Community Health Nursing Lecture
Community Health Nursing Lecture
Community Health Nursing Lecture
COURSE DESCRIPTION
This course deals with concepts, principles, theories and technique in the
provision of basic care in terms of health promotion, disease prevention,
restoration and maintenance and rehabilitation at the individual and family
level. It includes the study of the Philippine Health Care Delivery System,
national health situation and the global context of family as clients in
community setting utilizing the nursing process.
COURSE OUTLINE
Unit 1 Overview of Community Health Nursing/Public Health Nursing
Week
in
1,2
the Philippines
Week
Unit 2 The Health Care Delivery System
3,4
Week Unit 3 The Family & Filipino Cultures Values, and Practices in
5,6 relation to Health Care of individual and Family
Week
Unit 4 Family Nursing Process
7,8,9
Week 10 MIDTERM EXAMINATION
Week 11 Unit 5 Community health Nursing Activities
Week Unit 6 Records in Family Health Nursing Practice & New Technologies
12,13 Related to Public Health Electronic Information
Week
Unit 7 DOH Programs Related to Family Health
14,15
Week 16 Unit 8 Ethical Considerations in Community Health Nursing
Unit 9 Health-Related Entrepreneurial Activities in the Community
Week 17
Setting
Week 18 FINAL EXAMINATION
HEALTH
According to WHO Health is defined as a state of complete physical,
mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or
infirmity.
The state of being free from illness or injury.
The enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of health is one of
the fundamental rights of every human being without distinction of race,
religion, political belief, economic or social condition.
The health of all peoples is fundamental to the attainment of peace and
security and is dependent on the fullest cooperation of individuals and
States.
The achievement of any state in the promotion and protection of health
is of value to all.
COMMUNITY HEALTH
Community health refers to the health status of the members of the
community, to the problems affecting their health and to the totality of
the health care provided for the community.
Community health is a branch of public health which focuses on people
and their role as determinants of their own and other people's health.
Aims of CHN
To promote health and efficiency.
To prevent and control of diseases and disabilities.
To prolong life through need-based health care.
Mission of CHN
Health Promotion
Health Protection
Health Balance
Disease prevention
Social Justice
Philosophy of CHN
According to Dr. M. Shetland the philosophy of CHN is based on the
worth and dignity of man.
The community is the patient in CHN, the family is the unit of care and
there are four levels of clientele: individual, family, population group
(those who share common characteristics, developmental stages and common
exposure to health problems - e.g. children, elderly), and the
community.
In CHN, the client is considered as an ACTIVE partner NOT PASSIVE
recipient of care.
CHN practice is affected by developments in health technology, in
particular, changes in society, in general.
The goal of CHN is achieved through multi-sectoral efforts CHN is a
part of health care system and the larger human services system.
Responsibilities of CHN
Be a part in developing an overall health plan, its implementation and
evaluation for communities.
Provide quality nursing services to the three levels of clientele.
Maintain coordination/linkages with other health team members,
NGO/government agencies in the Provision of public health services.
Conduct researches relevant to CHN services to improve provision of
health care.
Provide opportunities for professional growth and continuing education
for staff development.
STANDARDS IN CHN
Theory
Data Collection
Diagnosis
Planning
Intervention
Evaluation
Quality Assurance and Professional Development
Interdisciplinary Collaboration
Research
DEFINITION OF TERMS
HEALTH CARE DELIVERY SYSTEM (HCDS)
It is the totality of all policies, facilities, equipment, products,
human resources and services which address the health needs, problems
and concerns of the people. It is large, complex, multi-level and
multi-disciplinary. HCDS is often used to describe the way in which
health care is provided to the people.
It is the network of health facilities and personnel which carries out
the task of rendering health care to the people. (Williams-Tungpalan,
1981)
HEALTH CARE SYSTEM (HCS)
It is a complex set of organizations interacting to provide an array of
health services (Dizon, 1977).
It is an organized plan of health services (Miller-Keane, 1987)
HEALTH CARE DELIVERY (HCD)
It is rendering health care services to the people (Williams-Tungpalan,
1981).
The following are the eight (8) essential elements of primary health care:
1. Education for Health
This is one of the potent methodologies for information dissemination.
It promotes the partnership of both the family members and health
workers in the promotion of health as well as prevention of illness.
2. Locally Endemic Disease Control
The control of endemic disease focuses on the prevention of its
occurrence to reduce morbidity rate. Example Malaria control and
Schistosomiasis control.
3.Expanded Program on Immunization
This program exists to control the occurrence of preventable illnesses
especially of children below 6 years old. Immunizations on
poliomyelitis, measles, tetanus, diphtheria and other preventable
disease are given for free by the government and ongoing program of the
DOH
4. Maternal and Child Health and Family Planning
The mother and child are the most delicate members of the community.
