Define the relationship between nursing practice, health policy, and politics.
Nursing practice influenced by health policy- sets guidelines for care.
Health policy shaped by political decisions / advocacy efforts
Health policy: decisions, plans, actions
purpose: to achieve specific health care goals within society
Defines a vision: targets and points of reference for short & medium-term goals
Priorities & expected roles
Builds consensus using stakeholders
Informs people
politics determine the funding, laws, regulations that impact nursing practice
Understand the role of nurses in developing public health policy.
Advocate for health equity, legislation, EBP, research
Identify primary agencies that affect public nursing practice.
American Nurses Association
Relevant to nursing practice, health policy, and social concerns impacting the health of pts
If topic is approved by ANA Board of directors, ANA issues panel appointed to research and draft a position → posted for public comment
Statement revised if necessary and then approved again by board
American Academy of Nursing
Advancing health policy / practice through generation, and dissemination of nursing knowledge
Create and execute knowledge-driving and policy-related initiates to drive reform of America’s health system
Discuss the steps of community health program planning.
Program planning process (FCDEI)
Formulating: defining problem
Conceptualizing: ID potential solutions- literature review
Detailing: consideration of potential solutions
Evaluating (the plan): choosing an option from the potential solutions
Implementing: putting the chosen solution into place
Identify the role of the public health nurse in implementing a community health program.
Program implementation:
Action steps
First steps:
General plan- describe the intervention (program)
Whom to approach first
Approach stakeholders
Recipients: what level?
Potential supporters
Possible opposition
Funding sources
Role of PHN: what will PHN do to make this program work- CH 9 p 208
Assessment → implementation
ID needs and priority populations
State a population dx
Review and evaluate EBI
Develop a policy and implement a program
Analyze the components of program evaluation.
Evaluating: collecting data
ID if outcomes are intended or unintended
Adjust and make changes accordingly
Evaluation aspects:
1. Relevance—Need for the program
2. Adequacy—Program addresses the extent of the need
3. Progress—Tracking of program activities to meet program objectives
4. Efficiency—Relationship between program outcomes and resources spent
5. Effectiveness—Ability to meet program objectives and the results of program efforts
6. Impact—Long-term changes in the client population
7. Sustainability—Enough resources to continue the program
Understand the objectives identified by Healthy People 2030 related to public health nursing.
Healthy People 2030 Goals
Attain healthy, thriving lives and well-being, free of preventable disease / death
Eliminate health dispariites, achieve health equity, and attain health literacy to improve well-being of all
Create environment that promotes attaining full potential for health & well-being for all
Promote healthy development, healthy behaviors and well-being across all life stages
Engage leadership, key constituents, and the public across multiple sectors to take action and design policies that improve well-being
My Extra Notes:
Government Health Care
Functions
Direct services: providing health care to services to certain idvs
Ex: military, medicare (60+), veterans, prisoners, low income
Financing: the largest share of healthcare spending is from the federal government
Info: collect, analyze, and disseminate data about health care and health status of idvs
Policy setting: policy decisions are made at all levels of government
Public protection: provides for the protection of the public’s health through the authority of the constitution
Program Mgt
Policy: guiding principles
Program: translation of policy into action
Head Start Program Performance Standards (1975): First performance standards that detail guidelines for serving children 3-5 - can go to pre-school and it’s paid for by government
Nursing Advocacy: influencing others (politics) to adopt specific course of action (policy) to solve problem
Building relationships
Letter to lawmakers
Money
Labor, expertise, influence
Grassroots network development
Program Management
Program: organized approach to meet needs of x, by fixing a health problem
Projects: smaller, organized activities with a limited time frame
Strategic planning: matching of client needs w/ specific provider strengths and resources
Community assessment: population focused approach that views the entire community as the client
Primary data: direct contact w/ community
Secondary: data that already exists
Population needs assessment: focuses on pop, its needs, and resources avail to address those needs
Describe ethical principles and theories.
Principlism: is an approach to problem solving in bioethics that uses the principles of respect for autonomy, beneficence, nonmaleficence, and justice as the basis for organization and analysis of ethical issues and dilemmas
Respect for autonomy: right to choice and self determination
Non-maleficence: do no harm
Beneficence: do good
Distributive Justice: equitable care
Ethics: branch of philosophy that includes both a body of knowledge about the moral life and a process of reflection for determining what persons ought to do or be regarding this life
Moral distress is an uncontrollable state of self in which one is unable to act ethically
Values are beliefs about the worth or importance of what is right or esteemed
Ethical dilemma is a puzzling moral problem in which a person, group, or community can envision morally justified reasons for both taking and not taking a certain course of action
Choose btw 2+ morally acceptable options
Utilitarianism: maximizing of good and minimizing of harm for the greatest number of people
Deontology: bases moral obligation on duty and claims that actions are obligatory irrespective of the good or harmful consequences that they produce.
