NR 222 - Health and Wellness Study Guide
Tertiary
Restoration and rehabilitation example: A woman who has breast cancer should go through chemotherapy to kill the cancerous cells.
Informatics
Use information and technology to communicate, manage knowledge, mitigate error, and support decision making. Examples: Navigate an electronic health record. Protect confidentiality of protected health information in electronic health records.
Acute illness
a trauma, myocardial infarction, or surgery; family members are often left in waiting rooms to receive information about their loved one
Empathy
ability to view other persons' situations from their perspective
Health Belief Model
addresses the relationship between a person's beliefs and behaviors; helps you understand factors influencing patients' perceptions, beliefs, and behavior to plan care that will most effectively help patients maintain or restore health and prevent illness.
Research of Health Promotion shows..
an increase in longevity, a decrease in mortality (death) and morbidity (disease), and an improvement in the quality of life for individuals who have been involved in health promotion activities such as physical activity and avoidance of smoking
Health disparities
an umbrella term that includes disparities in health and in health care; defined by Healthy People 2020 as a particular type of health difference that is closely linked with social, economic, and/or environmental disadvantage; adversely affect groups of people who have systematically experienced greater obstacles to health based on their racial or ethnic group
Patient
ancient roots in suffering, for millennia the term also connoted one who undergoes medical treatment
Social cognitive theory
another model that adds to the understanding of the determinants of health behavior; also describes the roles of reinforcement and observational learning in explaining health behavior change
Health behavior
any activities that an individual undertakes to enhance health, prevent disease, and detect and control the symptoms of a disease
Risk Factor
any situation, habit, or other variable such as social, environmental, physiological, psychological, developmental, intellectual, or spiritual that increases the vulnerability of an individual or group to an illness or accident example: falls, such as impaired gait, reduced vision, and lower extremity weakness
health care disparities
are differences among populations in the availability, accessibility, and quality of health care services (e.g., screening, diagnostic, treatment, management and rehabilitation) aimed at prevention, treatment, and management of diseases and their complications
family forms
are patterns of people considered by family members to be included in a family
Ethical dilemmas
are those situations in which a choice must be made between two or more equally undesirable options
ANA Standards of Nursing Practice
assessment, diagnosis, outcome, planning, implementation, evaluation (ADOPIE)
culture
associated with norms, values, and traditions passed down through generations
Holistic Health Model
attempts to create conditions that promote a patient's optimal level of health; nurses recognize the natural healing abilities of the body and incorporate complementary and alternative interventions such as meditation, music therapy, reminiscence, relaxation therapy, therapeutic touch, and guided imagery because they are effective, economical, noninvasive, nonpharmacological complements to traditional medical care
Responsibilities of Professional Nursing
autonomy, accountability, and communicator
Contemplative
aware of, but not considering change soon
Educator
based on a perception of desirable individual behavior, to structurally planned teaching according to individual needs.
Family structure
based on the ongoing membership of the family and the pattern of relationships, which are often numerous and complex example: a family member may have a relationship with a spouse, child, employer, and work colleagues
The provisions
broad and non contextual statements of the obligation of nurses.
Illness
composed of the subjective experience of the individual and the physical manifestation of disease; can be described as a response characterized by a mismatch between a person's needs and the resources available to meet those needs
Social determinants of health
conditions in which people are born, grow, live, work, and age
maintenance
continued commitment to behavior
Benefits of Physical Activity
contribute to the maintenance or improvement in mobility, which improves the quality of life and prevents disability and it enhances positive mental health through stress reduction and physical fitness, which contribute to the development of healthy behaviors
cultural competence
culturally sensitive, culturally appropriate, and culturally competent to meet the multifaceted health care needs of each person, family, and community
cultural competency
defined by the National Institutes of Health (2015) as the enabling of health care providers to deliver services that are respectful of and responsive to the health beliefs, practices, and cultural and linguistic needs of diverse patients
Health Promotion Model
defines health as a positive, dynamic state, not merely the absence of disease; designed to be a "complementary counterpart to models of health protection"
Deliverer of Services
delivery of direct services such as health education, flu shots, and counseling in health promotion.
