Nurs. 404 Midterm Flashcards

1
Q

What is community based nursing?

A

Community-based nursing – minor acute and chronic care that is comprehensive and coordinated where people work, live or attend school; illness care provided outside the acute care setting

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2
Q

What is community health nursing?

A

Community health nursing – use of systematic processes to deliver care to individuals, families, and community groups with a focus on promoting, preserving, protecting, and maintaining health

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3
Q

What is community oriented nursing?

A

Community-oriented nursing – care of a population of individuals, families, and groups, or the community as a whole

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4
Q

What is public health nursing?

A

Public health nursing – population-based practice, defined as a synthesis of nursing and public health within the context of preventing disease and disability and promoting and protecting the health of the entire community

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5
Q

1.Differentiate between: community-based nursing, community health nursing, community-oriented nursing, and public health nursing

A

The primary difference between community based nursing, community health nursing, public health nursing, and community oriented nursing is the focus, either on populations and the health of the entire community or on individual people, families and groups within the community. In most cases, however, nursing care in the community is a combination of both. Services are provided to individual clients and families as a means of improving the health of the population. Public health nursing is distinguished from other specialties by the adherence to eight principles

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6
Q

2.Describe the primary goals for Healthy people 2010 and 2020

A
  • Healthy People 2020
  • Eliminate preventable disease, disability, injury, and premature death
  • Achieve health equity, eliminate disparities, and improve the health of all groups
  • Create social and physical environments that promote good health for all
  • Promote healthy development and healthy behaviors across every life stage
  • Healthy people 2020 is a national, science based plan designed to reduce certain illnesses and disabilities by reducing disparities in healthcare services in people of different economic groups.
  • Healthy people programs have measured and tracked national health objectives to encourage collaboration, guided people toward making informed health decisions, and assessed the impact of prevention activity.
  • Specific objectives with baseline values for measurement are developed, setting specific targets to be achieved by 2020.
  • 4 goals 2010: eliminate preventable disease, disability, injury and premature death; achieve health equity, eliminate disparities, and improve the health of all groups; create social and physical environments that promote good health for all; promote healthy development and healthy behaviors across every stage of life.
  • Healthy people 2020 is a national consensus plan identifying focal areas that need active and specific plans and implementations based on the levels of illness and death that account for physical, psychosocial, and financial suffering of citizens
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7
Q

Know the Governmental Public Health Functions of assessment, policy development and assurance. Be able to apply to specific examples.
Assesses healthcare problems – via Department of Health and

A

Assesses healthcare problems – via Department of Health and Human Services, CDC, the state and local governments
Intervenes by developing relevant healthcare policy that provides access to services – policy focuses on cost, access to care, and quality of care
Ensures that services are delivered and outcomes achieved – outcomes are ensured by a continual evaluation system liking in part with the CDC surveys

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8
Q

Define public health

A

Public health – what society does collectively to ensure that conditions exist in which people can be healthy; ensuring that every person in the community has a standard of living adequate for the maintenance of health. This involves the science and art of preventing disease, prolonging life, and promoting physical health and efficiency through organized community efforts for the sanitation of the environment, the control of community infections, the education of the individual in principles of personal hygiene, the organization of medical and nursing services for the early diagnosis and preventive treatment of disease, and the development of the necessary social machinery.

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9
Q

Define community nursing centers

A

Community nursing centers – organized and managed by nurses in partnership with the communities they serve to provide community health services and primary care to vulnerable and underserved population aggregates (Chapter 8)

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10
Q

Define communities of solution

A

Communities of solution- phenomenological communities include groups that are referred to as “communities of solution.” A community of solution is formed by an aggregate specifically to address health concerns within a particular area. Communities of solution are composed of persons not only from the area of need but also members of neighboring communities who have a vested interest in a challenge the community faces. These communities can form in response to a health threat, such as contaminated water or industrial air pollution. Other examples include certain political action groups or the formation of ad hoc task force groups.

