community health nursing
TRANSCRIPT
COMMUNITY HEALTH NURSING
What is CHN?
A utilization of NURSING PROCESS Different Clients
Individuals Families Population Group Communities
Promotion of Health Prevention of Disease and Disability and
Rehabilitation
Dr. Araceli Maglaya
Factors Affecting Health
Political Economic Cultural Heredity Environment Socio-Economic
Health Promotion
Directed towards healthy individuals or populations
Focusing on prevention of the emergence of risk factors
such as unhealthy lifestyle behaviors
Levels of Prevention
Primary Level Disease Prevention For individuals who are at risk of developing
a dx Pre-pathogenic stage Deals with removal of risk factors or specific
protection Immunization Food supplementation Malaria or Dengue Prophylaxis
Secondary Level Disease Prevention For individuals in subclinical stage or
asyptomatic or symptomatic stage of a dx Aims to diagnose, treat problems at the
earliest possible time To limit disabilities Screening, case finding, surveillance, tx of
communicable dx
Tertiary Level Disease Prevention For individuals at pathogenic stage of the
dx Deals with reduction of magnitude and
severity of the residual effects of communicable and non communicable dx
Rehab of post stroke pt., control of spread of measles during an epidemic
THEORIES RELATED TO HEALTH PROMOTION
Pender’s Health Promotion Theory
Nora J. Pender (1982, revised, 1996) PhD, RN, Professor in University of Michigan Designed to be a complementary
counterpart to models of health protection Health
A positive, dynamic state not merely the absence of dx
Health Promotion Increasing ones well being
The health promotion model describes the multi dimensional nature of persons as they interact within their environment to pursue health.
The model focuses on following three areas: · Individual characteristics and experiences · Behavior-specific cognitions and affect · Behavioral outcomes
ASSUMPTIONS OF THE HEALTH PROMOTION MODEL
Individuals seek to actively regulate their own behavior.
Individuals in all their biopsychosocial complexity interact with the environment, progressively transforming the environment and being transformed over time.
Health professionals constitute a part of the interpersonal environment, which exerts influence on persons throughout their life span.
Self-initiated reconfiguration of person-environment interactive patterns is essential to behavior change
Bandura’s Self Efficacy Theory
Alberta Bandura Self Efficacy
Is the belief that one has the power to produce that effect by completing a certain task or activity r/t that competency
Relates to a person’s perception of their ability to reach a goal
It is the belief that one is capable of performing in a certain manner to attain certain goals.
It is the expectation that one can master a situation, and produce a positive outcome.
Self-efficacy is an important concept in positive psychology.
Major Concepts
Bandura’s Social Cognitive Model says that there are 3 factors that influence self-efficacy: Behaviors Environment, and personal/cognitive factors.
They all affect each other, but the cognitive factors are important.
Self-efficacy developing from mastery experiences in which goals are achieved through perseverance and overcoming obstacles and from observing others succeed through sustained effort.
Self-efficacy and self-esteem are different concepts, but related.
Self-efficacy relates to a person’s perception of their ability to reach a goal, whereas self-esteem relates to a person’s sense of self-worth.
Application of the Theory
"Motivation, performance, and feelings of frustration associated with repeated failures determine affect and behaviour relations" - Bandura, 1986)
SET is widely applied in health behaviour change.
Cognitive and behavioural psychotherapy for depression are based on theoretical concepts of self-efficacy.
Conclusion
Self-efficacy is the most important precondition for behaviour change.
HEALTH BELIEF MODEL
is one of the first theories of health behavior.
developed in the 1950s by a group of U.S. Public Health Service social psychologists
who wanted to explain why so few people were participating in programs to prevent and detect disease
The health belief model proposes that a person's health-related behavior depends on the person's perception of four critical areas: the severity of a potential illness, the person's susceptibility to that illness, the benefits of taking a preventive action,
and the barriers to taking that action.
HBM is a popular model applied in nursing, especially in issues focusing on patient compliance and preventive health care practices.
The model postulates that health-seeking behaviour is influenced by a person’s perception of a threat posed by a health problem and the value associated with actions aimed at reducing the threat.
HBM addresses the relationship between a person’s beliefs and behaviors.
It provides a way to understanding and predicting how clients will behave in relation to their health and how they will comply with health care therapies
There are six major concepts in HBM: 1. Perceived Susceptibility 2. Perceived severity 3. Perceived benefits 4. Perceived costs 5. Motivation 6. Enabling or modifying factors
Perceived Susceptibility: refers to a person’s perception that a
health problem is personally relevant or that a diagnosis of illness is accurate.
Perceived severity: even when one recognizes personal
susceptibility, action will not occur unless the individual perceives the severity to be high enough to have serious organic or social complications.
Perceived benefits: refers to the patient’s belief that a given
treatment will cure the illness or help to prevent it.
Perceived Costs: refers to the complexity, duration, and
accessibility of the treatment.
Motivation: includes the desire to comply with a
treatment and the belief that people should do what.
Modifying factors: include personality variables, patient
satisfaction, and socio-demographic factors.