Theoretical and Scientific Foundations of Nursing
DISCUSSION RESPONSE
Search-Based Questions
DISCUSSION RESPONSE
Search-Based Questions
Choose an “ethical” theory, define the related concepts outlined, and examine literature about the theory identifying and defining other concepts used in the theory.
Submission Instructions:
My background: I am a Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner. I work at mental health clinic (outpatient services) where I provide direct patient care, diagnose, and prescribe pharmacological treatments for patients with mental health disorders.
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List three questions you might ask the patient if she were in your office. Provide a rationale for why you might ask these questions.
When assessing this patient, it's important to ask questions that will help the provider understand the underlying causes and potential treatment options. Given the patient's recent loss and significant life changes, it's crucial to approach the assessment with sensitivity. Here are three questions I'd like to ask, along with their rationales:
1. Have you observed any changes in your sleep pattern, mood, or feelings since your husband passed away?
Rationale: This question allows the patient to provide insight into the nature and duration of her sleep disturbances and changes in her mood or feelings. Understanding the onset and progression of depression symptoms can related to her recent bereavement following her husband's passing.
2. Could you describe your emotions and have you ever experienced thoughts of self-harm or suicide?
Rationale: This question aims to comprehend a person's emotional state and evaluate the presence of suicidal thoughts or self-harm ideation. It's important to ask such questions without delay in treatment. Since the patient has a history of major depressive disorder (MDD), and her depression has worsened, it's crucial to explore her emotional state.
3. How have you been coping with the loss of your husband, and have you sought support or counseling to help you through this difficult time?
Rationale: Inquiring about coping strategies and support systems is essential for assessing the patient's resilience and identifying potential sources of assistance. Grief counseling or therapy can be invaluable in helping individuals navigate the complex emotions associated with loss. Additionally, it's important to assess whether the patient has been utilizing any resources to manage her depression.
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Identify people in the patient's life you would need to speak to or get feedback from to further assess the patient's situation. Include specific questions you might ask these people and why.
To gain a more comprehensive understanding of the patient's situation and evaluate her social support network, I would identify individuals in the patient's life, such as family members or close friends. Engaging in conversations with these individuals can be beneficial because they may have insights into the patient's emotional well-being and daily functioning. I would ask Questions like: “Could you please share any observations regarding alterations you may have noticed in the patient's behavior, mood, or sleep patterns following her husband's passing?” Family members and close friends are often the first to detect significant shifts in a person's behavior and emotional state. Their observations can offer valuable insights into the patient's emotional condition and the way the loss of her husband has affected her daily life.
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Explain what, if any, physical exams, and diagnostic tests would be appropriate for the patient and how the results would be used.
In evaluating a 75-year-old patient with a chief complaint of insomnia and depression, diabetes (DM), and hypertension (HTN), a thorough assessment should include both physical exams and diagnostic tests: A physical examination should include checking blood pressure, heart rate, heart sounds, peripheral pulses, respiratory rate, and temperature. It should also involve assessing the patient's overall appearance and evaluating their general health. In addition, assessing mental status, cognitive function, and neurological signs can help identify any neurological issues that may be contributing to sleep disturbances. Consider arranging a sleep study, also known as polysomnography (PSG). This medical test monitors various physiological functions while a person sleeps.
Diagnostic Tests include the following Blood Tests: Complete Blood Count (CBC) will check for anemia or other blood-related issues that can affect sleep and overall health; a Comprehensive Metabolic Panel (CMP), assess kidney and liver function, electrolytes, and glucose levels; The HbA1c (Glycated Hemoglobin) test can monitor her long-term blood glucose control, can provide valuable insights into her diabetes management. The results of these exams and tests will inform a comprehensive treatment plan tailored to the patient's specific needs.
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List a differential diagnosis for the patient. Identify the one that you think is most likely and explain why.