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11
Q

Define epidemiology

A

Epidemiology –study of the distribution and determinants of states of health and illness in human populations; used both as research methodology to study states of health and illness, and as a body of knowledge that results from the study of a specific state of health or illness

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12
Q

Define risk factors

A

Risk factors – personal habits and behaviors, environmental conditions, or inborn or inherited characteristics that are known to affect a health-related condition that could be alleviated or managed

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13
Q

Define Aggregate/Population

A

Aggregate/Population – population group with common characteristics

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14
Q

Define outbreak

A

Outbreak – epidemic usually limited to a localized increase in the incidence of the illness

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15
Q

Define epidemic

A

Epidemic – an outbreak that occurs when there is an increased incidence of a disease beyond that which is normally found in the population

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16
Q

Define risk

A

Risk –probability or likelihood that a disease or illness will occur in a group of people who presently do not have the problem

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17
Q

Define population risk

A

Population at risk – groups of people who have specific characteristics, or risk factors, that increase the probability of developing health problems

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18
Q

Define community assessment

A

Community assessment- Conceptualizing the community as a client is difficult for the individual-oriented nurse. Assessing the health needs and assets of a community involves creating a comprehensive community profile or database. The individual nurse may be solely responsible for the assessment, but usually he or she contributes to the assessment as a member of a team. Epidemiologic statistical methods, such as calculation of rates, are used in this process (see Chapter 6).Epidemiologists gather available demographic data that provide information about the age and sex distribution, socioeconomic characteristics, and cultural and ethnic distributions. They access vital statistics, including applicable epidemiologic morbidity and mortality rates. Additional data can be obtained from community members or community groups. Information about the accessibility and avail-ability of healthcare services, such as health manpower, may or may not be community assets. To obtain information about health beliefs, norms, values, goals, perceived needs, and health practices, healthcare workers may use focus groups, interviews or observation, or surveys. Nurses may participate in field-testing new tools for data collection

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19
Q

Define health planning

A

Health planning- an organized and systematic process in which problems are identified, priorities selected, and objectives set for the development of community health programs based on the findings of community health assessments and health surveillance data. Health planning occurs at the global, national, regional, state, county, and local levels. Ideally, health planning is coordinated and consistent among each of these levels. Health planning occurs on both an ongoing and an episodic basis.

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20
Q

Define program replication

A

Program replication- What may have succeeded in one location may reflect how ready the community was to change, not how well a pro-gram was designed and/or how well it was implemented. The ability to replicate or reproduce a successful program within a different community or with a new population aggregate is a test of the strength of the design of an intervention. When an intervention has yielded positive results in one community, the next step in establishing evidence for practice is to test the intervention by replication.

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21
Q

Define sustainability

A

Sustainability – establishing the conditions for the health improvements achieved by an intervention to continue beyond the period of formal community health program or for a program to continue after grant funding ends.

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22
Q

Define WHO

A

• WHO- a state of complete physical, mental, and social well being, not merely the absence of disease or infirmity

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23
Q

define Winslow

A

• Winslow (father of public health) defined public health as- the science and art of preventing disease, prolonging life, and promoting physical health and efficiency through organized community efforts for the sanitation of the environment, the control of community infections, the education of the individual in principles of personal hygiene, the organization of medical and nursing service for the early diagnosis and preventive treatment of disease, and the development of the social machinery which will ensure to every individual in the community a standard of living adequate for the maintenance of health”

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24
Q

Define Halbert Dunn

A

• Halbert Dunn-placed health on a continuum ranging from premature death to wellness to high-level wellness, which can be equated to self-actualization. In this model, the environment (factors outside of the person) plays a major role in health

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25
Q

Define Smith

A

• Smith- identified four models of health:
o Clinical model- elimination of disease or symptoms
o Role performance model- health that involves a fit between people and social roles
o Adaptive model- health that involves adaptation to the environment
o Eudaimonistic model- health that is the actualization or realization of human potential

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26
Q

Define the institute of medicine

A
  • Institute of Medicine (IOM) defined global health as- “health problems, issues, and concerns that transcend national boundaries and may best be addressed by cooperative actions and solutions.” Each of Smith’s four models can be viewed within the definition of the IOM
  • A person’s definition of health actually determines how and when he or she seeks assistance from the healthcare system and may ultimately affect the outcome of long-term health
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27
Q

