Health promotion w2 peers responses

Home Health week 2 peer response

respond to peers thoughtfully, add value to the discussion, and apply ideas, insights, or concepts from scholarly sources, such as: journal articles, assigned readings, textbook material, lectures, course materials, or authoritative websites. For specific details and criteria, refer to the discussion rubric in the Menu (⋮) or in the Course Overview Weekly Discussion Guidelines. 

1st peer response

McKenzie Ledbetter

The Health Belief Model (HBM) was developed by Hochbaum, Rosenstock, and Kegels, psychologists working in the US Public Health Services. HBM is based on perceived susceptibility, severity, benefits, and barriers. This Model can be used to predict health behaviors, for example, the intention to vaccinate or comply with medical interventions. I chose this model because it is important to know if your patients will engage with healthy behavior or not. If it is the latter, you can implement education and resources to help them make healthy choices.

During the COVID pandemic, misinformation had an enormous impact on people following precaution guidelines. Many people ignored recommendations due to their lack of accurate information. The HBM can raise awareness of the relationship between health, information, and the digital landscapes the public interacts with (Houlden et al., 2021).

I believe this model can address my topics because there are a lot of people who have been misinformed about healthy behaviors regarding mental health and childbirth. This model can help screen for those individuals and once identified, education and resources can be offered to encourage better heath decisions.

 

Houlden, S., Hodson, J., Veletsianos, G., Reid, D., & Thompson-Wagner, C. (2021). The health belief model: How public health can address the misinformation crisis beyond COVID-19. 
Public health in practice (Oxford, England)
2, 100151. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.puhip.2021.100151

2nd peer response

Megan Brown

· I chose the Transtheoretical/Stages of Change Model. This model helps describe a patient's motivation and readiness to change a health-related behavior they may want to improve. It is described in a five-step process and evaluates the patient's behavioral change, the process of the changes, decision-making, and self-efficacy. Here are the five stages of this model: 

      1. Precontemplation: the patient is unaware of their need to change and most likely is unwilling to change. 

      2. Contemplation: this is when the patient begins to develop a desire to change and get better. 

      3. Preparation: personal plans begin of how to change. 

      4. Action: when the patient incorporates the new behavior into their life and/or routine. 

      5. Maintenance: the patient is consistent in changing and demonstrating that change, usually for six months or more. 

· I chose this model because I feel it gives the patient ways to improve and get better in a clear and precise way. It gives the patient their own choice to get better, which I feel is an excellent way to get a patient to change unhealthy behaviors. The patient needs to have that desire to change and get better first. It demonstrates more of an understanding of the actual cognitive and behavioral changes the patient will experience and go through. “Movement through these stages does not always occur in a linear manner, but may also be cyclical as many individuals must make several attempts at behavior change before their goals are realized” (Marcus & Simkin, 1994). It gives the patient time to work through each stage, even if it may not happen the first time, but it helps them feel more fulfilled. 

· This model can be used to address the Healthy People topic and objective I have chosen because, a lot of the time, the patient is unaware they need to change or unwilling to change. They don't know what steps they need to take to get better. Once given the education on how to get better, they need to desire to get better. This model can show the patient that they are getting better and gives them something to look at. It can also show healthcare professionals how the patient is improving and where they are at. 

 

Reference: 

Marcus , B. H., & Simkin, L. R. (1994, November 26). 
The transtheoretical model: Applications to exercise behavior. National Library of Medicine. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/7837962

week 2 info system healthcare

Experiences with Healthcare Information Systems

Discussion

Course Outcomes

This assignment enables the student to meet the following course outcomes:

· CO 3: Define standardized terminology that reflects nursing's unique contribution to patient outcomes. (PO #3)

· CO 4: Investigate safeguards and decision-making support tools embedded in patient care technologies and information systems to support a safe practice environment for both patients and healthcare workers. (PO #4)

Preparing the Discussion

· Discussions are designed to promote dialogue between faculty and students, and students and their peers. In discussions students:

· Demonstrate understanding of concepts for the week

· Integrate outside scholarly sources when required

· Engage in meaningful dialogue with classmates and/or instructor

· Express opinions clearly and logically, in a professional manner

· Use the rubric on this page as you compose your answers.