So, the protection of the mother and child to illness and other risks
would ensure good health for the community. The goal of Family Planning
includes spacing of children and responsible parenthood.
5. Environmental Sanitation and Promotion of Safe Water Supply
Environmental Sanitation is defined as the study of all factors in the
man's environment, which exercise or may exercise deleterious effect on
his well-being and survival.
Water is a basic need for life and one factor in man's environment.
Water is necessary for the maintenance of healthy lifestyle. Safe Water
and Sanitation is necessary for basic promotion of health
6. Nutrition and Promotion of Adequate Food Supply
One basic need of the family is food. And if food is properly prepared
then one may be assured healthy family. There are many food resources
found in the communities but because of faulty preparation and lack of
knowledge regarding proper food planning. Malnutrition is one of the
problems that we have in the country.
7. Treatment of Communicable Diseases and Common Illness
The diseases spread through direct contact pose a great risk to those
who can be infected. Tuberculosis is one of the communicable diseases
continuously occupies the top ten causes of death.
Most communicable diseases are also preventable. The Government focuses
on the prevention, control and treatment of these illnesses
8. Supply of Essential Drugs
This focuses on the information campaign on the utilization and
acquisition of drugs. In response to this campaign, the GENERIC ACT of
the Philippines is enacted.
I. INTRODUCTION
This topic will give the student knowledge about a family, how does it
function, as a client, as a system and its tasks, functions and roles. This
concept deals with the characteristic of a healthy family and the different
Filipino cultures values, and practices in relation to health care of
individual and family.
TYPES OF FAMILY
There are many types of family. They change overtime as a consequence
of BIRTH, DEATH, MIGRATION, SEPARATION and GROWTH OF FAMILY MEMBERS.
Structure of Family:
1. NUCLEAR- a father, a mother with child/children living together but
apart from both sets of parents and other relatives.
2. EXTENDED- composed of two or more nuclear families economically and
socially related to each other. Multigenerational, including married
brothers and sisters, and the families.
3. SINGLE PARENT-divorced or separated, unmarried or widowed male or
female with at least one child
4. BLENDED/RECONSTITUTED-a combination of two families with children from
both families and sometimes children of the newly married couple. It is
also a remarriage with children from previous marriage.
COMPOUND-one man/woman with several spouses
COMMUNAL-more than one monogamous couple sharing resources
COHABITING/LIVEIN-unmarried couple living together
GAY/LESBIAN-homosexual couple living together with or without children
NO-KIN- a group of at least two people sharing a relationship and
exchange support who have no legal or blood tie to each other
FOSTER- substitute family for children whose parents are unable to care
for them
FUNCTIONAL TYPE:
1. FAMILY OF PROCREATION- refers to the family you yourself created.
2. FAMILY OF ORIENTATION-refers to the family where you came from.
STAGES OF A FAMILY
According to MAGLAYA there are 7 developmental stages of a family:
STAGES TASKS
1. Beginning Establishing a mutually satisfying marriage
Family/Marriage & Planning to have or not to have children
Family Period of adjustment like routines in sleeping, eating,
chores, sexual and economic aspects
2. Child-bearing Having and adjusting the infant
family Supporting the needs of all three members Renegotiating
martial relationships
3. Family with a Adjusting to cost a family life
pre-school Children Adapting to the needs of pre-school children
Coping with parental loss of energy and privacy
Busy family children at this stage demand a great deal
of time related to growth and development needs and
safety considerations.
4. Family with Adjusting to the activity of the growing children
school age Children Promoting joint decisions between children and parents
Important responsibility of preparing their children to
be able to function in a complex world while at the
same time maintaining their own satisfying marriage
relationship. Encouraging and supporting children’s
educational achievements
5. Family with Maintaining open communication among members
teenagers and young Supporting ethical and moral values within the family
adult Balancing freedom with responsibility of teenagers
Releasing young adults with appropriate rituals and
assistance
Family allows the adolescents more freedom and prepare
them for their own life as technology advances gap
between generations increase
6. Post-parental Strengthening martial relationships
family Maintaining supportive home base Preparing for
retirement
Children leave to set their own household-appears to
represent the breaking of the family returns to two
partners nuclear unit
Period from empty nest to retirement
7. Aging Family Maintaining ties with younger and older generations
Adjusting for retirement
Adjusting to loss of spouse and closing family house
FAMILY ROLES
Nurturing figure– primary caregiver to children or any dependent
member.
Provider – provides the family’s basic needs.
Decision maker– makes decisions particularly in areas such as finance,
resolution, of conflicts, use of leisure time etc.
Problem-solver– resolves family problems to maintain unity and
solidarity.
Health manager– monitors the health and ensures that members return to
health appointments. Gate keeper-determines what information will be
released from the family or what new information can be introduced.