Assessment

A

Assessment-
• Monitor health status to identify community health problems
• Diagnose and investigate health problems and health hazards in the community

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28
Q

Policy Development

A

Policy Development
• Inform, educate, and empower people about health issues
• Mobilize community partnerships to identify and solve health problem
• Develop policies and plans support individual and community health efforts

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29
Q

Assurance

A

Assurance-
• Enforce laws and regulations that protect health and ensure safety
• Link people to needed personal health services and assure the provision of health care when otherwise unavailable
• Ensure a competent public health and personal health care workforce
• Evaluate effectiveness, accessibility, and quality of personal and population-based health services
• Assurance is a word used in public health to identify an important concept: that individual people, families, and populations have the healthcare personnel and systems needed to address their respective healthcare needs. Assurance as a goal is highly related to the goal of maintaining healthcare professionals in the work force who are competent and staying n the work force. It is possible to think about nursing school as a way the nursing program is supporting assurance.

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30
Q

Define police power

A

Police Power- state power concerning health care is called police power. It allows states to act to protect the health, safety, and welfare of their citizens. Example #1: require immunizations of children before being admitted to school. Example #2: states require infectious diseases to be reported. Example #3: requiring case finding, reporting treatment & follow-up care for individuals with TB

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31
Q

Define health indicators

A

Health Indicators – descriptors of the general health of a nation that are grouped into four categories: morbidity and mortality, risk factors, health service coverage, and health system resources

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32
Q

Define determinants of health

A

Determinants of Health – factors that affect outcomes of health status, such as physical environment, social environment, health behaviors, and individual health, as well as broader factors such as access to health services and overall health policies and interventions

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33
Q

Who was Clara barton?

A

Clara Barton- achieved widespread recognition during the civil war, distributing supplies to wounded soldiers and caring for the causalities with the help of her team of nurses. recognized the need for neutral relief society that could be activated in times of war and convinced congress to ratify treaty of Geneva, and the American red cross was established with an extended mission (to provide aid for natural disasters)

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34
Q

Who was florence nightingale

A

Florence Nightingale- Devoted her life to the prevention of needless illness and death. She formed a team of nurses that assisted soldiers during the Crimean War and statistically documented her successes saving lives through prevention of infections and improving environmental conditions. She opened the first school of nursing and is credited with founding the profession of nursing. As a pioneering epidemiologist, she effectively demonstrated that statistics provide an organized way of learning from experience.

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35
Q

Who was lillian Wald?

A

Lillian Wald- Founder of public health nursing. While attending school of nursing, she became involved in organizing a class in home nursing for poor immigrants and later donated her time working with this population. Her and other patrons established the Henry Street Settlement with fees being based on ability to pay and their focus was on teaching health and hygiene to the immigrant women, stressing the importance of preventative care. This project incorporated housing, employment, educational assistance, recreational programs, as well as school nurses and work health systems. In 1912, found the National Organization for Public Health Nursing which set the first professional standards for the practice of public health nursing. She also layed the foundation for nursing education in institutes of higher learning. She was an advocate for children and women rights helping establish Children’s Bureau, National Child labor committee, and national women’s trade union league.

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36
Q

Who was mary breckinridge?

A

Mary Breckinridge- Founded the Frontier Nursing Service in 1925. Studied mountain people and found women lacked prenatal care and had self taught midwifery practices. She realized that children’s healthcare must begin before birth with care of the mother and continue throughout childhood. She established the Frontier Graduate School of Midwifery, one of the first midwifery programs in the country.

37
Q

Who was lemuel shattuck?

A

Lemuel Shattuck- prepared a report for the Massachusetts sanitary commission that pointed out that much of the ill health and disability in American cities in 1850 could be traced to unsanitary conditions. Report is now considered one of the fundamental documents in public health in the US. It provided for the first systematic use of birth and death records and demographic data to describe the health of a population. Recommendations became the foundation of the sanitation movement. The Shattuck Report recommended the establishment of state health departments and local health boards.

38
Q

Who was john snow?

