Evolution of Health
1st, 2nd, or Tertiary
Theorist/Theory
Potpourri
Potpourri II
100
Aggregates with the least amount of disease r/t sanitary conditions.
What were the nomadic or semi nomadic
100
Actions providing early identification and treatment of disease.
What is secondary prevention?
100
Her theory is based on the assumption that self care needs and activities are the primary focus of nursing practice.
Who is Dorothea Orem/ The self-care deficit theory?
100
They are a useful tool in determining morbidity and mortality trends.
What are Vital Statistics?
100
She transformed military health and knew the value of data in influencing policy.
Who was Florence Nightingale?
200
The stage of health evolution were rodent infestation increased and facilitated the spread of plague.
What was the preindustrial cities stage?
200
Actions aiming to maximize recovery and potential.
What is tertiary prevention?
200
It evolved from the premise that the world of the perceiver determines action.
What is the Health Belief Model?
200
Discovered the causative agent for cholera and the tubercle bacillus.
Who was Koch?
200
These are retained because they offer repeated success through the years.
What are folk remedies?
300
Increased industrial waste, air & water pollution, and harsh working conditions took a toll on health.
What occured during the Industrial cities stage?
300
H1N1 Immunization clinics
What is primary prevention?
300
It provided a complement to the HBM and a mechanism for directing attention upstream and examining opportunities for nursing interventions at the populations level. Proposed that there was a deficit between public health needs and the resources.
What was Nancy Milo's Framework for Prevention?
300
Discovered immunizations and rabies vaccine.
Who was Pasteur?
300
Is known for the House on Henry Street as well as school nursing.
Who is Lillian Wald?
400
Infectious disease no longer account for a majority of deaths in the Western world.
What is the present stage?
400
Educate public about the concept of treatment as both prevention and pre-exposure prophylaxis regarding HIV.
What is secondary prevention?
400
Utilizes upstream and downstream actions to make changes in health care.
What is Critical Interactionism?
400
His surgical successes eventually improved when he soaked the dressings and instruments in mixtures of carbolic acid and oil.
Who was Lister?
400
He sought to promote literacy among the poorest of the poor.
Who was Paulo Freire?
500
Disease not always present in a population but flare up on occasion.
What is an epidemic?
500
Mandate immunizations of health care workers for hepatitis A and B.
What is primary prevention?
500
is based on the assumption that all behavior is determined by one's behavioral intentions.
What is the Theory of Reasoned Actions?
500
It does not use threat as a motivator for change.
What is the difference between Pender's Health Promotion Model and the Health Belief Model?
500
He contends that like children adults learn better in a facilitative, nonrestrictive, non structured environment.
Who was Knowles? or what are Knowles's Assumptions about adult learners.
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