Quiz 3 Study Guide
Quiz 3 Study Guide
3. Some data to consider-Be able to identify 4 leading causes of mortality worldwide and
the 4 common risk factors
4 leading causes of mortality worldwide
♦ Some data to consider....In 2014 the World Health Organization (WHO)
updated its 2011 report and confirmed that
1. non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are still the leading cause of
mortality worldwide.
2. cardiovascular diseases (17.7 million)
3. cancers (8.8 million)
4. respiratory diseases (3.9 million)
5. diabetes (1.6 million).
These four groups of diseases account for 81% of all NCD deaths and
share four common risk factors:
1.Physical inactivity
2.Tobacco use
3.Poor diets
4.Harmful use of alcohol
4. Social Justice- Understand the concepts of social justice and market justice
Social justice
♦ • Social justice refers to an equitable sharing of both the common burdens
and the common benefits or advantages in society.
♦ • The basis of social justice is a value system in which healthcare is a right
and achieving health equity and population health are goals.
♦ • Social justice holds that all individuals are entitled to equal protection
from health hazards in the environment produced by the powerful
♦ Achieving social justice requires addressing the root causes of ill health,
including “poverty, substandard housing, poor education, unhygienic and
polluted environments, and social disintegration...[that] lead to systemic
disadvantage not only in health, but also in nearly every aspect of social,
economic, and political life” (Gostin & Powers, 2006, p. 1054)
Market justice
♦ In contrast, in the value system of “market justice,” which characterizes
modern American society, health is one of personal individual
responsibility, and healthcare and other social goods are treated as
commodities or economic goods (Beauchamp, 1976; Budetti, 2008; Gostin
& Powers, 2006).
6. Building a Coalition- Know the Do’s and Don’t's of building a coalition group Be able to
select which steps the nurse should include as her process (what are the do’s)
Coalition
♦ Group of consumers, health professionals, policy makers and others
working together to improve community health status or to solve a
specific community health problem
Stakeholder
An individual , organization, or group that has an interest(stake) in a
specific community health issue or outcome of a community level
intervention
Key informant
Person knowledgeable about specific aspects of a problem and the
community’s current and past attempts to address it
Logic model
Visual representation of how a program is organized, including activities,
resources, short-term and intermediate outcomes, and program goals
Sustainability
Establishing the conditions for the health improvements achieved by an
intervention to continue beyond the period of a formal community health
program to continue or for a program to continue after grant funding ends
“Do’s” of building a coalition group (know what the nurse should include as her
process)
♦ Consider how each member of the coalition and the organization or group
represented will benefit from the work of the coalition.
♦ Understand group dynamics and member’s motives for serving.
♦ Form a group that is heterogeneous but able to show mutual respect.
“Don’ts” of building a coalition group
♦ Assign members of the coalition to tasks in a random manner.
♦ Seek out people with similar opinions and roles in the community.
10. Basics of Social Marketing- know what they are if you are given a list
Be able to identify the basics of social marketing
♦ Take a look at these sentences. What do the bold words have in common?
1. •Fasten your seat belt
2. .•Eat more fruit.
3. •Pull over to use your cell phone.
4. •Don’t litter.
5. •Get a mammogram
6. .•Talk to your doctor
These words describe problems to be addressed by changing behavior.
•Research may help to describe what your audience is currently
doing or thinking, which can help shape realistic goals for behavior
change. Social marketing is about identifying the specific target audience
segment(s), describing the benefits you will offer, and the creating
interventions that will influence or support the desired behavior change.
•Social marketing planning requires us to understand and
incorporate the “The Four Ps of Marketing,” into our program planning.
Social marketing is critical because it looks at the “Four Ps” and the
provision of health services from the viewpoint of the consumer.
1. Know your Audience.
Understand that you are not the target audience.
2. It is about Action.
The process of heightening awareness, shifting attitudes and strengthening
knowledge is valuable if, and only if it leads to action.
3. 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.
4. Competition always exists.
Your audience can choose to do something else.
5. Keep “The Five Ps of Marketing” and policy in mind.
Product Price Place Promotion Policy
6.It is important to understand that change happens on the “installment plan”.
Change does not happen all at once.