· Best Practices include:

· Participation early in the week is encouraged to stimulate meaningful discussion among classmates and instructor.

· Enter the discussion often during the week to read and learn from posts.

· Select different classmates for your reply each week.

Discussion Question

Share your experiences with healthcare information systems, past or present. Has it been an easy transition or difficult? Why do you believe your experience has been positive or negative? If you are currently not working in a healthcare setting, how has the medical record exposure in nursing school impacted your current knowledge?

Health promotion w1 peer resp

Health promotion week1 peers response 

respond to peers thoughtfully, add value to the discussion, and apply ideas, insights, or concepts from scholarly sources, such as: journal articles, assigned readings, textbook material, lectures, course materials, or authoritative websites. For specific details and criteria, refer to the discussion rubric in the Menu (⋮) or in the Course Overview Weekly Discussion Guidelines

1st peers post

Emilee Harper

WEEK 1 DISCUSSION 2

· Define health promotion in your own words.

 Health promotion, in my own words, is the process of empowering individuals, communities, and societies to enhance their overall well-being and achieve their highest level of physical, mental, and social health. It involves dedicated efforts to prevent illness, promote healthy behaviors, and address the encouragement of health to achieve optimal quality of life. 

· Discuss the differences in primary, secondary, and tertiary prevention.

1. Primary Prevention: This focuses on preventing the onset of health issues. It aims to reduce the risk of disease or injury before they occur. Examples include vaccinations, health education, and lifestyle interventions to promote healthy habits.

2. Secondary Prevention: Secondary prevention is about early detection and intervention to prevent the progression of a health issue. It includes activities like regular screenings, diagnostic tests, and prompt treatment to control a disease or injury in its early stages.

3. Tertiary Prevention: Tertiary prevention is geared towards minimizing the impact of established diseases or injuries and preventing their complications. It involves rehabilitation, disease management, and strategies to improve the patient's quality of life.

 

· Identify two patient-focused topics of interest from the Healthy People 2030 website that interest you. For each topic, identify an objective from the Healthy People 2030 website on which you would like to focus. Why are these topics of interest to you? Provide a rationale for your selections.

1. Topic 1: Mental Health and Mental Disorders

· Objective: “Increase the proportion of children, adolescents, and adults who receive treatment for a major depressive episode.”

· Rationale: Mental health is a critical but often stigmatized aspect of overall well-being. Focusing on increasing access to treatment for depression aligns with the goal of promoting mental health and reducing the burden of mental disorders.

2. Topic 2: Substance Abuse (Drug and Alcohol Use)

3.  

· Objective: “Reduce the proportion of people who misuse prescription drugs in the past year.”

· Rationale: The misuse of prescription drugs is a growing public health concern. Reducing this misuse can reduce the associated health risks, addiction, and adverse consequences on individuals and communities.

 

Increase the proportion of children and adolescents who get appropriate treatment for anxiety or depression – EMCD04. Increase the proportion of children and adolescents who get appropriate treatment for anxiety or depression – EMCD04 – Healthy People 2030. (n.d.).
https://health.gov/healthypeople/objectives-and-data/browse-objectives/children/increase-proportion-children-and-adolescents-who-get-appropriate-treatment-anxiety-or-depression-emc-d04

Prevention strategies – STATPEARLS – NCBI bookshelf. (n.d.).
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK537222/ Kisling LA, M Das J. Prevention Strategies. [Updated 2023 Aug 1]. In: StatPearls [Internet]. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; 2023 Jan-.

Reduce the proportion of people who misused prescription drugs in the past year – su12. Reduce the proportion of people who misused prescription drugs in the past year – SU12 – Healthy People 2030. (n.d.).
https://health.gov/healthypeople/objectives-and-data/browse-objectives/drug-and-alcohol-use/reduce-proportion-people-who-misused-prescription-drugs-past-year-su-12

 

2nd peer post

Melinda Goebel

Health Promotion is a huge factor in health care. It is about taking care of your health and preventing or treating disease and illness. Primary prevention is mostly about preventing damage to your health before it can occur. Secondary prevention is about preventing the illness from progressing and further damaging health. Tertiary prevention helps manage long term, complex health problems to improve life with the disease as much as a possible.