ANA Standards of Practice (definition)
describe a competent level (ADOPIE) of nursing care.
ANA Standards of Professional Performance (definition)
describe a competent level of behavior in the professional role; provide a method to assure patients that they are receiving high-quality care, that the nurses must know exactly what is necessary to provide nursing care, and that measures are in place to determine whether nursing care meets the standards
Qualitative Studies
describe phenomena or define the historical nature, cultural relevance, or philosophical basis of aspects of nursing care
Quantitative Studies
describe situations, correlate different variables related to care, or test causal relationships between variables related to care
Genomics
describes the study of all the genes in a person and interactions of these genes with one another and with that person's environment
ANA Standards of Professional Performance
ethics, education, evidence-based practice and research, quality of practice, communication, leadership, collaboration, professional practice evaluation, resources, environmental health
Codes of Ethics
examples of normative ethics in that they prescribe how members of a profession ought to act, given the goals and purposes of the profession related to individuals and society
Nursing interventions and outcome
focus provides a solid position from which nurses participate as decision makers in health care systems at organizational, community, national, and international levels
Caring is..
grounded in ethics beginning with respect for the autonomy of the care recipient; grounded as a science in nursing but is not limited to nursing; an attribute that may be taught, modeled learned and mastered; capable of being measured and analyzed scientifically, the subject of study withing caring science institutes/academics worldwide; central to relationships that lead to effective healing, cure, and/or actualization of human potential.
Goal for Scope and Standards of Practice
guide nurses to make significant and visible contributions that improve the health and well-being of all individuals, communities, and populations
Action
has begun to make behavioral change
Lifestyle Risk Factors
have positive or negative effects on health; those with potential negative effects are risk factors; some habits are risk factors for specific diseases example: excessive sunbathing increases the risk of skin cancer; smoking increases the risk of lung diseases, including cancer; and a poor diet and being overweight increase the risk of cardiovascular disease
Primary
health promotion and specific protection example: If a person loves to swim and being out in the sun then they should wear sunblock to prevent skin cancer.
Healer
help individuals integrate and balance the various parts of their lives
American Nurses Association (ANA)
illustrates the consistent commitment of nurses to provide care that promotes the well-being of their patients and communities
Illness Prevention Activities
immunization programs protect patients from actual or potential threats to health; they motivate people to avoid a decline in health or functional levels
alternative family
include multi-adult households, "skip-generation" families (grandparents caring for grandchildren), communal groups with children, "nonfamilies" (adults living alone), and cohabitating partners.
Internal Variables
includes a person's developmental stage, intellectual background, perception of functioning, and emotional and spiritual factors.
extended family
includes relatives (aunts, uncles, grandparents, and cousins) in addition to the nuclear family.
Transtheoretical Model (TTM)
incorporates Stages of Change (readiness to take action), Decisional Balance (benefits to and detractors from changing a behavior), Self-Efficacy (personal confidence in making a change), and Processes of Change (cognitive, affective, and behavioral activities facilitating change)
autonomy
independence, able to make your own choice
External Variables
influences a person's health beliefs and practices include family practices, psychosocial and socioeconomic factors, and cultural background
Cultural Background
influences beliefs, values, and customs; influences the approach to the health care systems, personal health practices, and the nurse-patient relationship
Physiological Risk Factors
involve the physical functioning of the body example: being overweight
Precontemplative
not considering change
Nonmaleficence
not to harm other people; constrains people from autonomous actions that are likely to harm others.