When assessing a patient with insomnia, along with chronic medical conditions like diabetes and hypertension, this patient likely has Major Depressive Disorder (MDD). She had no history of MDD before her husband's passing, and the current worsening of her depression may be attributed to his death. Although anxiety can cause insomnia problems, MDD with Bereavement seems most likely. However, we need to ensure there aren't other underlying causes, such as sleep problems or medical issues. To do that, we should conduct thorough assessments and laboratory tests. She needs to seek help from both her regular doctor and a mental health professional to find the right treatment and support.
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List two pharmacologic agents and their dosing that would be appropriate for the patient's antidepressant therapy based on pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics. From a mechanism of action perspective, provide a rationale for why you might choose one agent over the other.
When selecting pharmacologic agents for this 75-year-old patient, the choice of antidepressant therapy should consider pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics. Reduced kidney and liver function in elderly individuals can potentially affect both pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics.
SSRIs, such as sertraline (Zoloft) and escitalopram (Lexapro), are two preferred for elderly patients. They are generally well-tolerated and have a lower risk of certain side effects, such as sedation or anticholinergic effects, which can be problematic for older adults. Sertraline (Zoloft) 150mg once daily or Escitalopram (Lexapro) 20 mg daily would be appropriate for this patient.
The patient has been taking Sertraline (Zoloft), her start dose was 100mg daily; increase slowly, no more than a maximum Dose of 200 mg once daily; sertraline increases serotonin levels and can be effective in treating depression. Escitalopram is considered perhaps the best-tolerated SSRI, with the fewest cytochrome P450 (CYP450)-mediated drug interactions. (Stahl, 2021). Escitalopram (Lexapro) 20 mg daily is also the appropriate choice.
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For the drug therapy you select, identify any contraindications to use or alterations in dosing that may need to be considered based on ethical prescribing or decision-making. Discuss why the contraindication/alteration you identify exists. That is, what would be problematic with the use of this drug in individuals based on ethical prescribing guidelines or decision-making?
When prescribing antidepressant therapy, it's important to consider drug contraindications and alterations. For the selected antidepressant, escitalopram (Lexapro), don't use it with MAOIs or within 14 days after stopping an MAOI to prevent serotonin syndrome. This is a contraindication due to the risk of serotonin syndrome, a potentially life-threatening condition characterized by agitation, confusion, rapid heart rate, and other symptoms. Escitalopram is primarily metabolized in the liver; it should be used with caution in patients with severe hepatic impairment or elderly with decreased liver function. In such cases, a lower initial dose and slower titration may be considered, as drug clearance may be reduced.
In all cases, ethical prescribing involves a thorough assessment of the patient's medical history, medication history, and potential contraindications. Dosing adjustments, when necessary, should be made to maximize therapeutic benefits while minimizing risks and adverse effects.
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Include any “checkpoints” (i.e., follow-up data at Week 4, 8, 12, etc.), and indicate any therapeutic changes that you might make based on possible outcomes that may happen given your treatment options chosen.
In depression treatment, scheduled follow-up appointments are vital for assessing progress, managing side effects, and adjusting treatment. Common intervals are every 4 weeks. At the checkpoint, like follow-up data at weeks 4, 8, 12, etc., make treatment decisions based on the patient's response, side effects, and goals. If there's significant improvement with few side effects, stick with the current dose. If there's limited improvement or major side effects, consider increasing the dose (if not already at the maximum) or trying a different antidepressant. In cases of long-term remission with a low risk of recurrence, think about tapering or discontinuing the medication.
At Week 4 (four weeks after initiating treatment), it's the time to evaluate the patient's initial response to medication. Inquire about changes in mood, sleep patterns, energy levels, and any side effects.
At Week 8 (eight weeks after starting treatment), it's time to reassess the patient's mood and overall well-being. Keep an eye on side effects, whether they're taking the medication as prescribed, any changes in their medical conditions, and any suicidal ideation.
