Let’s be honest: studying Health Communication isn’t just about memorizing definitions of “wellness.” It’s about understanding the high-stakes intersection of psychology, sociology, and media. Whether you’re prepping for a mid-term or the final boss—the national board exam—staring at a textbook for six hours usually leads to more caffeine jitters than actual knowledge.

Below is the exam paper download link

Past Paper On Health Communication For Revision 

Above is the exam paper download link 

The secret? Active recall. You need to stop reading and start doing. To help you bridge that gap, we’ve put together a breakdown of the core concepts you’ll likely face, plus a link to download a full revision past paper at the end of this post.


Your Burning Questions, Answered

Q: Why is the “Theory of Planned Behavior” always on the exam? Because it works. In health comms, we aren’t just giving advice; we’re trying to predict if someone will actually act. Examiners love this theory because it tests your ability to break down why a person chooses to use a condom, quit smoking, or get vaccinated.

Q: What is the difference between “Social Marketing” and “Public Relations” in a health context? This is a classic trap question. Think of it this way: PR is about managing the reputation of an organization (like the WHO or a local hospital). Social marketing, however, uses commercial marketing techniques to “sell” a healthy behavior. If you’re designing a billboard to make eating greens look “cool,” you’re social marketing.

Q: How do I handle a question on “Health Literacy”? Don’t just define it. Explain the impact. A patient with low health literacy isn’t just “uninformed”—they are statistically more likely to be hospitalized because they can’t follow dosage instructions. In your exam, always link literacy to “patient outcomes.”


Strategy: How to Use the Past Paper Effectively

Don’t just download the PDF and let it rot in your “Downloads” folder. Follow this three-step “Battle Plan” to ensure the info actually sticks:

    1. The Blind Run: Set a timer for 60 minutes. No phone, no notes, no Google. Try to answer the paper as if the invigilator is staring right at you.

    2. The Gap Analysis: Mark your own work. Where did you stumble? Was it the technical jargon of the Health Belief Model, or was it the essay question on Crisis Communication?

    3. The Deep Dive: Spend the next two hours only studying the areas where you failed. This is “targeted revision,” and it’s 10x more effective than re-reading the chapters you already know.

Shutterstock

The Reality of the Exam Room

Most students lose marks not because they don’t know the material, but because they don’t answer the prompt. If the paper asks you to “Critique,” don’t just “Describe.” If it asks for an “Intervention,” you need to provide a logical, step-by-step plan that includes a target audience and a specific channel (like social media vs. radio).

Health communication is about the human element. When you’re writing your answers, keep the patient or the community at the center of your logic

Back to Mpya News Home page: Education, Fashion, Law, business and sports

Last updated on: March 5, 2026

New information gained / new value takehome

  • Examiners love this theory because it tests your ability to break down why a person chooses to use a condom, quit smoking, or get vaccinated.
  • A patient with low health literacy isn’t just “uninformed”—they are statistically more likely to be hospitalized because they can’t follow dosage instructions.
  • Follow this three-step “Battle Plan” to ensure the info actually sticks:The Blind Run: Set a timer for 60 minutes.
  • ShutterstockThe Reality of the Exam Room Most students lose marks not because they don’t know the material, but because they don’t answer the prompt.
Verified Content

This content was developed using AI as part of our research process. To ensure absolute accuracy, all information has been rigorously fact-checked and validated by our human editor, Alex Munene.

External resource 1: Google Scholar Academic Papers

External resource 2: Khan Academy Test Prep

Reference 1: KNEC National Examinations

Reference 2: JSTOR Academic Archive

Reference 3: Shulefiti Revision Materials


Photo credit: instagram.com

About

Digital entrepreneur and content specialist at MPYA News, focused on delivering high-quality insights and resources.