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Selecting Intervention Best Practices

Area I — Assessment of Needs and Capacity

TL;DR

This lesson covers selecting intervention best practices as part of Area I — Assessment of Needs and Capacity. Focus on understanding how these concepts are applied in real-world health education scenarios and how NCHEC frames them in exam questions.

In Video 10 of the CHES & MCHES certification prep series, we take an in-depth look at selecting intervention best practices. This lesson falls under Area I — Assessment of Needs and Capacity, one of the core competency areas defined by the National Commission for Health Education Credentialing (NCHEC). Whether you are preparing for your initial CHES certification or advancing to the MCHES level, mastering this content is essential for exam success and professional practice.

Area I of the NCHEC exam blueprint focuses on Assessment of Needs and Capacity. This competency area tests your ability to identify health education needs through data collection, stakeholder engagement, and community analysis. Health education specialists must demonstrate proficiency in both quantitative and qualitative assessment methods to design effective programs.

This topic appears frequently on the CHES and MCHES certification exams. Scenario-based questions in this area often require you to identify the most appropriate course of action given a specific public health context. Pay close attention to the distinctions between similar concepts, as NCHEC exam writers frequently use closely related answer choices as distractors. Reviewing this material alongside practice questions will help reinforce your understanding and improve your test-taking confidence.

As you work through this content, consider how each concept connects to the broader health education process. The NCHEC exam blueprint emphasizes the integration of knowledge across all Areas of Responsibility. A strong candidate understands not only the individual competencies but also how assessment, planning, implementation, evaluation, advocacy, communication, leadership, and ethics work together in professional practice. Use this video lesson as a starting point, then deepen your understanding through additional study resources available at subthesis.com.

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