Benner's Five Levels of Proficiency
novice, advanced beginner, competent, proficient, expert
Standard 5b in Nursing Scope and Standards of Practice requires..
nurses "to promote health and a safe environment" through health teaching and evaluation of teaching effectiveness in clinical practice
Advocate
nurses help individuals obtain what they are entitled to receive through the health care system, try to make the system more responsive to individual and community needs, and help persons develop the skills to advocate for themselves; strives to ensure that all persons receive high-quality, appropriate, safe, and cost-effective care
Health Education
nurtures health promoting habits, values, and attitudes that must be learned through practice; these must be reinforced through systematic instruction in hygiene, bodily function, physical fitness, and use of leisure time
Paternalism
often justified by the assertion that the persons affected will be better off or protected from harm
single parent family
one parent leaves the nuclear family because of death, divorce, or desertion or when a single person decides to have or adopt a child
Client
one who listens, leans upon, or follows another; connotes a more advisory relationship often associated with consultation or business
Health belief model
paradigm used to predict and explain health behavior; developed to describe why people failed to participate in programs to detect or prevent disease
blended family
parents bring unrelated children from prior adoptive or foster parenting relationships into a new, joint living situation.
Healthy People 2020 defines a health disparity
particular type of health difference that is closely linked with social, economic, and/or environmental disadvantage
Preparation
planning to act soon
Care Manager
prevent duplication of services, maintain quality and safety, and reduce costs.
Levels of Prevention
primary, secondary, tertiary, and passive
Evidence-Based Practice
Integrate best current evidence with clinical expertise and patient/family preferences and values for delivery of optimal health care. Examples: Demonstrate knowledge of basic scientific methods. Appreciate strengths and weaknesses of scientific bases for practice. Appreciate the importance of regularly reading relevant journals.
Purpose of The Code of Ethics for Nurses with Interpretive Statements
It is a succinct statement of the ethical values, obligations, duties, and professional ideas of nurses individually and collectively; it is the profession's non-negotiable ethical standard; it is an expression of nursing's own understanding of its commitment to society.
Safety
Minimize risk of harm to patients and providers through both system effectiveness and individual performance. Examples: Examine human factors and basic safety design principles and commonly used unsafe practices. Value own role in preventing errors.
Accompanying interpretive statements
provide addtional, more specific, guidance in the application of this obligation to current nursing practice; subjective to more frequent revision
Consultant
provide knowledge about health promotion and disease prevention to individuals and groups
Community-based care
provided in nontraditional health care settings in the community
Morbidity
refers to a diseased state or disability from any cause
Family
significant and affects who is included on health insurance policies, who has access to children's school records, who files joint tax returns, and who is eligible for sick-leave benefits or public assistance programs
Alternative Therapies
sometimes include the same interventions as complementary therapies; but they become the primary treatment example: person with chronic pain uses yoga to encourage flexibility and relaxation at the same time that nonsteroidal antiinflammatory or opioid medications are prescribed
Trauma
sudden, unplanned, and sometimes life-threatening
Advanced Beginner
A nurse who has had some level of experience with the situation. This experience may only be observational in nature, but the nurse is able to identify meaningful aspects or principles of nursing care
Integrative nursing
"a way of being-knowing-doing that advances the health and well-being of people, families, and communities through caring-healing relationships; these nurses use evidence to inform traditional and emerging interventions that support "whole person/whole systems healing"
Expert
A nurse with diverse experience who has an intuitive grasp of an existing or potential clinical problem. This nurse is able to zero in on the problem and focus on multiple dimensions of the situation. He or she is skilled at identifying both patient-centered problems and problems related to the health care system or perhaps the needs of the novice nurse.
Proficient
A nurse with more than 2 to 3 years of experience in the same clinical position. This nurse perceives a patient's clinical situation as a whole, is able to assess an entire situation, and can readily transfer knowledge gained from multiple previous experiences to a situation. This nurse focuses on managing care as opposed to managing and performing skills.
