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Chapter 2 Health Promotion and Disease Prevention. Health and Illness. Community-based care concentrates on true “health care” activities to promote health and prevent illness and injury. Shift in thinking from a focus on sick care to disease and injury prevention. Definition of Health.
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Health and Illness • Community-based care concentrates on true “health care” activities to promote health and prevent illness and injury. • Shift in thinking from a focus on sick care to disease and injury prevention
Definition of Health • Health: state of physical, mental, and social well-being and not merely absence of disease or infirmity (WHO, 1986) • Updated WHO definition (2008)included characteristics, behaviors, and physical, social, and economic environment • Seen as a resource for everyday living
Health-Illness Continuum Care in the acute care settings is usually directed to resolving immediate health problems. In the community, care focuses on maximizing individual potential for self-care. The client assumes responsibility for health care decisions and care provision, with the client’s ability to function the primary concern.
Healthy People 2020 Missions • To identify nationwide health improvement priorities • To increase public awareness and understanding of the determinants of health, disease, and disability and the opportunities for progress • To provide measurable objectives and goals applicable at the national, state, and local levels
Healthy People 2020 Missions (cont.) • To engage multiple sectors to take actions to strengthen policies and improve practices that are driven by the best available evidence and knowledge • To identify critical research, evaluation, and data collection needs
Healthy People 2020 Goals • Attain higher quality, longer lives free of preventable disease, disability, injury, and premature death • Achieve health equity, eliminate disparities, and improve the health of all groups • Create social and physical environments that promote good health for all • Promote quality of life, healthy development, and healthy behaviors across all life stages
Health Promotion Versus Disease or Injury Prevention? • Health promotion: activities to help individuals change their lifestyle to move toward a state of optimal health (a balance of physical, emotional, social, spiritual, and intellectual health) • Disease prevention: activities undertaken to avoid the occurrence of a disease or injury and minimize the consequences. Intended to prevent future illness. • Health protection: environmental or regulatory measures that confer protection on population groups
Levels of Prevention • Primary prevention: prevention of the initial occurrence of a disease or an injury • Secondary prevention: early identification with prompt intervention to prevent or limit disability • Tertiary prevention: assistance to halt further disease progress and to meet one’s potential and maximize quality of life
Levels of Public Health Practice • Individual-focused practice • Changes knowledge, attitudes, beliefs, practices, and behaviors of individuals • Practice level directed at individuals alone or as part of a family, class, or group • Receive services because they are part of population at risk
Levels of Public Health Practice (cont.) • Systems-focused practice • Changes organizations, policies, laws, and power structures • Focus is not directly on individuals and communities but focuses on systems that impact health. • More effective and long lasting way to impact population health
Levels of Public Health Practice (cont.) • Community-focused practice • Changes community norms, community attitudes, community awareness, community practices, and community behaviors • Directed toward entire population, groups within the community, or target groups • Measured in terms of what proportion of population actually changes
Levels of Public Health Practice (cont.) • Population-based • Public health interventions are population-based if they consider all levels of practice. • Represented by all three inner rings of the intervention wheel • Interventions may be focused at population or on individuals and families known to be at risk.
Public Health Interventions • Surveillance • Disease and other health event investigation • Outreach • Screening • Case-finding • Referral and follow-up • Case management
Public Health Interventions (cont.) • Delegation functions • Health teaching • Counseling • Consultation • Collaboration • Coalition building • Community organizing
Public Health Interventions (cont.) • Advocacy • Social marketing • Policy development • Policy enforcement
Summary • Nursing practice has evolved as a reflection of society’s need to focus on health rather than illness. • Healthy People 2020 provides a framework to put disease prevention into action. • Prevention is a key concept in community-based care.
Question • Student nurses go into a neighborhood door-to-door. They identify individuals who have not had flu shots and direct them to the local community center’s flu clinics. This is an example of • A. Screening • B. Outreach • C. Health teaching • D. Surveillance
Answer • B. Outreach • Rationale: Outreach is locating populations of interest or populations at risk and providing them with information about the nature of the concern, what can be done about it, and how services can be obtained.
Question • A nurse meets with Edna, an elderly woman who has been hospitalized with a broken hip, and her family. They discuss what self-care Edna can manage on her own and how the family may be able to assist her once she goes home and determine the community resources available to assist with her care. These actions would be considered • A. Health teaching • B. Case management • C. Collaboration • D. Case-finding
Answer • B. Case management • Rationale: Case management optimizes the self-care capabilities of individuals and families and the capacity of systems and communities to coordinate and provide services.
Question • The nurse is providing blood pressure screening at the local senior center. This is an example of which level of prevention? • A. Health promotion • B. Primary prevention • C. Secondary prevention • D. Tertiary prevention
Answer • C. Secondary prevention • Rationale: Screening is considered secondary prevention because the nurse is identifying the presence of disease.