At Week 12 (12 weeks after starting treatment), continue monitoring the patient's mood and how they're responding to treatment. Check for any signs that their depression might be coming back or getting worse.
Ongoing Follow-up (Regularly, every 3-6 months): Continue to monitor the patient's mental health, medication adherence, and any emerging side effects. Evaluate the need for ongoing treatment.
Reference:
Levenson JC, Kay DB, Buysse DJ. The pathophysiology of insomnia. Chest. 2015 Apr;147(4):1179-1192. doi: 10.1378/chest.14-1617. PMID: 25846534; PMCID: PMC4388122.
Stahl, S. M. (2021). Stahl's essential psychopharmacology: Neuroscientific basis and practical applications (5th Ed.) Cambridge University Press.
Lexapro Labeling-508; Reference ID: 4036381 https://www.fda.gov/media/135185/download
please follow all directions
After studying Module 2: Lecture Materials & Resources, discuss the following:
Submission Instructions:
Analyze the subjective portion of the note. List additional information that should be included in the documentation.
Analyze the objective portion of the note. List additional information that should be included in the documentation.
Is the assessment supported by the subjective and objective information? Why or why not?What diagnostic tests would be appropriate for this case, and how would the results be used to make a diagnosis?
Would you reject/accept the current diagnosis? Why or why not? Identify three possible conditions that may be considered as a differential diagnosis for this patient. Explain your reasoning using at least three different references from current evidence-based literature.
Explore the factors contributing to the development and recurrence of UTIs, such as urinary stasis, urinary catheterization, and antibiotic resistance. How can nurse practitioners assess and address these risk factors in patient care to prevent UTIs and minimize recurrence?
Introduction
The health care industry is always striving to improve patient outcomes and attain organizational goals. Nurses can play a critical role in achieving these goals; one way to encourage nurse participation in larger organizational efforts is to create a shared vision and team goals (Mulvale et al., 2016). Participation in interdisciplinary teams can also offer nurses opportunities to share their expertise and leadership skills, fostering a sense of ownership and collegiality.
You are encouraged to complete the Budgeting for Nurses activity before you develop the plan proposal. The activity consists of seven questions that will allow you the opportunity to check your knowledge of budgeting basics and as well as the value of financial resource management. The information gained from completing this formative will promote success with the Interdisciplinary Plan Proposal. Completing this activity also demonstrates your engagement in the course, requires just a few minutes of your time, and is not graded.
Demonstration of Proficiency
· Competency 1: Explain strategies for managing human and financial resources to promote organizational health.
· Explain organizational resources, including a financial budget, needed for the plan to be a success and the impacts on those resources if nothing is done, related to the improvements sought by the plan.
· Competency 2: Explain how interdisciplinary collaboration can be used to achieve desired patient and systems outcomes.
· Describe an objective and predictions for an evidence-based interdisciplinary plan to achieve a specific objective related to improving patient or organizational outcomes.
· Explain the collaboration needed by an interdisciplinary team to improve the likelihood of achieving the plan’s objective. Include best practices of interdisciplinary collaboration from the literature.
· Competency 4: Explain how change management theories and leadership strategies can enable interdisciplinary teams to achieve specific organizational goals.
· Explain a change theory and a leadership strategy, supported by relevant evidence, that are most likely to help an interdisciplinary team succeed in collaborating and implementing, or creating buy-in for, the project plan.
· Competency 5: Apply professional, scholarly, evidence-based communication strategies to impact patient, interdisciplinary team, and systems outcomes.
· Organize content so ideas flow logically with smooth transitions; contains few errors in grammar/punctuation, word choice, and spelling.
· Apply APA formatting to in-text citations and references, exhibiting nearly flawless adherence to APA format.
Reference
Mulvale, G., Embrett, M., & Shaghayegh, D. R. (2016). 'Gearing up' to improve interprofessional collaboration in primary care: A systematic review and conceptual framework.
BMC Family Practice,
17.
