Exam 3: Underserved Populations, Vulnerable Populations, and Intimate Partner Violence Flashcards

1
Q

IPV

A

intimate partner violence

a pattern of abusive behaivors and coercive control within an intimate relationship

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2
Q

SV

A

sexual violence

sexual activity in which consent is not obtained or freely given

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3
Q

Health Consequences of Violence

A

unintended pregnancy

chronic pain

GI disorders

migraine HA

anxiety and depression

PTSD

injury and death

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4
Q

What is the USPSTF Screening and Referral Recommendation

A

recommends that health care professionals screen women of childbearing age (14-46 yo) for IPV and provide or refer women who screen positive to intervention services

HOWEVER…the recommendation does not specify in what conditions screening should occur - only that it include women

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5
Q

What do we know about IPV screening

A
  1. Adequate evidence that available screening instruments can ID current and past abuse or icnreased risk for abuse
  2. Adequate evidence that effective interventions can reduce violence, abuse, and physical or mental harms for women of reproductive ages (14-46 yo)
  3. Adequate evidence that the risk for harm to the individual from screening or interventions is no greater than small
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6
Q

Screening women of childbearing age for IPV has a …

A

MODERATE NET BENEFIT

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7
Q

Barriers to Screening for IPV

A

inadequate prep and education

providers believing IPV does not affect patient population

discomfort with the subject and assessing the danger

lack of belief in usefulness of screening

time constraints

inadequate rapport with patient

personal history of abuse

fear of being offensive or endangering patients

lack of effective interventions, resources, protocols, support staff, or confidence in the legal system

lack of knowledge or access of screening tools

belief that only physical violence is legitimate health concern

belief that it is a private issue and patients should come forward on their own

dilemma of caregiver abuse of an elderly or disabled person

language and cultural differences

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8
Q

RADAR Assessment Process

A

R - Routine Screening

A - Ask direct questions in a kind nonjudgmental way

D - document findings

A - assess patient safety

R - review options and referrals

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9
Q

Factors to consider r/t patient safety

A

Any increase in frequency and severity of the violence

threats of homicide or suicide

presence of firearms in the home

separation from or plans to leave partner

highly controlling behavior

womans assessment of his likelihood to kill her

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10
Q

Danger Assessment

A

insturment that helps to determine the level of danger an abused woman has of being killed by her intimate partner

in 2008 it was revised to include reassault in abusive female same sex relationships too

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11
Q

What happens if you scores 4-5; 3; 2; or 1 Yes to the Danger Assessment

A

4-5: Allow them to call police and follow through by calling victim or hand off to knowledgable advocate

3 yes: full DA

2: tell them of risk factors

0 or 1: proceed with normal referral for domestic violence

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12
Q

What is an essential part of screening and counseling for IPV

A

safety planning discussion:

review options and provide referrals: numbers, websites, services

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13
Q

Some important components of a safety plan

A

pack a bag in advance

have personal documents ready

hide extra sets of house and car keys

establish a code word with friends and family

ID a safe place to go

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14
Q

With IPV the provider is not ____ the problem the key is to…

A

fixing; the key is to be there, listen, educate, refer

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15
Q

IPV public health success is what compared to not being what?

A

it is routine screening, assessment education

it is not disclosure and them leaving the relationship (this increases severe injury or death risk)

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16
Q

Importance of Screening

A

validates violence as a health care issue

opens dialogue - “plant a seed”

provides an opportunity for education, services, and referral

opportunity to conduct a safety and lethality assessment

integral to assessment and tx

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17
Q

Nurses have an ethical mandate to…

A

treat all people with compassion and respect for the inherent dignity

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18
Q

Correctional health care needs and challenges

A

lakc of consistent access to tx

arrive to prisons and jails with undiagnosed conditions

correctional nursing occurs in an environment that often does not embrance health care as its core purpose (safety and a safe environment is the top priority)

correctional nurse is the only initial and primary link to healthcare services

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19
Q

Common correctional health issues

A

mental illness (#1)

drug dependence

chronic illnesses like DM HTN and asthma

communicable diseases like Hep C HIV Staph TB and an STI

aging population incarcerated with mobility problems, vision and hearing issues, and cognitive issues

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20
Q

Process Algorithm

A

algorithm for nurses in clinical settings to assess social determinants of heatlh

21
Q

___ to ___% of incarcerated individuals will eventually return to their communities

22
Q

Vulnerability

A

susceptibility through actual or potential stressors that may lead to an adverse effects

23
Q

What are the contributors to vulnerable population disparities

A

poverty and such not race and ethnicity

24
Q

Disenfranchmisement

A

feelings of being separated from mainstream society

25
Epidemiologic Triangel
interplay of environment, agent, and host impact health agent - what host is who evnironment is where
26
Causes for vulnerable populations
combined effects of limited resources (social, actual things, etc) predisposing factors
27
___ is the primary cause of vulnerability
poverty (as is age)
28
Setting the satge for vuln pop assessment
comfortbale non threatening environment cultural competence RESPECT CLIENTS PRIORITIZATION (non health concerns need address first) collaboration with other resources and other progessions
29
Seize the Oppotunity
assessment of client in vuln pop is limited so really balance the assessment and get a lot done and educate
30
Nursing dx of vuln pop client is made according to...
maslows hierarchy fo needs
31
Maslows Hierarchy
Self actualization (intellectual and spiritual) Self esteem (emotional) Love and belonging (sociocultural) safety and security (environment) physiologic needs
32
Individual level nursing interventions
centered on improving asccess minimize hassle culturally sensitive culturally competent educaiton in terms of health promotion and disease prevention
33
Community level nursing interventions
public service announcements health fairs
34
Examples of ways to act with community vulnerable popualtions
create a caring environment show respect, compassion, and concern dont make assumptions cordinate a network of services and providers advocate for accessible health care services
35
One Stop Comprehensive Services
providing information on multiple topics (immunizatinos, flu care, diet, etc) all at once
36
Wrap Around Services
social and economic assistance wiht the health care at the same time
37
Mental Health
being able to engage in productive activities and fulfilling relationships with other people to adapt to change and to cope with adversity
38
mental disorder
conditions that are characterized by alterations in thinking, mood or behavior which are associated with distress and impaired functioning
39
mental illness
refers collectively to all diagnosible mental disorders
40
Older Adults
65+
41
Factprs making older adults more vulnerable
chronic illness causing disabillity abuse and neglect injury cognition may not allow self advocacy 5 I's
42
5 I's
intellectual impairment immobility instability incontinence iatrogenic drug rxns (aka adverse rxns) *all these impact adult health*
43
3 D's of INtellectual Impairment
Dementia Delirium Depression
44
Nursing Dx for Older Adults
risk for falls confusion ineffective protection knowledge deficit impaired physical mobility ineffective health maintenance acute and chronic pain self care deficit caregiver stress
45
Nursing Interventions for Older Adults
assess self care abilities promote independece education medication reconciliation secondary prevention - asking or screening caregivers for role strain tertiary prevention - refer to respite, encourage support groups
46
Nursing INterventions for pregnant adolescents
ID those at risk (poor) dispel myths understand their developmental level tertiary prevention school based sex ed
47
Infant
1 month to 1 year
48
5 H Club
For INfants Hungry Homeless Hopeless Hugless Without Health Care
49
Nursing Interventiosn for INfants
assess educate and prevention education refer promote mandated reporter