A

John Snow- best known epidemiologist of 19th century. He used population data and his own observations to investigate the epidemic of cholera. He observed that deaths were particularly high in connection with two water supplies in London. He used his investigative skills and linked the cause of cholera with the water supply even before the era of bacteriology

39
Q

Eight domains of public health nursing practice (p9)

A
  • Analytic assessment skills
  • Policy development and program planning skills
  • Communication skills
  • Cultural competency skills
  • Community dimensions of practice skills
  • Basic public health science skills
  • Financial planning and management skills
  • Leadership and systems thinking skills
40
Q

Social determinants of health p4?

A

• Social conditions in which people live, their income, social status, education, literacy, home and work environment, support networks, gender, culture, and availability of health services. These conditions have an impact on the extent to which a person or community possesses the physical, social, and personal resources necessary to attain and maintain health

41
Q

Common themes in national and international health planning

A

• Providing health promotion and disease prevention at the population level, addressing social determinants of health, and achieving health equality.

42
Q

Healthcare disparities (p 143)

A

• Racial or ethnic difference in the quality of healthcare that is not due to access related factors or clinical needs, preferences, and appropriateness of intervention. Health disparities are differences in health status that result from (1) systematic disadvantages in access to basic needs or healthcare services or (2) systemic deficiencies in the organization and delivery of healthcare services due to financing problems or lack of cultural or linguistic competence. Where disparities found: cardiovascular disease, cancer, HIV, diabetes, end stage renal disease, and certain surgical procedures. What department of Health and Human services watches over: infant mortality, cancer screening, CV disease, diabetes, HIV/AIDS, and immunizations?

43
Q

Bottom-up and top-down approach to health planning (p134)

A
  • Bottom-up: the impetus for health planning and program development comes from local or state level.
  • Top-down: comes from regional, national, or global initiative
44
Q

Health impact pyramid (p 140)

A

• Framework that describes the public health impact of interventions at 5 different levels
• Lowest level: interventions to address socioeconomic conditions such as poverty, lack of education, and lack of access to clean water or sanitation.
• Second Level: Interventions that change the environmental context to make healthy options the default choice, regardless of education, income, service provisions, or other social factors such that individuals would have to expend significant effort not to benefit from them. Ex. Food and drug safety, iodization of salt, elimination of trans-fats in food, and restrictions on smoking in public places and on work sites.
• Middle level: Community health interventions such as immunizations that have long-term protective effect as well as periodic screenings such as colonoscopy.
• Fourth level: Clinical interventions such as treatment of hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and diabetes
• Fifth level (top): Counseling and health education. Require largest effort by individuals and achieving sustained health behavior change is the exception rather than the rule.
o *As you move up the pyramid the individual effort increases. As you move down the pyramid the population impact increases.

45
Q

Change theory (p 143-144)

A
  • Lewin’s model: 3 step process of unfreezing, changing, and refreezing
  • unfreezing: necessary precursor to change. Unfreezing moves a community from a stage of denial or lack of awareness of the need to change a condition or to address an issue, to a stage of preplanning or preparation for change. Creating dissatisfaction with the current state and raising awareness of a need for change are catalysts for unfreezing.
  • Changing: Change is more often achieved incrementally through repeated cycles or steps than it is by large paradigm shifts. Changing requires an understanding of what needs to be changed, how the change will take place, and an idea of what the change will “look like” when the desired state has been achieved.
  • Refreezing: process of stabilizing once a change has occurred with the goal of sustaining the change in the community’s state of health or health behavior. Establishes the new status quo. Sustainability is a concern.
  • Force Field analysis: change management technique. Involves identifying factors within a community that are driving or reinforcing change in the desired direction as well as those that are restraining or resisting change. Ex. Fig 8.4
  • Levers of change: purpose of using is to increase driving forces and/or to decrease restraining forces.
46
Q

Types of communities

A

• Geopolitical communities:
o Group of people who live within identified boundaries and governing systems (city, municipality, township)
• Phenomenological Communities:
o Group of people who have interpersonal and intrapersonal connections. Share common interests or beliefs. Community members share common interests, beliefs, goals, and together they identify what activities, structures, and outcomes are meaningful specifically to them. Ex. Homeless or people with disabilities, certain political action groups, formations of ad hoc task force groups, undocumented immigrants and people living with HIV.
• Societal, National, or International Communities:
o Broad context used to describe society in general or a nation. Ex. US citizens have a common federal government and share ideals, whereas individual communities within the country have different state and local governments and priorities in relation to individual needs and interests. Global community interests include member’s health and safety.
o First step to plan to help any community is to assess the community’s needs

47
Q

SMART goals/objectives

A

• Objectives that are Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time bound. Example in box 8.4 on p 149.