11. Ethical Priniciples- What are they? Be able to identify what one is being described.
Autonomy
♦ • Empowering students to understand the information they are given and
to utilize all resources to make their own choices regarding health and life-
style choices by providing them with accurate and honest information
Beneficence
♦ • Providing and focusing on topics that are relevant to students at this
college
Non-maleficence
♦ • Providing students with information and resources in a safe environment
with materials that we are properly educated on when we discuss them
Justice
♦ • Providing all students with confidentiality, access to the same
materials/resources with consideration for age, education, and interest
♦ • Providing equal opportunity to for them to ask questions
12. Community Assessment- Approach for Broad Range of People Know that using multiple
methods of perspectives is the best approach for an accurate assessment of a broad range
of people
1.Use a questionnaire written on a fifth grade reading level
2.Interview a subpopulation of each group represented
3.Analyze census data
4. Use multiple methods of perspectives
13. Windshield surveys Subjective- know that windshield surveys are subjective data (not
objective, cognitive analysis, or valid data)
•Assessments made by community health nurses are often informal. They use the
windshield survey to learn about the neighborhoods in which their clients live.
Many community health providers use this method, but it has its limitations.
• It is a subjective process which nurses may use to understand the community by
viewing surroundings. It is a descriptive way of understanding what appears to be
the physical expression of the community as it is viewed on foot or through the
windshield of a car.
•There is recent criticism that community assessments have often emphasized
what was missing in communities to address health and safety, rather than looking
at the strengths and resources the community may have to address these issues
♦ • Community location (boundaries, urban/rural)
♦ • Size density• Housing (type/condition, adequacy, multiple families)
♦ • Signs of decay (older area? disrepair? obvious sanitation issues?)
♦ • Safety hazards present in the environment• (sidewalks, motor vehicles,
safe routes to school, crime)
♦ • Street people (who is walking around?)
♦ • Transportation (availability of public?)
♦ • Stores (groceries, fast food, restaurants, clothing, gas? vacancies?)
♦ • Open space/ recreation
♦ • Sewage and waste disposal (any obvious issues?)
14. Community as a System... Does a difference in one area impact other areas? Be able to
identify subsystems
The different parts of the community interact with each other. In order to make a
difference in one area you need to understand how other areas impact it. If you
make a difference in one area, it will impact other areas.
15. SWOT Analysis- What is internal and external? What Are mean by strengths,
weaknesses, opportunities, and threats? If given an example, know which one it is.
Internal (strengths, weaknesses)
External (opportunities, threats)
16. To run meetings efficiently- know what is involved and be able to select the appropriate
ways to do this
•Know the purpose of the meeting (to make a decision, generate ideas,
communicate something, or to plan)
.•Show respect for the time and expertise of coalition members.
•Begin and end on time.
•Send an agenda and background materials in advance.
•Get the right people to attend. Know who your resources are and the role that
they play.
•Invite only key stakeholders.
•Stay on topic.
•Communicate results.
•Learn how to resolve conflicts and reach consensus.
17. Actions that help provide holistic and effective care in a community Know what actions
(collaborating with other healthcare workers and clients) the nurse should prioritize to
provide the most holistic and effective care for the community
A community health nurse may be working in a community recently devastated
by a disaster like a hurricane or a tornado. Many of the survivors are being cared
for in their homes. Care might be needed for those who are ill, recovering, or in
hospice.
***The nurse need to collaborate with other health care workers and the clients.
Why??
♦ Note limitations of the following without the above:
1. What about referral of the clients to an outreach center?
2. What about a consult with hospice nurse or social worker?
3. What about providing care according to the healthcare provider’s
orders?
18. The environment- What does it mean to be an obesogenic environment? Know what
kinds of things might make it that way? Ie lots of junk food, people around you who eat
poorly and too much, buffet style eating, etc.
Obesogenic environment—defined as an environment promoting or contributing
to obesity
Salutogenic environments are ones “...that reduce vulnerability to illness and
promote enhanced levels of well-being”
19. Internal and External locus of control- review behaviors for each
Internal locus of control
♦ Some people understand that there are consequences for their
actions/behaviors.
Example: If I do this, then my health could improve.
Vs
External locus of control
o Some people believe that things are in the control of God, work or
authority figures. Therefore, they believe that their actions/behaviors will
not change what will happen.
Examples: Somebody in control wants me to do it. Work requires things
that are out of my control which is why I have problems. It is God’s will
or it is hereditary so I cannot control it.