Intellectual Background
A person's beliefs about health are shaped in part by the person's knowledge, lack of knowledge, or incorrect information about body functions and illnesses, educational background, traditions, and past experiences
Developmental Stage
A person's thought and behavior patterns change throughout life
Healthy People 2020 Focus Areas
Adolescent Health; Blood Disorders and Blood Safety; Dementias, Including Alzheimer's Disease; Early and Middle Childhood; Genomics; Global Health; Healthcare-Associated Infections; Health-Related Quality of Life and Well-Being; Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Health; Older Adults; Preparedness; Sleep Health; and Social Determinants of Health
Health Ecology
An evolving view of health recognizes the interconnection between people and their physical and social environments EX: People are likely to go walking where there are sidewalks (within the community)
cultural awareness
An in-depth self-examination of one's own background, recognizing biases, prejudices, and assumptions about other people
Terms for Health Ethics
Autonomy Beneficence nonmaleficence Justice Fidelity
Holistic nursing
the mind-body-spirit of patients, using interventions such as relaxation therapy, music therapy, touch therapies, and guided imagery
Code of Ethics
the philosophical ideals of right and wrong that define the principles you will use to provide care to your patients
Prevalence
the proportion of a given population with the disease or condition at any one point in time
Nursing
the protection, promotion, and optimization of health and abilities; prevention of illness and injury; alleviation of suffering through the diagnosis and treatment of human response; and advocacy in the care of individuals, families, communities, and populations (ANA 2010b)
Beneficence
the quality or state of doing or producing "good."; duty to maximize the benefits of actions while minimizing harms
World Health Organization (WHO) Health Definition
the state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease and infirmity, but moves beyond this definition to encompass spiritual, developmental, and environmental aspects over time. Example: a person with diabetes may be considered healthy if she is able to adapt to her illness and live a meaningful, spiritually satisfying life
Family function
what a family does; focuses on the processes used by the family to achieve its goals
Cultural competent organizations should..
• Value diversity • Conduct a cultural self-assessment • Manage the dynamics of difference • Institutionalize cultural knowledge • Adapt to diversity
Healthy People 2020 Main Goals
•Attain high 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
The first nursing code of ethics was adopted by the ANA in this year
1950
Functional Health
The ability to function: can be characterized as being present or absent, having high-level or low-level wellness, and being influenced by neighborhood and society
Confidentiality
The ability to maintain privacy in one's life is an expression of autonomy
Assessment
The registered nurse collects comprehensive data pertinent to the patient's health and/or the situation.
Passive Primary
Things you do not necessarily do on purpose but it is there for you example: Vitamin D in milk; Drinking milk.
Health disparity
a particular type of health difference that is closely linked with social, economic, and/or environmental disadvantage
Proxy-Decision Making
1. Autonomy Based: person's previously articulated desires 2. Best Interest 3. Reasonable person standard
Wellness
a positive state in which incremental increases in health can be made beyond the midpoint
The standards of practice
1. Assessment 2. Diagnosis 3. Outcomes Identification 4. Planning 5. Implementation 6. Evaluation 7. Ethics 8. Culturally congruent practice 9. Communication 10. Collaboration 11. Leadership 12. Education 13. Evidence-based practice and research 14. Quality of practice 15. Professional practice evaluation 16. Resource utilization 17. Environmental health
Components of The Code of Ethics for Nurses with Interpretive Statements
1. The provisions 2. Accompanying interpretive statements
Goals of Health Education
1. to inculcate a sense of responsibility in individuals for their own health and a shared sense of responsibility for avoiding injury to the health of others example: encouraging child-rearing practices that foster normal growth and development (personal, social, and physical) addresses both the individual parent and the needs of society 2. to understand the appropriate use of health services example: a semiannual visit to a dentist may teach a child better oral health habits and to visit the dentist regularly, although this is not the primary purpose of the visit
Competent
A nurse who has been in the same clinical position for 2 to 3 years. This nurse understands the organization and specific care required by the type of patients (e.g., surgical, oncology, or orthopedic patients). He or she is a competent practitioner who is able to anticipate nursing care and establish long-range goals. In this phase the nurse has usually had experience with all types of psychomotor skills required by this specific group of patients.