48
Q

Social marketing (box 8.5)

A

• Know your AUDIENCE. Understand you are not the target audience
• It’s about ACTION! The process of heightening awareness, shifting attitudes, and strengthening knowledge is valuable if and only if it leads to action.
• There must be an EXCHANGE. If you want someone to give up, or modify, an old behavior or accept a new one, you must offer that person something very appealing in return.
• COMPETITION always exists. Your audience can always choose to do something else.
• Keep the 5 Ps of Marketing and policy in mind. The 5 Ps are:
o PRODUCT represents the desired behavior you are asking your audience to do and the associated benefits, tangible objects, and/or services that support behavior change.
o PRICE is the cost (financial, emotional, psychological, or time-related) or barriers the audience faces in making the desired behavior change.
o PLACE is where the audience will perform the desired behavior, where they will access the program products and services, or where they are thinking about your issue.
o PROMOTION stands for communication messages, materials, channels, and activities that will effectively reach your audience.
o POLICY refers to the laws and regulations that influence the desired behavior.
• It is important to understand that change mostly happens on the “installment plan”

49
Q

Epidemiologic triad:

A

• Model based on the belief that health status is determined by the interaction of the characteristics of the host, agent, and environment, not by any single factor. Host=the client whose health status is the concern (person, family, group, or community). Agents=element or force that under proper conditions can initiate or perpetuate a problem. Environment=Refers to the context within which the agent and host interact. Figure 5.2 p 94

50
Q

Wheel of causation:

A

• Epidemiological model that deemphasizes the agent as the sole cause of disease while emphasizing the interplay of physical, biological, and social environments. Center of circle is the genetic core of the host which is surrounded by a segmented wheel representing the biologic, physical, and social environments. The interaction between the host and environment remains the major determinant of health status.

51
Q

Web of causation:

A

• epidemiological model that strongly emphasizes the concept of multiple causation while de-emphasizing the role of agents in explaining illness. In this model it is necessary to identify all possible antecedent factors that could influence the development or prevention of a particular health condition. Each factor is a link in multiple interrelated chains. This model can be helpful in understanding the multiple pathways and factors that contribute to the development of chronic disease. Ex. On p 142

52
Q

Natural history:

A

• Course of a disease or condition from the onset to resolution. Integrates pathogenesis with prevention. The initial interaction between the agent, host, and environment occur during the prepathogenesis period (Primary prevention). The period of pathogenesis begins when there are biological, psychological, or other responses with the host (secondary prevention). Tertiary prevention is rehabilitation measures. P. 94

53
Q

Epidemiologic approach to community assessment:

A

• create comprehensive community profile or database. Uses statistics such as rates. Analyze data for health needs and assets, identify patterns of disease, illness, and injuries. Critical thinking! Set goals and objectives (NURSING PROCESS!) p.97-98

54
Q

Community as partner framework:

A

• People as central members of the community. 8 parts of the community interact with the various members, (see fig 10-3). The word “partner” demonstrates the equity of the nurse’s relationship with the community. P.185/186.

55
Q

Functional health status approach:

A

• for individual, family, or community assessment. GORDON. Provides insight into hoe groups respond to problems and take action. (Box 10.4). p. 186

56
Q

Collaborative model:

A

• emphasizes interdisciplinary nature of task, (nurse, SW, community member) collaboration between expert and those with health concerns. Community members need to have active voice in identifying issues and making decisions. “We can do it!” But very time consuming. p.189.