 

I chose to focus on Heart Disease and Stoke from the Health People 2030 website. I chose this because it relates so closely to my practice at work on a Heart and Vascular Unit. Another reasoning I had behind researching this topic is because it is so relevant in health promotion and heart disease effects so many Americans, when it could be prevented.

 

Part of the Heart Disease and Stroke topic included screening for atrial fibrillation. This objective caught my interest because it is so much more common than people realize and often people live with atrial fibrillation without knowing until a larger event, such as heart attack or stroke occur. It could do so much for Secondary Prevention if the general population had more of an understanding of atrial fibrillation and a way to screen.

 

Diabetes is a huge problem in the population of the United States and effects so many of all ages. As a nurse I about half of my patient will come in with type 2 diabetes. This is another disease that has so many other effects on the body and health that could be prevented or controlled.

 

Type 2 diabetes is occurring in children and young adults more often. This could be prevented with education on a balanced diet and the risk of being diabetic. There is also ways to control blood sugars and lower A1C in these younger generations that are being diagnosed with type 2 diabetes.

 

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. (2021). Healthy People 2030. Health.gov. https://health.gov/healthypeople

D. Saa Interview

Healthcare Professional Interview:Interview with a culturally competent Registered Nurse, Nursing Leader, or Advanced Practice Nurse. BSN students must select a nursing professional with a BSN or higher degree in nursing practice. The interview must address the following topics:

  • The practitioner’s philosophy regarding cultural diversity. (10 points)
  • Their strategies for providing culturally congruent healthcare. (10 points)
  • How do they address the uniqueness of cultural health practices? (Provide examples). (10 points)
  • How do they address issues such as cultural bias, language barriers, and client conflict? (10 points)
  • The challenges and benefits of addressing healthcare disparities. (Provide examples). (10 points)

This is an all-or-none assignment. Please ensure that all of the concepts listed above are included in your interview. The interview should be at least one page in length and uploaded. Please pay close attention to spelling and grammar.

EVIDENCE-BASED PRACTICE AND THE QUADRUPLE AIM

To Prepare:

  • Read the articles by Sikka, Morath, & Leape (2015); Crabtree, Brennan, Davis, & Coyle (2016); and Kim et al. (2016) 
  • Reflect on how EBP might impact (or not impact) the Quadruple Aim in healthcare.
  • Consider the impact that EBP may have on factors impacting these quadruple aim elements, such as preventable medical errors or healthcare delivery.

To Complete:

Write a brief analysis (no longer than 2 pages) of the connection between EBP and the Quadruple Aim.

Your analysis should address how EBP might (or might not) help reach the Quadruple Aim, including each of the four measures of:

  • Patient experience
  • Population health
  • Costs
  • Work life of healthcare providers

please provide at least 3 references! APA format

reply

Read a selection of your colleagues’ responses and respond to at least two of your colleagues on two different days by expanding upon your colleague’s post or suggesting an alternative approach to the ethical issue described by your colleague. use 2 reference for each. Less than 1 page

1.Organizations use professional ethics to provide a framework for what behaviors are accepted and expected.  Professional ethics can be defined as “rules of acceptable conduct that members of a given profession are expected to follow” (American Psychological Association, n.d.).  As a doctorally prepared nurse, it is critical to understand the impact that an organization’s professional ethics can have on the success of an organization as well as patient outcomes.  A recent study conducted by Torkaman et al. (2020) investigated the relationship between professional ethics and organizational commitment and was able to show a positive correlation between professional ethics and nurses’ commitment to their organization.   A DNP-prepared nurse would be able to identify the importance of leveraging professional ethics in order to increase retention rates.  The DNP-prepared nurse could offer reimbursement for staff who attend ethics-based training to highlight the organization’s emphasis on these principles, strengthening nurses’ perceptions of the value of professional ethics within their organization.