ASKED (mnemonic) for implementation of culturally congruent practice
Awareness Skill Knowledge Encounters Desires
Novice
Beginning nursing student or any nurse entering a situation in which there is no previous level of experience (e.g., an experienced operating room nurse chooses to now p
culture
Beliefs, customs, and traditions of a specific group of people.
Campinha-Bacote's model of cultural competency has five interrelated constructs
Cultural awareness-examine own bias Cultural knowledge-seek education Cultural skill-able to conduct assessments Cultural encounter-engage in cultural interactions Cultural desire-want to become aware
Teamwork and Collaboration
Function effectively within nursing and interprofessional teams, fostering open communication, mutual respect, and shared decision making to achieve quality patient care. Examples: Recognize the contributions of other health team members and patient's family members. Discuss effective strategies for communicating and resolving conflict. Participate in designing methods to support effective teamwork.
social inequality
Groups have unequal access to resources, services, and positions
Patient-Centered Care
Recognize the patient or designee as the source of control and full partner in providing compassionate and coordinated care based on respect for patient's preferences, values, and needs. Examples: Involve family and friends in care. Elicit patient values and preferences. Provide care with respect for diversity of the human experience.
Psychosocial and Economic
Socioeconomic and psychosocial factors increase the risk for illness and influence the way that a person defines and reacts to illness; include the stability of the person's marital or intimate relationship, lifestyle habits, and occupational environment
Spiritual Factors
Spirituality is reflected in how a person lives his or her life, including the values and beliefs exercised, the relationships established with family and friends, and the ability to find hope and meaning in life
Emotional Factors
The patient's degree of stress, depression, or fear can influence health beliefs and practices
Diagnosis
The registered nurse analyzes the assessment data to determine the diagnoses or issues.
Education
The registered nurse attains knowledge and competency that reflects current nursing practice.
Collaboration
The registered nurse collaborates with health care consumer, family, and others in the conduct of nursing practice.
Communication
The registered nurse communicates effectively in all areas of practice.
Quality of Practice
The registered nurse contributes to quality nursing practice.
Leadership
The registered nurse demonstrates leadership in the professional practice setting and the profession.
Planning
The registered nurse develops a plan that prescribes strategies and alternatives to attain expected outcomes.
Professional Practice Evaluation
The registered nurse evaluates her or his own nursing practice in relation to professional practice standards and guidelines, relevant statutes, rules, and regulations.
Evaluation
The registered nurse evaluates progress toward attainment of outcomes.
Outcomes Identification
The registered nurse identifies expected outcomes for a plan individualized to the patient or the situation.
Implementation
The registered nurse implements the identified plan. Coordination of Care: The registered nurse coordinates care delivery. Health Teaching and Health Promotion: The registered nurse uses strategies to promote health and a safe environment. Consultation: The graduate level-prepared specialty nurse or advanced practice registered nurse provides consultation to influence the identified plan, enhance the abilities of others, and effect change. Prescriptive Authority and Treatment: The advanced practice registered nurse uses prescriptive authority, procedures, referrals, treatment, and therapies in accordance with state and federal laws and regulations.
Evidence-based Practice and Research
The registered nurse integrates evidence and research findings into practice.
Environmental Health
The registered nurse practices in an environmentally safe and healthy manner
Resources
The registered nurse uses appropriate resources to plan and provide nursing services that are safe, effective, and financially responsible.