Professional Context
This assessment will allow you to describe a plan proposal that includes an analysis of best practices of interprofessional collaboration, change theory, leadership strategies, and organizational resources with a financial budget that can be used to solve the problem identified through the interview you conducted in the prior assessment.
Scenario
Having reviewed the information gleaned from your professional interview and identified the issue, you will determine and present an objective for an interdisciplinary intervention to address the issue.
Note: You will not be expected to implement the plan during this course. However, the plan should be evidence-based and realistic within the context of the issue and your interviewee's organization.
Instructions
For this assessment, use the context of the organization where you conducted your interview to develop a viable plan for an interdisciplinary team to address the issue you identified. Define a specific patient or organizational outcome or objective based on the information gathered in your interview.
The goal of this assessment is to clearly lay out the improvement objective for your planned interdisciplinary intervention of the issue you identified. Additionally, be sure to further build on the leadership, change, and collaboration research you completed in the previous assessment. Look for specific, real-world ways in which those strategies and best practices could be applied to encourage buy-in for the plan or facilitate the implementation of the plan for the best possible outcome.
Using the
Interdisciplinary Plan Proposal Template [DOCX]
Download Interdisciplinary Plan Proposal Template [DOCX]will help you stay organized and concise. As you complete each section of the template, make sure you apply APA format to in-text citations for the evidence and best practices that inform your plan, as well as the reference list at the end.
Additionally, be sure that your plan addresses the following, which corresponds to the grading criteria in the scoring guide. Please study the scoring guide carefully so you understand what is needed for a distinguished score.
· Describe an objective and predictions for an evidence-based interdisciplinary plan to achieve a specific goal related to improving patient or organizational outcomes.
· Explain a change theory and a leadership strategy, supported by relevant evidence, that is most likely to help an interdisciplinary team succeed in collaborating and implementing, or creating buy-in for, the project plan.
· Explain the collaboration needed by an interdisciplinary team to improve the likelihood of achieving the plan’s objective. Include best practices of interdisciplinary collaboration from the literature.
· Explain organizational resources, including a financial budget, needed for the plan to succeed and the impacts on those resources if the improvements described in the plan are not made.
· Communicate the interdisciplinary plan, with writing that is clear, logically organized, and professional, with correct grammar and spelling, using current APA style.
Additional Requirements
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Length of submission: Use the provided template. Remember that part of this assessment is to make the plan easy to understand and use, so it is critical that you are clear and concise. Most submissions will be 2–4 pages in length. Be sure to include a reference page at the end of the plan.
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Number of references: Cite a minimum of 3 sources of scholarly or professional evidence that support your central ideas. Resources should be no more than 5 years old.
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APA formatting: Make sure that in-text citations and reference list follow current APA style.
Note: Faculty may use the Writing Feedback Tool when grading this assessment. The
Writing Feedback Tool is designed to provide you with guidance and resources to develop your writing based on five core skills. You will find writing feedback in the Scoring Guide for the assessment, once your work has been evaluated.
Portfolio Prompt: Remember to save the final assessment to your ePortfolio so that you may refer to it as you complete the final Capstone course.
Module 04 Content
1.
Top of Form
You are a Training Specialist hired by Universal Medical Supplies, Inc. This organization has been experiencing low productivity and errors in communication in the workplace. As part of an ongoing professional development series, the Vice President of the Human Resources department has tasked you with creating Critical Thinking training materials. The materials will be presented in many forms and by various means to help improve productivity and communication in the organization.
As part of the company’s training plan, they want to provide articles for the staff on the company’s intranet as required reading prior to other training activities. You will create one of those articles in the form of a blog post. It should provide an overview and give concrete examples of logical fallacies being used in the news and social media.
Instructions
Use online resources to create a blog post that illustrates how logical fallacies and audience manipulation appear in the news and social media. Social media may include sites like Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and others.