57
Q

Screening programs: Box 4.5

A

• Mass screening: applied to entire population
o Blood lead level
o Papnicoluaou (PAP) smears
o Phenylketonuria of newborns
• Selective screening: performed for specific high-risk populations
o Mammograms for young women at high risk for cancer
o Tuberculin test for hospital employees
o Occupational diseases
o Exposure to radiation
• Multiphasic screening: variety of screening tests applied to the same population on the same occasion. Data can be used for establishing baseline data in a healthcare facility and for risk factor appraisal.
o Series of tests performed on a single blood sample
o Periodic surveillance of drug therapy
o Monitoring the state of an illness
• Case findings: clinician’s search for illness as a part of a client’s periodic health examination
o Monitoring the health of individuals in a case load.

58
Q

Public Health Laws- source for laws, types of law:

A

o course of action: a program of actions adopted by a person, group, or government, or the set of principles on which they are based
o prudence: shrewdness or prudence, especially in the pursuit of a course of action a settled course of action to be followed by a government or institution to obtain a desired end.

59
Q

What is health policy?

A

• Health policy is a set course of action to obtain a desired health outcome for an individual, family, group, community or society.

60
Q

Define politics

A

• Politics- Art of influencing others to accept a specific course of action

61
Q

Define legislative law

A

• Legislative Law – what we all know!

62
Q

Define administrative law

A

• Administrative Law – rule written by administration (Nurse Practice Act, MBN)

63
Q

Define judicial law

A

• Judicial or Common Law – Affordable Care Act (supreme determined it’s constitutional)

64
Q

What are states rights?

A

• State’s rights- 10th amendment of the Constitution
o The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people
• State power concerning health care is called POLICY POWER. Power point.
• Nice charts in the Health Policy pp.

65
Q

Levels of government at which public health is provided:

A

Levels of government at which public health is provided:
• Federal government creates policy, financing, and regulatory enforcement, department of human services. State governments play a role in public health regulations, program responsibilities, and resource allocation. Local governments implement the public health activities. *the private sector often does not provide services that would improve social welfare. P.27

66
Q

US Health Care system- focus , cost as compared to other countries:

A

• cure not prevent, and most expensive, per capita spending on health care $7,290, 16% of GDP. P.30

67
Q

Levels of Prevention:

A

• Primary – no signs and symptoms of the disease. Maximize health and wellness. Secondary – planned effort to minimize the impact of the disease and injury once it’s realized, screening. Tertiary prevention – long-term management and treatment of clients with chronic conditions. Maintain quality of life. P.71-74

68
Q

Behavioral models:

A

• models that assist clients, groups, and communities to redirect activities toward health and wellness. P. 65. “Describe, explain, or predict prevention health behaviors.” P.76

69
Q

Learning theories:

A

• A behavioral change model emphasizing reinforcement of social competence, problem solving, autonomy, and sense of purpose. P.65. “a goal is established and reinforced by the nurse, with rewards given as reinforcement.” P.76.

70
Q

Health belief model:

A

• A behavioral change model that considers the severity of the potential illness or physical challenge, the level of conceivable susceptibility, the benefits of taking preventive action, and the challenges that may be faced on taking action toward the goal of health promotion. Uses “cues” as an important way to remind people of health behavior, “Got milk?” p. 77.

71
Q

Theory of reasoned action:

A

• A behavioral health model emphasizing that individual performance of a given behavior is primarily determined by a person’s intention to perform that behavior. P. 65. Behavior determined by intention to perform the behavior, which is determined by the attitude of the behavior. P.78.

72
Q

Social learning theory:

A

• A behavioral change model that considers environmental influences, personal factors, and behavior as key components to change. P.65. person must believe in his/her ability to perform the behavior (self-efficacy) p.78.

73
Q

Ecological model:

A

• models that consider intrapersonal attribute, interpersonal dynamics, person/environment interactions, cultural beliefs, and attitudes. P.65. All are interdependent. P.79-80
o Ontogenetic: attitudes and beliefs that influence decisions, trauma history, level of acculturation, self-efficacy, positive outcome expectancies, communication skills, risk appraisal.
o Microsystem: relationship stage, intimacy, communication patterns between sexual partners, association with peers, family environment, church.
o Exosystem: Socioeconomic and employment status, degree of social isolation, social networks and support, poverty.
o Macroculture: Social norms regarding HIV/AIDS, attitudes about gender roles, racism.

