The document discusses the roles and responsibilities of community health nursing, including defining community health nursing, comparing it to public health nursing, describing the core functions of community health nursing practice such as assessing community health needs and designing interventions, and outlining the main roles of community health nurses such as being a clinician, educator, advocate, manager, collaborator, leader, and researcher.
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Community Health Nurseing Unit1
The document discusses the roles and responsibilities of community health nursing, including defining community health nursing, comparing it to public health nursing, describing the core functions of community health nursing practice such as assessing community health needs and designing interventions, and outlining the main roles of community health nurses such as being a clinician, educator, advocate, manager, collaborator, leader, and researcher.
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Community Health Nursing
Roles, Responsibilities and
History. By Mr. Imran Yousafzai Lecturer INS KMU Learning Objectives 1. Define Community Health Nursing. 2. Discuss public, community and community based nursing. 3. Describe different roles of the community health nurse 4. Discuss the functions of CHN. How Healthcare Needs of a community are established? The health-care demands of the community could be defined through analysing four major contributing factors: 1.Health problems and risks, 2.Lifestyle in terms of health behaviour and care, 3.Environment as a threat to health, and 4.available and accessible health services and care. • Community health-care demands underpin health services and care activities, which could also be categorized into four interrelated groups: • (1) clinical care, (2) health care, (3) support for healthy activities and (4) welfare and other support. (1) Clinical care • is confined to diseases and symptomatic therapeutics. • earlier discharged in the course of recovery, increase the need for continuing clinical/medical care . • People who are homebound under a physician’s plan of treatment. • Clinical care demands in community health may include delegated medical treatment and observation – symptom management, wound care, tube feeding, etc. (2)Health care • Health care represents diverse direct health services and care provided to individuals, families and groups, by the community health centre or similar facility. • Examples of health-care demands include the following: Health assessment and outreach/case finding. Screening and surveillance for both communicable diseases such as tuberculosis (TB), HIV, dengue haemorrhagic fever (DHF), influenza; and non-communicable diseases such as hypertension, diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular diseases, etc. immunization for vaccine, health education – health counselling/family counselling interventions for family planning and birth spacing, etc. (3) Support for healthy activity • Support for healthy activity is designed to promote healthy lifestyles and reduce health threats and risks in the community. • This category of services and care activities is focused on public health and covers a wide range of programmes and interventions provided collaboratively to the residents by community allies including the health centre and other facilities. • Support for healthy activity may range from: – health teaching and health information dissemination, capacity building etc (4) Welfare and other support • (Welfare and other support is usually provided to the needy such as the disabled, those who are housebound and bedridden, and the aged.
• Welfare and other support may include:
aids and tools for day-to-day activities of the disabled. compensation for caregivers of persons who are bedridden etc. Community health nursing and practical implications • All community health services and care activities carried out respond to the needs, health problems and health risks, cultural way of living, resources, and preferences of the community. • In a health-care system in transition, community health nursing represents a profession that responds to all categories of demands of the people. What is Community Health Nursing (WHO) • Community health nursing is a population- focused, community-oriented approach aimed at health promotion of an entire population, and prevention of disease, disability and premature death in a population. Public Health Nursing Vs Community Health Nursing • The term community health nursing is often synonymous with public health nursing. • Community health nursing is a specialty in nursing. • According to the American Nursing Association (ANA), public health nursing is the practice of promoting and protecting the health of populations using knowledge from nursing, social and public health sciences (Waldorf, 1999). History and Development Main Roles • The primary goal of community health nursing is to help a community protect and preserve the health of its members, while the secondary goal is to promote self-care among individuals and families. Community-Based Nursing • covers nursing care provided to individuals, families and groups wherever they live, work, play or go to school. • Community based nursing is a philosophy of care that applies to all nurses who practise outside the hospital. • Major activities include case management, patient education, individual and family advocacy, and an interdisciplinary approach (Zotti, Brown, Stotts, 1996). • According to this definition, community-based nursing is not a specialty in nursing but a philosophy that guides care, design and delivery of all nursing specialties. Core functions of community health nursing practice: 1. community social capital, including community culture, and identification of resources as key actors in the community healthcare system. 