that have flames from burning
cotton, on specific points in the body. It is believed to relieve muscle and joint pains
Reflexology
◦ Uses the same technique as the acupuncture. The only difference is that
acupressure does not use needles but hands to apply pressure on certain points of
the body.
Nutrition Therapy
Quackery
Reflexology
Acupressure
◦ Uses the same technique as the acupuncture. The only difference is that
acupressure does not use needles but hands to apply pressure on certain points of
the body.
Nutrition Therapy
The start of the 20th century saw the rise of distinct musical styles that reflected a move away
from the conventions of earlier classical music. These new styles were:
IMPRESSIONISM
One of the earlier but concrete forms declaring the entry of 20 th century music was known as
impressionism. It is a French movement in the late 19th and early 20th century. The sentimental
melodies and dramatic emotionalism of the preceding Romantic Period were being replaced in
favor of moods and impressions. The impressionistic movement in music had its foremost
proponents in the French composers Claude Debussy and Maurice Ravel.
CLAUDE DEBUSSY
He was the primary exponent of the impressionist movement and the focal point for other
impressionist composers.; L’ Enfant Prodigue (The Prodigal Son)
MAURICE RAVEL
During his stint with the school were he stayed until his early 20’s, he had composed a
number of masterpieces.
Miroirs (Mirrors), 1905, a work for piano known for its harmonic evolution and imagination,
PRIMITIVISM
Primitivistic music is tonal through the asserting of one note as more important than the others.
New sounds are synthesized from old ones by juxtaposing two simple events to create a more
complex new event.
NEO-CLASSICISM
Neo-classicism was a moderating factor between the emotional excesses of the Romantic
period and the violent impulses of the soul in expressionism.
It was, in essence, a partial return to an earlier style of writing, particularly the tightly-knit
form of the Classical period, while combining tonal harmonies with slight dissonances.
the ballet Romeo and Juliet and the opera War and Peace; avant garde
The avant garde style exhibited a new attitude toward musical mobility, whereby the order
of note groups could be varied so that musical continuity could be altered.
Expressionism
|à The expressionist artist strives to convey his personal feelings about the object painted, rather
than merely record his observation of it.
|à Compositions tend to be simpler and more direct, and are often characterized by thick impasto
paint, loose, feely applied brushstrokes, and occasional symbolism.
Impressionism
|à It is a 19th-century art movement that originated with a group of Paris-based artists whose
independent exhibitions brought them to prominence during the 1870s and 1880s.
|à Impressionist painting characteristics include relatively small, thin, yet visible brush strokes,
open composition, emphasis on accurate depiction of light in its changing qualities ordinary
subject matter, inclusion of movement as a crucial element of human perception and experience,
and unusual visual angles.
Cubism
|à Cubism has been considered the most influential art movement of the 20th century. The term
is broadly used in association with a wide variety of art produced in Paris during the 1910s and
extending through the 1920s.
Dadaism
|à It was an art movement of the European avant-garde in the early 20th century.
|à This is the European artistic and literary movement (1916-1923) that flouted conventional
aesthetic and cultural values by producing work marked by nonsense, travesty, and incongruity
againts traditional art.
|à Dadaists believed an oppressive intellectual rigidity in both art and everyday society.
DADA GALAXY
Surrealism
|à Surrealist artworok can be an object of an idea, and it represents the artist’s idea of what that
is, based on his own subconcious .
|à A surrealist painting can look like a dream, or an object can be appropriated to look like
something completely different.
Salvador Daliwas
Abstract Realism
|à It is the abstract beauty of paint without the dilution of a recognizable image and it shows the
strong visual symbolism of human’s deciphering reality.
DRIP PAINTING
Pop Art
|à It is a brash, fun and young art movement of the 1960’s that includes different styles of
painting and sculpture but all had common interest in mass-media, mass-production and mass-
culture.
|à It was strongly influenced by the ideas of the Dada movement and reaction against Abstract
Expressionism.
Claes Oldenburg (1922-), Coosjeq Van Bruggen (1942-2009) "SPOONBRIDGE AND CHERRY'
OP Art
|àAn Optical Art is mathematically themed form of Abstract art, which uses repetition of simple
forms and colors to create vibrating effects, more patterns, foreground-background confusion, an
exaggerated sense of depth, and other visual effects.
|à All painting is based on tricks of visual perception manipulating rules of perspective to give the
illusion of three-dimensional space, mixing colors to create the impression of light and shadow,
and so on.
|à The rules on Optical art that the viewer's eye uses to try to make sense of a visual image are
themselves the "subject" of the artwork.
|àIt is a type of art that is created in front of or presented to an audience by the artist and non-
traditional art form often with political or topical themes they typically feature a live presentation
to an audience or onlookers and draw on such arts as acting, poetry, music dance and painting.
Flash Mob
A. Rhythm
|à It is type of movement seen in the repetition of shapes and colors of picture or art work.
Movement
B. Balance
C. Variety/Emphasis
|à Variety in art refers to the use of contrasting or different types of elements in a work art.
Emphasis
|à Sometimes an artist wants the viewer to look particularly close at a specific area of the work.
|à The artist will manipulate the Elements of Art so that your eye is drawn to a particular area.
D. Proportion
|à It is the comparative relationship of one part to another with respect to size and scale.
E. Harmony
|à Harmony in art results from a combination of related (but often different) Elemts of Art
creating a pleasing work for the eye
F. Unity