Community Health
Communicable Disease
Nursing Process
History of Healthcare
Ethical and Legal Obligations
100

A tool to ensure public health programs, services, and policies are adequately meeting goals and objective

Population Health Assessment

100

The resistance of a group to invasion and spread of an infectious agent, based on a high proportion of individual members of the group being resistant to infection

Herd Immunity

100

Apply community health promotion strategies to achieve collaborative community actions and to improve sustainable health outcomes of the community

Community Health Promotion Model

100

The earliest forms of health care in Canada

The practices of First Peoples using traditional medicines and healing practices

100

Nurses uphold principles of justice by safeguarding human rights, equity, and fairness and by promoting the public good

Promoting Justice

200

Public health professionals improve the health of Canadians through healthy public policy, public participation, and community-based interventions.

Health Promotion

200

Are carried and transmitted by blood

Blood Borne Disease

200

An ongoing systematic appraisal of the community.

Community Assessment

200

The earliest form of nursing practised in Canada and has a long and proud history of health promotion.

Community Health Nursing

200

Nurses recognize the importance of privacy and confidentiality and safeguard personal, family, and community information obtained in the context of a professional relationship.

Privacy and Confidentiality

300

 Initiatives are those that prevent conditions that would enable the risk factors for disease from developing

Primordial Prevention

300

Enter the body through the mouth and intestinal tract and affect the digestive system

Enteric Infection

300

Is a diverse group of people or aggregates residing within the boundaries of a community.

A population

300

Canada’s first nurse

Jean Mance

300

Nurses recognize, respect, and promote a person’s right to be informed and make decisions.

Informed Decision Making

400

May entail both personal and communal efforts, such as decreasing environmental risks, enhancing nutritional status, immunizing against communicable diseases, or improving water supplies

Primary Prevention

400

Acquired through the consumption of contaminated food.

Food Borne Infection

400

A view of a community achieved by walking and observing. 

A Windshield Survey

400

Provided a comprehensive array of services from bedside nursing to preventive health teaching.

District or Visiting Nurses

400

Nurses work with persons who have health-care needs or are receiving care to enable them to attain their highest possible level of health and well-being.

Promoting Health and Well Being

500

Those that aim to identify disease processes as early as possible, usually at the preclinical stage, which may reduce the prevalence of the disease by curbing its duration

Secondary Prevention

500

Enter water supplies through fecal contamination from animals or humans to cause enteric illnesses

Water Borne Pathogens

500

An interview with an important member of a community. 

Key Informant

500

Declared primary health care as the guiding vision for achieving health for all people.

The declaration of Alma Ata. 

500

Nurses recognize and respect the intrinsic worth of each person

Promoting Dignity