This level of prevention includes immunizations, smoking prevention, and health education.
What is Primary Prevention?
This nurse founded modern nursing after demonstrating that sanitation reduced mortality during the Crimean War.
Who is Florence Nightingale?
This ethical principle refers to telling the truth.
What is Veracity?
Before identifying community problems, the nurse should first assess these.
What are the community's strengths/assets?
This framework is used to write searchable clinical questions.
What is PICOT?
Unlike equality, this principle provides people with what they need to achieve similar health outcomes.
What is Equity?
This physician is considered the Father of Epidemiology after tracing a cholera outbreak to a contaminated water pump.
Who is John Snow?
Stopping a medication after a severe allergic reaction demonstrates this ethical principle.
What is Nonmaleficence?
Data collected through interviews, windshield surveys, and direct observation are considered this type of data.
What is Primary Data?
This type of evidence is considered the strongest.
What are Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses?
These are the three core public health functions.
What are Assessment, Policy Development, and Assurance?
This organization is responsible for disease surveillance and prevention in the United States.
What is the CDC?
A nurse contacts a legislator about safe staffing laws. This is what type of advocacy?
What is Legislative (Political) Advocacy?
The CHANGE Model evaluates these five community sectors.
What is community-at-large, community institutions/organizations, health care, schools, and worksites?
These are the three major factors used when evaluating evidence.
What are Quality, Quantity, and Consistency?
This health behavior theory states that people are more likely to change when they perceive susceptibility, severity, benefits, fewer barriers, and self-efficacy.
What is the Health Belief Model?
This federal agency regulates the safety of foods, medications, and medical devices.
What is the FDA?
According to the ANA Code of Ethics, nurses are expected to advocate for this broad concept to eliminate inequalities.
What is Social Justice?
A nurse drives through a neighborhood evaluating housing, sidewalks, grocery stores, and transportation. This assessment method is called what?
What is a Windshield Survey?
Place the PDSA cycle in the correct order.
What is Plan, Do, Study, Act?
A city renovates mold-infested apartments to reduce asthma attacks. This is an example of this type of intervention.
What is an upstream intervention?
This organization is responsible for improving the health of children worldwide through immunizations, nutrition programs, clean water initiatives, and emergency relief.
What is UNICEF?
List the six client rights discussed in the lecture.
What is Self-determination, Confidentiality, Access to health care, Choice, Information, Redress?
Name the five steps of the Strategic Prevention Framework.
What is assessment, capacity, planning, implementation, and evaluation?
A nurse reads one research article and changes practice based only on that article. This is called what?
What is Research Utilization (not Evidence-Based Practice)?