Suggests humans should act on what they think is right, despite any consequences
Advocacy: the act of pleading for or supporting a course of action on behalf of a person, group, or community.
Distributive justice: equitable care
Egalitarianism: view that everyone is entitled to equal rights and treatment, and it is the role of government to ensure that this happens. supports welfare rights
Libertarianism: advocates for social and economic liberty. Although egalitarianism lacks incentives for individuals, libertarianism emphasizes the contribution and merit of individuals. Rights of idv > any collective rights of society
Liberal Democratic Theory: values both liberty and equality
Communitarianism: emphasizes importance of community
Virtue ethics: goal is to enable people to flourish as humans, central to professional ethics in PHN
Care ethics: contribute to preservation of humanity, essence of nursing and core value of PHN
Feminist ethics: equitable distribution of power, connections among gender, disadvantage, and health
Discuss the process of ethical decision-making.
Ethical decision making: focuses on process of how ethical decisions are made
Ethical Decision-Making Framework
ID ethical issues and dilemmas
Find meaningful context
Obtain all relevant facts
Reformulate if needed
Consider appropriate options
Decide and take action
Consider the ethical tenets underlying the core functions in public health nursing.
2 ethical tenets of assessment
Beneficence: competency, virtue ethics or moral character
Nonmaleficience: risk-benefit analysis
3 ethical tenets of policy development
Achieve public good: rooted in citizenship
Service to others over self:
Serve rather than steer
Serve citizens not customers
Value citizenship and public service above entrepreneurship
2 ethical tenets of assurance
Bounded in the ethical principle of justice
All persons should receive essential personal health services
Providers of public health services are competent and available
Describe the role of cultural humility in achieving the public health goals of health equity.
Steps toward cultural safety: cultural awareness → cultural competence → cultural humility
Cultural awareness: self-examination and in-depth exploration of one’s own beliefs and values as they influence behavior
Culturally aware nurses
Are conscious of culture as an influencing factor btw themselves and others
Understand bias of their own behavior
Recognize that health is expressed differently
Cultural competence: combo of culturally congruent behaviors, practice attitudes, and policies that allow nurses to use interpersonal communication, relationship skills, and behavioral flexibility to work effectively in cross-cultural situations
Nurse provides care considering the person’s idv culture
Cultural humility: lifelong process of self-reflection and self-critique where the idv learns about another’s culture, but also starts with an exam of their own beliefs and cultural identities
Is a process-based framework that require life-long self-reflection and open-minded stance towards others
Describe major facilitators and barriers to providing culturally sensitive health care for diverse populations.
7 steps for culturally sensitive care: awareness, avoid making assumptions, learn about other cultures, build trust, overcome language barriers, ed patients about med practices, active listenting
Barriers: stereotyping, prejudice, racism, ethnocentrism, cultural imposition, cultural conflict, culture shock
Cite culturally sensitive nursing interventions to promote positive health outcomes for diverse individuals, communities, and organizations.
Cultural preservation: pts of a particular culture retain and preserve traditional values so they can maintain, promote, and restore health
Cultural accommodation: pts of a particular culture accept nursing strategies or negotiate with nurses to achieve good health care outcomes
less change: soy sauce → low sodium
Cultural repatterning: people of a particular culture to change or modify a cultural practice for new or different health care patterns that are meaningful, satisfying, and beneficial
Bigger Differences! More dramatic! - Changing taco toppings
Cultural brokering: btw the patient’s culture and the biomedical health care culture on behalf of patients
Being an advocate!
Understand the impact of social determinants of health (SDOH) and access to health care and the community.
SDOH: conditions in the environments, affect wide range of outcomes
Economic stability: 1/10 people in US live in poverty
Education access & quality: educated more likely to be healthier and live longer
Healthcare access & quality: help people get timely health care services. 1/10 people in US don’t have health insurance
Neighborhood & Built Environment
Social & Community Context
Evaluate the role of the public health nurse in providing equitable care.
Health Equity: achieved when every person has opportunity to attain their full health potential and no one is disadvantaged from achieving this potential bc of social position or other socially determined circumstances
Social justice: providing impartiality and objectivity at a systems or governmental level
Why it matters
Lack of cultural competence: inc gap in disparities
Improves quality of care, lowers cost
Meet Health People objectives
Extra Notes:
Culture: Set of common beliefs, values, and assumptions about life
Race: biologic variation within a pop, same race may be of different cultures
Ethnicity: shared feeling of peoplehood, relates to cultural factors, equally influenced
Health Disparities: higher burden or illness, injury, disability, or mortality experienced by one group relative to another
Health Inequalities: are reflected in differences in length of life, quality of life, rates of disease, disability, and death, access to tx (more quantitative)
INTERPETER: SPOKEN LANGUAGE
TRANSLATOR: TEXT