Steps for Nursing Process
Communities
Data Collection
Healthy Vs. Non-Healthy Family
Community Assessment Vocabulary
100
After implementing interventions, the nurse examines outcomes.
What is evaluation?
100
The nurse understands that this can be the people who live in the same area, the area in which they live, people who share common interests, a nation or society in general.
What is community?
100
a way to gather subjective data by either walking or riding through a community looking at the quality of streets, bridges, types of house materials, people, light, air quality, and stores
What is a windshield survey
100
set goals to meet the needs of each individual family member emotionally, physically, intellectually, and spiritually
What is a healthy family
100
identifying community needs, clarifying problems, and identifying strengths and weaknesses of a community
What is community assessment
200
The nurse has prioritized the unmet needs of a population. A plan has been developed to meet those needs. The next step should be cost effective and multidisciplinary.
What are interventions?
200
The type of community where a nurse does a windshield survey of the City of Waukesha or checks the census for Milwaukee in 2010.
What is a geopolitical community?
200
gathers data by exploration of attitudes within a focused discussion
what are focus groups
200
marital strains, losses, family legal violations, illness, and family care strains
What is an unhealthy family
200
A population or defined group
What is aggregate
300
The step in the nursing process where data is collected from census, interviews, surveys, observations, and library databases, during which the nurse notices a vulnerable population and unmet community needs.
What is identifying problems/diagnosing problems?
300
The nurse recognizes that homeless people, people with disabilities, "communities of solution", and under-served populations fit in this category.
What is a phenomenological community?
300
uses therapeutic conversation and questions, ecomaps and genograms, and acknowledges family strengths
what is a 15 minute family assessment
300
parents might ask their guests to refrain from smoking in the home to reduce the exposure of their children to second-hand smoke that could aggravate their asthma
What is family risk reduction
300
Two or more persons who are joined together by bonds of sharing and emotional closeness
What is a family
400
Accumulation of information gathered by census, various surveys, focus groups, interviews and databases.
What is data collection?
400
Community in its broadest context. Can be across a nation or global.
What is a societal, national or international community?
400
a system of hardware and software used for storage, retrieval, mapping, and analysis of geographic data; draws relationships and associations that are important in community assessments
What is geographic information systems
400
grandparents with early signs of dementia might live with their children and their families
What is intergenerational diversity
400
This involves a physical component of a statistic
What is status
500
The next step after a nurse has identified unmet needs of a community, in which she/he prioritizes problems.
What is plan development?
500
The nurse interviews undocumented workers harvesting crops. A type of community to which these people belong.
What is a phenomenological community?
500
strengths and positive aspects of community are measured in conjunction with what is needed or not actualized; empowerment of all, working together toward a goal
What is asset-based assessment
500
a family assessment that gathers data on groups of behaviors that occur over time; help identify sequences of events as opposed to isolated incidents and provides insight into how groups respond to problems and take action
What is functional health patterns
500
These have a purpose and a defined beginning and end.
What is a group