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COMMUNITY HEALTH NURSING

COMMUNITY HEALTH NURSING. Population-focused Nursing. “Community” or “public” health nursing is population based. Care may be given to individuals and families, but its purpose is the improvement of the health of the population as whole. Community Health Nursing.

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COMMUNITY HEALTH NURSING

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  1. COMMUNITY HEALTH NURSING

  2. Population-focused Nursing • “Community” or “public” health nursing is population based. • Care may be given to individuals and families, but its purpose is the improvement of the health of the population as whole.

  3. Community Health Nursing • A synthesis of nursing knowledge and practice and the science and practice of public health, implemented via systematic use of the nursing process and other processes, designed to promote health and prevent illness in population groups.

  4. Tenets of Community Health Nursing - 1 • Systematic and comprehensive population-based assessment, policy development, and assurance. • Partnering with representatives of the people. • Priority for primary prevention. • Intervention to create conditions for health.

  5. Tenets of Community Health Nursing - 2 • Active outreach • Concern for the population as a whole • Resource allocation supports maximum gain for the population. • Interdisciplinary collaboration Source: Quad Council of Public Health Organizations. (1999).

  6. Community Health Nursing Standards of Care - 1 • Standard I. Assessment • Standard II. Diagnosis • Standard III. Outcomes identification • Standard IV. Planning • Standard V. Assurance • Standard VI. Evaluation Source: Quad Council of Public Health Organizations. (1999).

  7. Community Health Nursing Standards of Performance - 1 • Standard I. Quality of care • Standard II. Performance appraisal • Standard III. Education • Standard IV. Collegiality

  8. Community Health Nursing Standards of Performance - 2 • Standard V. Ethics • Standard VI. Collaboration • Standard VII. Research • Standard VIII. Resource utilization Source: Quad Council of Public Health Organizations. (1999).

  9. Attributes of Community Health Nursing - 1 • Population consciousness • Health orientation • Autonomy • Creativity

  10. Attributes of Community Health Nursing - 2 • Continuity • Collaboration • Intimacy • Variability

  11. Population Consciousness • An awareness of how information about individual clients or families relates to the health status of the total population

  12. Health Orientation • An emphasis on health promotion and maintenance rather than the cure of disease or disability

  13. Autonomy • Independent judgment and action by the community health nurse • Active client participation in health decision making

  14. Creativity • An ability to develop innovative solutions to community health problems using available resources

  15. Continuity • Long term relationships with clients • Provision of care across time as old problems are solved and new ones occur • Provision of care across multiple needs

  16. Collaboration • Interaction and joint decision making with multiple health-related and non-health-related disciplines to address the health needs of population groups

  17. Intimacy • Potential for developing awareness of intimate details of clients’ lives • Potential for increased accuracy of nursing assessment

  18. Variability • In clients served • In health problems addressed • In settings for practice

  19. Community Health Nursing Roles • Client-oriented roles • Delivery-oriented roles • Population-oriented roles

  20. Caregiver Educator Counselor Referral resource Role model Advocate Primary care provider Case manager Client-oriented Roles

  21. Caregiver • Uses the nursing process to provide direct nursing intervention to individuals, families, or population groups

  22. Educator • Facilitates learning for positive health behavior change

  23. Counselor • Teaches and assists clients in the use of the problem solving process

  24. Figure 8–1 Problem Solving in Community Health Nursing

  25. Referral Resource • Links clients to services to meet identified health needs

  26. Role Model • Demonstrates desired health-related behaviors

  27. Advocate • Speaks or acts on behalf of clients who cannot do so for themselves

  28. Primary Care Provider • Provides essential health services to promote health, prevent illness, and deal with existing health problems

  29. Case Manager • Coordinates and directs the selection and use of health care services to meet client needs, maximize resource utilization, and minimize the expense of care

  30. Delivery-oriented Roles • Coordinator/Care manager • Collaborator • Liaison

  31. Coordinator/Care Manager • Organizes and integrates services to best meet client needs in the most efficient manner possible

  32. Collaborator • Engages in shared decision making regarding the nature of health problems and potential solutions to them

  33. Liaison • Provides and maintains connections and communication between clients and health care providers or among providers

  34. Case finder Leader Change agent Community developer Coalition builder Researcher Population-oriented Roles

  35. Case Finder • Identifies clients with specific health problems or conditions • Geared toward awareness of population-level problems

  36. Leader • Influences clients and others to take action regarding identified health problems

  37. Change Agent • Initiates and facilitates change in individual or client behaviors or conditions or those affecting population groups

  38. Community Developer • Mobilizes residents and other segments of the population to take action regarding identified community health problems or issues

  39. Coalition Builder • Promotes the development and maintenance of alliances of individuals or groups of people to address a specific health issue

  40. Researcher • Conducts studies to explain health-related phenomena and to evaluate the effectiveness of interventions to control them

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