2. assessment of community health conditions, health risks and problems to identify the health-care demands of the people 3. design and implementation of comprehensive community health interventions and care. 4. health policies/agreements developed at the local community level to drive policies/agreements at the provincial and national levels. Roles of Community Health Nurses 1. Clinician 2. Educator 3. Advocate 4. Manager 5. Collaborator 6. Leader 7. Researcher Clinician Role • Care provider: The nurse ensures that health services are not only provided to individuals and families but also provided to groups and populations • The clinician role has emphasis on holism, health promotion and skill expansion Holistic practice = considering the broad range of interacting needs that affect the “collective health” of the client as a larger system (Patterson 1998) Examples at the clinics & Schools • Immunisation of infants and pre-schoolers • Family planning programs • Assessment and screening • Prevention of behavioural problems in adolescents Expanded skills in observation, listening, communication and counseling are integral to your role as a CHN with emphasis on psychological and socio-cultural factors Educator Role Health teacher: one of the major functions of the CHN (Breckon et.al. 1998)
Important role because
•Community clients are NOT usually acutely ill and can absorb and act on health information •A wider audience can be reached leading to a community-wide impact •When public has a higher level of health consciousness. Advocate Role • Based on clients’ rights: Every patient or client has the right to receive just, equal, and humane treatment. Why Advocacy? • Current health care system offers de-personalised and fragmented services. Many clients who are poor and disadvantaged are frustrated and the nurse becomes an advocate for clients pleading their cause and acting on their behalf Goals of advocacy: 1. Help clients gain more independence and self- determination 2. Make the system more responsive and relevant to the needs of clients Characteristic Actions of an Advocate 1. Being assertive 2. Taking risks 3. Communicating and negotiating well 4. Identifying resources and obtaining results Manager Role • Nurse directs and administers care to meet goals by: 1. Assessing client needs 2. Planning and organising to meet those needs 3. Directing and leading to achieve results 4. Controlling and evaluating the progress to make sure that the results are met Manager Role • Nurse oversees client care as: 1. A case manager 2. Supervising ancillary staff 3. Managing caseloads 4. Running clinics 5. Conducting community health needs assessment projects Nurse as Planner • Sets the goals for the organisation • Sets the direction • Determines the means (strategies) to achieve them • It includes defining goals and objectives • It may be strategic ( long-term broader goals) Nurse as Organiser • Designing a structure for people + tasks to function to reach the desired objectives • It includes assignments and scheduling It includes: 1. Deciding what tasks to be done 2. Who will do them 3. How to group the tasks 4. Who reports to whom 5. Where decisions will be made (Robbins 1997) Questions to be addressed by the organiser 6. Is the clinic, program providing the needed services? 7. Are the clients satisfied? 8. Are the services cost-effective? Nurse as Leader • The nurse directs, influences, or persuades others to make change to positively influence people’s health. • Includes persuading and motivating people, directing activities, effective two-way communication, resolving conflicts and coordinating the plan • Coordination: Bringing people and activities together to function in harmony to achieve desired objectives Nurse as Controller and Evaluator • Controller: Monitors the plan and ensures that it stays on course. – Sometimes plans do not proceed as intended and need to be adjusted – Monitoring, comparing and adjusting are activities of controlling – Comparing performance and outcomes against set goals and standards = Evaluator role Management Skills (Robbins, 1997) 1. Human: ability to understand, communicate, motivate, delegate and work with people. They are essential to be successful in your role as a manager 2. Conceptual: The mental abilities to analyse and interpret abstract ideas to understand and diagnose situations 3. Technical: Apply special management-related knowledge and expertise for e.g. computerised management information system Collaborator Role • Means working jointly with others on a common project to cooperate as partners Who? – Clients – Other nurses and physicians – Teachers and health educators – Social workers – Physical therapists – Nutritionists – Psychologists – Epidemiologists and Biostatisticians – Attorneys – Secretaries – City Planners and legislators Researcher Role • Systematic investigation, collection, and analysis of data for solving problems and improving community health practice • This role is at several levels: – Agency and organisational studies for job satisfaction among public health nurses – Some CHN participate in more collaborative research with other health professionals The Research Process 1. Identify an area of interest 2. Specify the research question or statement 3. Review the literature 4. Identify a conceptual framework 5. Select a research design 6. Collect and analyse data 7. Interpret the results 8. Communicate the findings Settings for CHN Practice 1. Homes 2. Community health centres 3. Schools 4. Occupational health settings (business and industry) 5. Residential institutions: Older age residences 6. Parishes or charitable mosques related organisations 7. National and International organizational programs and projects. 8. Community at large References: • Basavanthappa BT: Health Belief Model. Community Health Nursing. 2008, New Delhi: Jaypee Brothers Medical Publishers, 224-225.