Providing accessible services to promote the health of populations most at risk for health problems
What is equity?
Define the community, gather data, organize data, analyze data, create a problem list, make a community nursing diagnosis, plan programming, implement the program, and evaluate.
What are the steps in the Community Assessment Model?
The group that suffers the most, by being the most marginalized and vulnerable to disabilities and disease.
Who are the homeless?
The prevention level of the nurse is collaborating with other healthcare professionals on a bioterrorism defense plan.
What is primary prevention?
Ethnical background, religious preferences, family structure, language, food patterns, and medicine and remedies.
What is the parameters of a cultural assessment?
The study of the occurrence and distribution of health-related states or events in specified populations, including the study of the determinants influencing such states, and the application of this knowledge to control the health problems.
What is epidemiology?
Boundaries, Environment, Size, Climate, History, Population
What is the definition of place?
Intentional or negligent act of a caregiver or any other person that causes harm or serious risk of harm to older adults?
What is elder abuse?
Tuberculosis, influenza, and rabies virus fall in this category of agents.
What is Category C Biological Agent?
Toxins, air pollution, water pollution, and contamination.
What are environmental risk factors?
The ongoing systematic collection, analysis, interpretation, and dissemination of specific health data for use in public health.
What is disease surveillance?
awareness, access, availability, affordability, acceptability, appropriateness, and adequacy
What are the seven As of use to evaluate a community's system and service effectiveness?
This population is affected by the income level of caregivers, and faces food insecurity, is at risk for homelessness, and may have difficulty with learning and development.
Who are children?
Smallpox, botulism, anthrax, tularemia, Ebola, and the plague.
What is Category A Biological Agents?
Wars and political unrest, natural and man-made disasters, limited resources and structures in lesser-developed nations, climate change, and nutrition.
What are global health influences?
A collaborative process of assessment, planning, facilitation, care coordination, evaluation, and advocacy for options and services to meet individual and family comprehensive health needs through communication and available resources to promote patient safety, quality of care, and cost-effective outcomes.
What is case management?
This system contains problem classification schemes, intervention themes, and problem rating scales of outcomes.
What is the Omaha System?
Violence, substance use disorder, mental health issues and illness, poverty and homelessness, rural residency, migrant emplotment, veteran status, and diability
What are vulnerable populations?
Prevention medication for anthrax.
What is ciprofloxacin or doxycycline?
Inadequate health insurance, language barriers, social isolation, inconvenient hours, attitudes of healthcare providers, lack of personal or public transportation.
What are barriers to health care?
A graphic illustration of population-based public health practice known as the Public Health Intervention Model and “Minnesota Model."
What is the Intervention Wheel?
Recognize the cues, analyze cues, generate hypothesis, generate solutions, take action, and evaluate the outcomes.
What is the clinical judgment model?
Distances from services, lack of personal and public transportation, and unpredictable weather or travel conditions.
What are barriers to health for rural popluations?
The bacterium Francisella tularensis (F. tularensis) causes this disease from contact with infecting animals.
What is tularemia?
The global health organization.
What is the World Health organization (WHO)?