I. INTRODUCTION
This concept will provide the student knowledge in the conduct of family
health nursing process. This will guide the student in dealing with families
as clients in the community by utilizing the different steps of family health
nursing process, from assessment, identification of family health problems,
formulating family nursing diagnosis, planning, implementation and
evaluation. This will equip the student the different approach and strategies
to deal with identified family health problems.
LEARNING CONTENT
Review of the Nursing Process
It is a scientific and systematized approach to health to care for
individuals, families, and illness prevention
It is the means by which nurses address the health needs and problems
of their clients
It is a systematic, client-centered method or structuring the delivery
of nursing care
Nursing process is a systematic, rational method of planning and
providing individualized nursing care.
The Purpose of Nursing Process
To identify client’s health status, actual or potential healthcare
problems or need.
To establish plans to meet the identified needs and to deliver specific
interventions to meet those needs.
It provides a framework in which to practice nursing.
Characteristics of a nursing process:
Dynamic and cyclic
Patient centered
Goal directed
Open and Flexible
Problem Oriented
Planned
Universally accepted
Interpersonal and collaborative
Holistic
Systematic
Benefits of Nursing Process
1. Improves the quality of care that the client receives
2. Ensures a high level of client participation together with continuous
evaluation designed to meet the client’s unique needs
3. Enables nurses to use time and resources efficiently to both their own
and their client’s benefit
The steps of the Nursing Process
Assessment
Nursing Diagnosis
Planning
Implementation
Evaluation
FAMILY HEALTH
The continuing ability to meet defined functions in interaction with
other social, political, economic and health system.
Possessing the abilities and resources to accomplish family
developmental tasks.
FAMILY HEALTH NURSING PROCESS
Family nursing process is the same, whether the focus is the famiily as
patient or as environment. The goal is to help the family reach and
maintain its maximum health in a given situation.
PRINCIPLES OF FAMILY HEALTH CARE
1. Establishing good professional relationship with the family
2. Proper education and guidance should be provided
3. Gather all relevant information about family to identify problem and
set priorities
4. Provide need-based support and services to the family to improve their
health status
5. Health care services should be provided to the family irrespective of
their age, sex, income, religion, etc.
6. Duplication of health services should be avoided
7. Proper health message to be communicated to family in every contact
STEPS OF FAMILY HEALTH NURSING PROCES
1. ASSESSMENT
2. FORMULATION OF FAMILY NURSING PROBLEM/DIAGNOSIS
3. PLANNING
4. IMPLEMENTATION
5. EVALUATION PHASE
I. ASSESSMENT
Family Health Nursing Assessment
This involves a set of actions by which the nurse measures the status
of the family as a client, its ability to maintain itself as a system
and functioning unit, and its ability to maintain wellness, prevent
control and resolve problems in order to achieve health and well-being
among its members.
Data Collection Data Analysis Diagnosis
DATA COLLECTION
Two important things to ensure Effective and Efficient Data Collection in
Family Nursing Practice:
1. Identify the types of kinds of data needed
2. Specify the methods of data gathering and necessary tools for gathering
data
DATA ANALYSIS – sorting out and classifying or grouping data by type of
nature.
ANALYZE DATA TO IDENTIFY NEEDS AND PROBLEMS
1. Criteria for analysis
2. Process for analysis
o sorting of data
o clustering of related cues
o distinguishing relevant from irrelevant cues
o identifying patterns
o comparing patterns
o interpreting results of comparison
o making inferences and drawing conclusions
NURSING DIAGNOSIS
The end result of the secondary level assessment and a set of family
nursing problems for each health condition or problem
First major phase of nursing process in family health nursing
It involves a set of action by which the nurse measures the status of
the family as a client. Its ability to maintain wellness, prevent,
control or resolve problems in order to achieve health and wellness
among its members
Data about present condition or status of the family are compared
against the norms and standards of personal, social, and environmental
health, system integrity and ability to resolve social problems. The
norms and standards are derived from values, beliefs, principles, rules
or expectation.
III. PLANNING PHASE (FAMILY HEALTH AND NURSING CARE PLAN FORMULATION)
It is based on the analysis of diagnosed health problems and assessment
of family’s ability to resolve problems, establish priorities, setting
goals and objectives, formulating family health nursing care plan.
1. Analysis of diagnosed health problems and assessment of family’s
ability to resolve problems Family’s ability to resolve health
problems can be assessed on the basis of:
a. ability to recognize the presence of health problems
b. ability to make decisions for taking appropriate health action
c. ability to provide desired care to the sick disabled
d. ability to maintain environment conducive to health promotion
maintenance and personnel development
e. ability to utilize community for health care
2. Establish priorities -means rank ordering of the health problems.
SCORING:
1. Divide the score for each of the criteria
2. Divide the score by the highest possible score and multiply by the
weight
3. Sum up the scores for all the criteria. The highest score is 5,
equivalent to the total weight