74
Q

What is a logic model?

A

• Logic Model: visual representation of the logic behind the operation of the program, who, what, where, when, why. It’s both a planning tool and communication tool. P.147.

75
Q

Principles of public health?

A

• Principles of Public Health: focus on the aggregate, promote prevention, encourage community organization, practice the ethical theory of the greater good, model leadership in health, use epidemiologic knowledge and methods.

76
Q

Epidemiologic measures : rate

A

Rate –measurement used to describe the occurrence of a state of health in a specific group of people in a given period of time, p. 105
Rate = # of conditions or events within a designated period of time x base multiple of 10
Population at risk during the same period of time

77
Q

Epidemiologic measures: crude rate

A

Crude rate – general or summary rates that measure the occurrence of the condition being investigated in the entire population. Calculation of these rates usually involves averaging the population numbers at the beginning and end of the year and that number is used in the denominator, p. 106

78
Q

Epidemiologic measures : Adjusted rate

A

Adjusted rate – there is often a need to remove the effects of differences in the composition of a population when comparing one with another. For example, an investigator may want to compare two or more groups knowing they differ in terms of a characteristic, such as age, that may influence the results. The process of adjusting rates controls for these differences, p. 106

79
Q

Epidemiologic measures: period prevalence

A

Period Prevalence – type of prevalence rate that indicates the existence of a conditions during a period or an interval of time, p. 107

80
Q

Epidemiologic measures: sensitivity

A

Sensitivity –the ability of the test to identify correctly people who have the health problem under study, the probability of testing positive if the health problem is truly present, p. 116

81
Q

What is a descriptive study?

A

Descriptive study – study in which information is collected to characterize and summarize (describe) a health event or problem. Descriptive epidemiology is fundamental in the work of epidemiologists, p. 120

82
Q

What is an analytic study?

A

Analytic study –investigation that uses comparisons between groups to determine the role of various risk factors in causing the problem, p. 120

83
Q

What is a retrospective study?

A

Retrospective study –type of analytic study in which participants are enrolled after the health outcome of interest has occurred, subjects are selected on the basis of the presence or absence of the disease or outcome in question, p. 125

84
Q

What is an experimental study?

A

Experimental study – also known as “intervention studies”, investigation designed to test hypothesized relationships by modifying an identified factors in a population, can be categorized as preventative trials and therapeutic trials and both can be either quasi-experimental or true experimental studies, p. 126

85
Q

What is a prospective study?

A

Prospective study – also known as “cohort studies”, an analytic study in which participants are enrolled before the health outcome of interest has occurred, the study monitors subjects over time to find associations between risk factors and health outcomes, p. 124

86
Q

Define health literacy

A

• Health Literacy - The degree to which an individual has the capacity to obtain, communicate, process, and understand basic health information and services to make appropriate health decisions

87
Q

Define stages of change

A

• Stages of Change - describes how individuals go through a series of stages when change occurs

88
Q

Medicare coverage

A

Medicare Coverage
• Part A – hospital insurance, covers inpatient hospital care, skilled nursing care, hospice care and some home health care
• Part B – medical insurance, covers certain doctors’ services, outpatient care, medical supplies and preventative services
• Part D – prescription drug coverage

89
Q

Ecological model

A

dd. Ecological model: models that consider intrapersonal attribute, interpersonal dynamics, person/environment interactions, cultural beliefs, and attitudes. P.65. All are interdependent. P.79-80
i. Ontogenetic: attitudes and beliefs that influence decisions, trauma history, level of acculturation, self-efficacy, positive outcome expectancies, communication skills, risk appraisal.
ii. Microsystem: relationship stage, intimacy, communication patterns between sexual partners, association with peers, family environment, church.
iii. Exosystem: Socioeconomic and employment status, degree of social isolation, social networks and support, poverty.
iv. Macroculture: Social norms regarding HIV/AIDS, attitudes about gender roles, racism.