Perception of Functioning
The way people perceive their physical functioning affects health beliefs and practices
Family Practices
The way that patients' families use health care services generally affects their health practices
Healthy People Five Main Goals
To continue to improve infant health, and, by 1990, to reduce infant mortality by at least 35%, to fewer than 9 deaths per 1000 live births •To improve child health, foster optimal childhood development, and, by 1990, reduce deaths among children ages 1 to 14 years by at least 20%, to fewer than 34 per 100,000 •To improve the health and health habits of adolescents and young adults, and, by 1990, to reduce deaths among people ages 15 to 24 by at least 20%, to fewer than 93 per 100,000 •To improve the health of adults, and, by 1990, to reduce deaths among people ages 25 to 64 by at least 25%, to fewer than 400 per 100,000 •To improve the health and quality of life for older adults, and, by 1990, to reduce the average annual number of days of restricted activity attributable to acute and chronic conditions by 20%, to fewer than 30 days per year for people 65 and older
Quality Improvement
Use data to monitor the outcomes of care processes and use improvement methods to design and test changes to continuously improve the quality and safety of health care systems. Examples: Use tools such as flow charts and diagrams to make process of care explicit. Appreciate how unwanted variation in outcomes affects care. Identify gaps between local and best practices.
Health
a state of physical, mental, spiritual, and social functioning that realizes a person's potential and is experienced within a developmental context
The Scope of Nursing practice describes..
What - the definition of nursing Who - RNs & APRNs have been educated, titled, and maintain active licensure to practice nursing When - Nursing occurs whenever there is a need for nursing knowledge, wisdom, caring, leadership, practice or education anytime, anywhere,. Where - Nursing occurs in any environment where there is a healthcare consumer in need of care, information, or advocacy How - defined as the ways, means, methods, and manners that nurses use to practice professionally. Why - characterized as nursing response to the changing needs of society to achieve positive healthcare consumer outcomes in keeping with nursing's social contract with an obligation to society.
Active Primary
You are personally involved example: Working out to prevent obesity.
Patient Self-Determination Act (PSDA) of 199
a competent person has the right to refuse treatment
Racism
a devaluing of the beliefs, values, and customs of others
Wellness-Illness Continuum
a dichotomous depiction of the relationship between the concepts of health and illness
opression
a formal and informal system of advantages and disadvantages tied to our membership in social groups, such as those at work, at school, and in families
Chronic illness
a global health problem and present continuous challenges for families
The Code of Ethics for Nurses With Interpretive Statements
a guide for carrying out nursing responsibilities that provide quality nursing care; it also outlines the ethical obligations of the profession
Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
a model that nurses use to understand the interrelationships of basic human needs
Career Opportunities for Nurses
advanced practice registered nurses (APRNs), nurse researchers, nurse risk managers, quality improvement nurses, consultants, and even business owners.
Nursing Roles in Health Promotion and Practice
advocate, care manager, consultant, deliverer of services, educator, healer, and researcher
Age Risk Factors
affects a person's susceptibility to certain illnesses and conditions example: premature infants and neonates are more susceptible to infections
Advocacy
aggressive action taken on behalf of an individual, or perhaps a group viewed as an individual entity, to protect or secure that individual's rights
Affordable Care Act Law
aimed at reducing the number of uninsured Americans.
Communicator
allows you to know your patients, including their strengths, weaknesses, and needs
Autonomy
an essential element of professional nursing that involves the initiation of independent nursing interventions without medical orders
Justice
an ethical principle of major importance in health-promotion settings
Components of consent process include
determining the person's competency to consent
Veracity
devotion to the truth; another principle that supports health-promotion activities
Applied Research
done to directly affect clinical practice
Secondary
early diagnosis, prompt treatment, and disability limitation. example: Women who are at a high risk of breast cancer due to their age group should go in for screenings.
Integrative Health Care
emphasizes the importance of the relationship between practitioner and patient; focuses on the whole person; is informed by evidence; and makes use of appropriate therapeutic approaches, health care professionals, and disciplines to achieve optimal health; an integrative health care system consumers are treated by a team of providers consisting of both biomedical and complementary practitioners.
Culturally congruent practice (transcultural)
emphasizes the need to provide care based on an individual's cultural beliefs, practices, and values;
The Code of Ethics for Nurses with Interpretive Statements
establishes the ethical standard for profession and provides a guide for nurses to use in ethical analysis and decision-making; addresses individual as well as collective nursing intentions and actions; it requires each nurse to demonstrate ethical competence in professional life.
