Health promotion and addressing risk, social, and genetic factors to prevent development of disease.
What is primary prevention
The first and second essential services include;
1. Assess and monitor population health and,
2. Investigate, diagnose and address health hazards.
What is the Core Public Health Function of Assessment?
Help identify key problems and assets in a community.
What is a community health assessment?
Art; music; dress; dance; religious beliefs; family role expectations.
What are cultural patterns?
The founder of community health nursing in the U. S. and the Henry Street Settlement in New York City.
Who is Lillian Wald?
Screening, surveillance, early detection and treatment of a disease.
What is secondary prevention?
Build and maintain organizational infrastructure and improve and innovate through evaluation, research and quality improvement.
What is Assurance?
Comprehensive; population-focused; setting specific; assets-based; rapid needs; health impact
What are the different types of community assessments?
Shared heritage, language and country of origin.
What is ethnicity?
The ability of an instrument (BP cuff) to give consistent results on repeated trials.
What is reliability?
Rehabilitation, preventing complications, improving quality of life, prevention of disability and premature death.
What is tertiary Prevention
Build a diverse and skilled workforce and enable equitable access.
What is the Core Public Health Function of Assurance.
Summary which occurs at the end of program implementation. It judges the merit of the program and whether or not the program achieved the intended change or outcomes.
What is a summative evaluation?
Assigning common negative or positive characteristics to everyone within a group without recognizing individual differences.
What is stereotyping?
The degree to which the instrument (BP cuff) measures what is suppose to measure.
What is validity?
The development of a manual or physical skill such as an injection (Domain).
What occurs in the psychomotor domain?
Communicate effectively to inform and educate while supporting, strengthening and mobilizing communities and partnerships.
What is policy development?
Census data; crime report data; air quality reports; national health survey data; morbidity mortality rates.
What are secondary data sources?
A continual process of self-awareness about one's own culture and a commitment to learning and self reflection to provide care to those who differ from themselves.
What is cultural humility?
Conditions in the environments where people are born, live, learn, work, play, worship, and age that affect a wide range of health, functioning, and quality-of-life outcomes and risks.
What are the Social Determinants of Health?
Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act
What is FERPA?
Everyone has fair and just opportunity to achieve good health and well being.
What is equity?
Population; NANDA; Related To; As evidence by
What are the 4 parts of a Community Health Nursing diagnosis.
The process of integrating native and traditional immigrant cultural values with dominant cultural values, adopting a new culture without denying ones heritage.
What is acculturation?
Data-driven national objectives to improve health and well-being over the next decade.
What is Healthy People 2030?