Your blog post should be a minimum of 5 paragraphs that includes the following elements:
· An introduction to the topic of logical fallacies.
· 2 examples of audience manipulation in the
news with a clickable link to the articles inserted in the blog post. Explain each fallacy example and how it is being used to manipulate the audience.
· 2 examples of audience manipulation in
social media. Explain each fallacy example and how it is being used to manipulate the audience. The two examples can be from the same or different social media sites. Example: One from Facebook and one from Twitter. Insert a screenshot image of each social media post.
· A summarizing paragraph.
· References with links to your sources.
Write your blog post in a Word document. Be sure to proofread for grammar and spelling.
For assistance with logical fallacies in advertising, news, and social media, please see:
For assistance with writing a blog post, see:
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Blog Writing: Tips and Best Practices to Keep Readers Engaged
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The Art of Digital Marketing
Bottom of Form
Hospitals have noises that are buzzing day and night. Emergency Rooms, ICU’s and monitored patient floors to mention a few, have high rates of noise saturation. The most common attribution to the noise is alarms. Alarms are designed to alert staff of a change or potential change in patient status (Hebda et al., 2019). Often, the alarm going off is false or has no patient threat. This is due to parameters not being set, patches not sticking, or positioning of a sensor. This can cause alarm fatigue, “The desensitization of a clinician to an alarm stimulus that results from sensory overload causing the response of an alarm to be delayed or missed” (West et al., 2014).
The result of alarm fatigue can lead to harmful patient situations. For example, if a nurse on a busy med-surg floor has several patients on beds with alarms, patients with IV pumps infusing and on telemetry monitoring, the alarm noise from all the devices could cause the nurse to tone out some of the sounds. If one of her patient’s bed alarms continues to go off repeatedly and every time she enters the patient’s room, finds the patient in bed, she determines the sensor is set to sensitive for the patient. But if the sensor is not reset, and the alarm continues to go off, the nurse may start to ignore the alarm. The last time the alarm sounds, the patient does get out of bed and falls, injuring his hip. This can turn into a legal issue as the safety measure was in place to protect the patient from harm, but due to a failure to change the bed setting, and the nurse’s desensitization of the alarm, the patient had a poor outcome. There is an ethical responsibility for the nurse to assess the injured patient, report the fall to appropriate change according to hospital policy and discuss the incident with the patient or family members. According to Kadivar et al., (2017), that despite measures put into place in the health care setting, there are still numerous threats posed to patient safety.
Evidence suggests that alarm fatigue is a patient safety and quality concern. As health care delivery becomes more digitalized, it is increasingly important to develop a safety culture to address alarm fatigue. The research suggests establishing safe alarm management and response processes. The use of multilevel sharing practices and prevention strategies is also a way to collaborate with multidisciplinary teams on strategies for reduction in alarm fatigue (Winter et al., 2021). By decreasing the number of false alarms with use of proper management, nurses can better care for patients needs without disruptions. Thus, reduce potential missed or ignored alarms resulting in poor patient outcomes.
References:
Kadivar, M., ManooKian, A., Asgharican., & Zarvani, A. (2017). Ethical and legal aspects of patient's safety: A clinical case report.
Journal of Medical Ethics and History of Medicine,
10, 15.
Winters, B., Slota, J., & Bilimoria, K. (2021). Safety Culture as a Patient Safety Practice for Alarm Fatigue.
Journal of the American Medical Association,
326(12), 1207-1208.
https://doi.org/chamberlainuniversity.idm.oclc.org/10.1001/jama.2021.8316
Hebda, T., Hunter, K., & Czar, P. (2018). Handbook of Informatics for Nurses & Healthcare Professionals (6th ed.). Pearson Learning Solutions.
https://ambassadored.vitalsource.com/books/9781323903148
West, P., Abbott, P., & Probst, P. (2014). Alarm fatigue: A concept analysis.
Online Journal of Nursing Informatics,
18(2), 1.
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