                                                                                      Autonomy

            Autonomy in healthcare refers to the notion that patients should have the right to make their own decisions about their treatment.  Ethical dilemmas may arise when patients do not have the capacity to make decisions, and others (family members, Emergency Room (ER) staff, or legal guardians) have to step in to make these critical decisions for the patient.  Rejno et al. (2020) created vignettes to examine the importance of autonomy and dignity.  In one of these vignettes, a patient named David was in a motor vehicle accident and had to be sedated and placed on a respirator.  The ER team providing care to David has no knowledge of his wishes for care and, therefore, has to use their own judgment to provide life-saving measures.  In situations like this, “healthcare professionals can find support from basic ethical values, ethical guidelines such as those provided by the ICN and from learning not to prejudge what the dignity of identity might be for David; additionally, it is essential to protect the identity of every patient, viewing each as a unique person whose life stories are acknowledged, in order to preserve their dignity” (Rejno et al, 2020).  The DNP-prepared nurse should consider creating an ethics committee to help provide support and guidance to staff who need to provide care for patients who are unable to make decisions on their own.

                                                                      Issues in My Own Practice

            Over the years, I have worked in many different inpatient psychiatric settings, one being a consistently nationally-ranked hospital by US News and World Report.   One of the main differences that I observed in this organization was a strong emphasis on professional ethics.  Staff members took great pride in the fact that they were providing evidence-based best patient care in an organization that set forth professional expectations, which, for the most part, staff strived to follow.  When staff are provided with clear expectations, they feel more supported, are better equipped to deliver quality care, and are more invested in the organization.

            In the inpatient psychiatric setting, autonomy is an issue that we deal with quite regularly.  Oftentimes, patients are so mentally ill that they do not want to take medications that would help them to stabilize.  When this is the case, the Psychiatrist has to petition the court to have the patient committed and medicated against their will.  Staff members have to physically restrain these patients and provide intramuscular medications to them against their will.  As you can imagine, this frequently brings up ethical questions of patient autonomy.  In order to provide support, ethics committees are a valuable tool to help staff process complex patient cases.

  References

American Psychological Association. (n.d.) Dictionary of Psychology. https://dictionary.apa.org/professional-ethicsLinks to an external site.

Rejno, A., Ternestedt, B.-M., Nordenfelt, L., Silfverberg, G., & Godskesen, T. E. (2020). Dignity at stake: Caring for persons with impaired autonomy.Links to an external site.Links to an external site. Nursing Ethics, 27(1), 104–115. https://doi.org/10.1177/0969733019845128

Torkaman, M., Heydari, N., & Torabizadeh, C. (2020). Nurses’ perspectives regarding the relationship between professional ethics and organizational commitment in healthcare organizations. Journal of Medical Ethics & History of Medicine, 13(17), 1–10.

2.   Ethics are one of the main pillars of nursing care and uphold the quality and integrity of interventions delivered. Ensuring that ethical considerations are taken when constructing the framework for a healthcare organization can ensure that those involved feel connected to a deeper and valuable meaning within their work and are also meeting the ethically based qualifications to deliver said care (Torkaman et al., 2020).

            Along with ensuring the providers are qualified to deliver appropriate care, the setting must also be appropriate for the level of patient acuity. Telehealth has undoubtedly increased access to care, providing resources to individuals who may not have sought psychiatric support prior to virtual appointments. An ongoing assessment by federal and state regulators has been the appropriateness of prescribing certain medications, including buprenorphine products for medication-assisted treatment (MAT) in the use of substance use disorders. Additionally, fully virtual psychiatric providers have also experienced the need to carefully screen the mental health symptoms for severity and ensure a patient is appropriate for telehealth level of care (LOC).