20. I would invite you to consider the following- know that routines tend to decrease anxiety
and change tends to increase anxiety
Routines tend to decrease anxiety.
Change tends to increase anxiety.
For those who have difficulty with transition or have had difficulties in the past, it
may be more difficult to approach change.
▫ Medicare will pay for skilled needs if the above criteria is met but the
nurse needs to seek renewal every 60 days to continue care
7. Medicare Renewal- What is the timing that is required?
The client wants to know how long Medicare will pay for skilled needs.
This care must seek a renewal if skilled needs continue to exist every 60 days.
8. Comparison of Skilled and Nonskilled nursing care- be able to say which is which if
given a list
Skilled Nursing Care Nonskilled Nursing Care
Assessment of lungs and weight of a client Changing a dry dressing
diagnosed with congestive heart failure
Teaching a newly diagnosed diabetic client Teaching the client’s significant other/spouse
how to fill insulin syringes or use an insulin how to pay healthcare bills
pen
Managment of care given to a client Managing care of a home health aide after all
postcerebrovascular accident by speech healthcare skilled needs have been stabilized
therapy, physical therapy, and home health
aide services
Changing a complicated wet-to-dry dressing Pouring medication in plastic labeled
on a client’s abdomen container
Monitoring the fluctuating blood pressure of Visiting the client to decrease lonelieness
an elderly man who has just started taking
antihypertensive medication
9. Parish/Faith-based nursing/What does Faith Community Nursing look like?- What are the
key roles? What would a nurse be doing? Be able to pick out what she should and should
not be doing.
Health educator
Personal health counselor
Referral agent
Coordinator of volunteers
Developer of supportive groups
Integrator of faith and health
Health advocate
11. Intrinsic and Extrinsic Factors Related to Falls in the Home- Know the difference
between intrinsic and extrinsic issues, What are modifiable issues in the elderly in regard
to falls?
Intrinsic
▫ Age
▫ previous hx falls
▫ cognitive impairment
▫ muscle weakness
▫ decreased lower body strength
▫ Female
▫ taking 4 or more meds per day
▫ taking psychotropic meds
▫ vision impairment
▫ peripheral neuropathy
▫ Parkinson’s Dx
▫ history of a stroke
▫ arthritis
Extrinsic
poor lighting
changes in floor surface or slippery surface
high-gloss floors
lack of handrails on stairs
inappropriate chair height
Clutter
throw rugs
electrical cords
loose carpeting
poor sidewalk and pavement conditions
snow and ice
PETS
12. Health Care Reform- What are avoidable hospital re-admissions typically caused by?
•by insufficient post hospitalization care
•failure to adhere to recommended medication or therapy regimens
•lack of physical support for the discharged patient
Chapter 13 - Family Assessment Power Point
1. Ecomaps and Genograms- know definition of each
a. Ecomap
i. a diagram used to identify the direction and intensity of family relationships
between members and/or community institutions of importance to the family.
b. Genogram
i. a diagram of family relationships between blood relatives that can span two or
more generations. Life events such as marriages, divorces, births, and deaths
are included in the diagram; it is used to identify relationships as well as possible
patterns of disease.
2. Theoretical Perspectives of Family- understand basic concepts of Family Systems
Theory/Family Structural-Functional Theory/ Family Development Theory
3. Homeless Families- Know % of homeless population who are children and how
homelessness impacts children
Precipitating factors
Lost job or work hours
Eviction
Overcrowding
Catastrophic illness
Unanticipated major bills
Interpersonal violence
Natural disaster
7. Improving Pregnancy Outcomes-That is the main benefit for the Nurse –Family
Partnership program
a. The public health nurse works closely with the school nurse to locate at-risk
pregnant adolescents to include them in the Nurse–Family Partnership Program.
The nurse points out that the main benefit from being included in the program
is Improved pregnancy outcomes.
8. Caregiver Burden/Caretaker Son- What are the signs and symptoms of caregiver burden?
Review the cases of the 77-year-old woman and the caretaker son.
a.
b.
c.
d.
9. Resources for Families of Older Adults- What is available to assist a family in the care of
elderly clients and what is not
a. Resources are available to assist a family with the care of an elderly client
include:
• Adult day care program
• Companions
10. Caregiver Advice Record and Enable Act- What is it? What are hospitals required to do?