Evidence-based practice
searching for the best evidence with which to answer clinical research questions;nurses assume a more active involvement in the prevention of disease and the promotion of health
Nursing diagnosis
life processes as well as actual or potential health problems.
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPPAA)
meant to protect the privacy of individually identifiable health information in the face of advances in electronic technology and to limit the ways in which "health plans, pharmacies, hospitals, clinics, nursing homes and other covered entities
nuclear family
mom, dad, child consists of a married couple with or without children.
The study of ethics is also referred to as
moral philosophy and moral theology
Ethics
refers to the formal study of that mortality from a wide range of perspectives including semantic, logical, analytic, epistemological, and normative.
ethnic group
religion; socioeconomic status; gender; age; mental health; cognitive, sensory, or physical disability; sexual orientation or gender identity; geographic location; or other characteristics historically linked to discrimination or exclusion
Informed consent
research, treatments, or health-promotion endeavors is a process of ensuring that a person has all of the appropriate information necessary to reach a decision about participation that facilitates autonomous action
relapse
reverted back to old behavior
Health Promotion Activities
routine exercise and good nutrition help patients maintain or enhance their present levels of health; motivate people to act positively to reach more stable levels of health
Wellness education
teaches people how to care for themselves in a healthy way and includes topics such as physical awareness, stress management, and self-responsibility; help people achieve new understanding and control of their lives
Ethics (ANA standard)
the RN practices ethically
health equity
the accomplishment of the highest level of health for all people
social determinants of health
the conditions in which people are born, grow, live, work and age...shaped by the distribution of money, power and resources at global, national, and local levels
Disease
the failure of a person's adaptive mechanisms to counteract stimuli and stresses adequately, resulting in functional or structural disturbances
Ethnocentrism
to be aware of their own beliefs, values, and customs and how these ideas translate into behavior
cultural assessment
understand how the patient's religious values will affect her willingness to receive care values reside "underneath the iceberg."
Researcher
use evidence-based findings as their foundation for clinical decision-making
Complementary Therapies
used in addition to or together with conventional treatment recommended by a person's health care provider; complement conventional treatments. Many of them such as therapeutic touch contain diagnostic and therapeutic methods that require special training. Others such as guided imagery and breathwork are easily learned; include relaxation; exercise; massage; reflexology; prayer; biofeedback; hypnotherapy; creative therapies, including art, music, or dance therapy; meditation; chiropractic therapy; and herbs/supplements
Morality
used to refer to what would be called personal values, character, or conduct of individuals or groups within communities and societies.
Environment Risk Factors
where we live and the condition of that area (its air, water, and soil) determine how we live, what we eat, the disease agents to which we are exposed, our state of health, and our ability to adapt; the physicals of this risk factor in which a person works or lives can increase the likelihood that certain illnesses will occur example: some kinds of cancer and other diseases are more likely to develop when industrial workers are exposed to certain chemicals or when people live near toxic waste disposal sites
Accountability
you are responsible professionally and legally for the type and quality of nursing care provided
Cognitive skills
• Focusing (the ability to identify, differentiate, maintain attention on, and return attention to simple stimuli for an extended period) • Passivity (the ability to stop unnecessary goal-directed and analytic activity) • Receptivity (the ability to tolerate and accept experiences that are uncertain, unfamiliar, or paradoxical).
Health Promotion Assessment Questions
• How do you define health? • What does health mean to you? • How would you describe your health now? • Do the choices you make and actions you take affect your health? • Can you give examples when choices and actions created a positive change in health for you? • Can you give examples when choices and actions created a negative or unsafe change in health for you? • What factors facilitated choices and actions that created a positive change in health? • What factors created barriers to choices and actions that led to a negative or unsafe change in health? • Are there any supportive personal influences in your life that would assist you in choices and actions that would create a positive change in your health (i.e., family, friends, and health care providers)? • Are there any supportive situational influences, such as more than one plan of action, pertaining to the health change available to you?