            The Doctor of Nursing practice (DNP) is a change agent supportive of guiding these processes not only at their but as regulations change and adapt. The DNP can play an integral role in collecting new data on care outcomes and translating this data into information that can be disseminated to and understood by non-healthcare professionals. Doing so can promote the ongoing availability of telehealth measures, with focus on increasing access to care. The DNP serves as an expert reviewer to examine outcomes with particular attention to interventions that provide therapeutic outcomes and assessing for gaps in practice. This is of particular concern with telepsychiatry, as progressive steps have been implemented over time to proactively identify individuals who may be at risk for self-harm or are experiencing high-acuity symptoms out of reasonable scope of telehealth care (Fiorini et al., 2020).

            Much like general psychiatry services, there are even fewer psychiatric providers providing specialty substance use disorder treatment. Throughout the pandemic, access was increased to MAT treatment and the previous requirement for a specialty waiver and training to prescribe buprenorphine was waived and consolidated by the Omnibus bill (SAMHSA, 2023). This allows all prescribers with schedule III authority to prescribe buprenorphine products to their patients with opiate use disorder, pending state law allowability. Prescribers have also been permitted to prescribe to patients via telehealth, given all other aspects of MAT treatment are completed including urine drug screening and engagement in psychotherapy per state requirements Mahmoud et al., 2022). These permissions may not continue if they are not continuously extended, and the patients utilizing the prescribers who are available in their area due only to telehealth will be without a MAT prescriber once they end. DNPs can present and advocate for ongoing advancements in safe but broadened prescribing practices for MAT, with respect for the seriousness of buprenorphine prescribing and also the management and severity of opiate use disorder in the United States.

References

Fiorini, R. A., De Giacomo, P., & L’Abate, L. (2020). Towards resilient telehealth support for clinical psychiatry and psychology: a strategic review. Studies in Health Technology and Informatics213, 275–278.

Mahmoud, H., Naal, H., Whaibeh, E., & Smith, A. (2022). Telehealth-based delivery of medication-assisted treatment for opioid use disorder: a critical review of recent developments. Current Psychiatry Reports24(9), 375–386. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11920-022-01346-z

Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). (2023). Waiver elimination (MAT Act). https://www.samhsa.gov/medications-substance-use-disorders/waiver-elimination-mat-act

Torkaman, M., Heydari, N., & Torabizadeh, C. (2020). Nurses’ perspectives regarding the relationship between professional ethics and organizational commitment in healthcare organizations. Journal of Medical Ethics and History of Medicine, 13(17), 1–10. https://doi.org/10.18502/jmehm.v13i17.4658

CONTROVERSY ASSOCIATED WITH PERSONALITY AND PARAPHILIC DISORDERS

TO PREPARE

· Review this week’s Learning Resources and consider the insights they provide on assessing, diagnosing, and treating personality and paraphilic disorders.

· Select a specific personality or paraphilic disorder from the 
DSM-5-TR to use for this Assignment.

· Use the Walden Library to investigate your chosen disorder further, including controversial aspects of the disorder, maintaining the therapeutic relationship, and ethical and legal considerations. 

THE ASSIGNMENT

In 2–3 pages:

· Explain the controversy that surrounds your selected disorder.

· Explain your professional beliefs about this disorder, supporting your rationale with at least three scholarly references from the literature.

· Explain strategies for maintaining the therapeutic relationship with a patient that may present with this disorder.

· Finally, explain ethical and legal considerations related to this disorder that you need to bring to your practice and why they are important.

Medication Errors

nursing 

laura

 From a financial standpoint, what impact would this scholarship have on your education? 

  Discuss how your interest in your field or major developed. Describe your experience in the field and what you gained from this involvement. Please provide a minimum of 200 words. 

 When did you know that you wanted to pursue this degree? What makes now the time to pursue or continue your pursuit of your degree? Please provide a minimum of 200 words. 

  What are your short- and long-term career goals, and how will earning this degree contribute to achieving those goals? Please provide a minimum of 200 words. 

 Describe the skills and traits you possess that help you overcome obstacles. Please describe an experience or accomplishment that you are proud of. Please provide a minimum of 200 words. 

Nursing 9-3

 In a 5–7 page written assessment, determine how health care technology, coordination of care, and community resources can be applied to address the patient, family, or population problem you’ve defined.