Cornerstones from Public Health



Similar documents
CORNERSTONE Public Health Nursing Practice focuses on entire populations and reflects community priorities and needs

PUBLIC HEALTH NURSING PRACTICE FOR THE 21 ST CENTURY National Satellite Learning Conference. Learning Guide

Nursing s Social Policy Statement

Learning Disabilities Nursing: Field Specific Competencies

What Is a Public Health Nurse? Historical Visions of Public Health Nursing

EDYTH T. JAMES DEPARTMENT OF NURSING

Caring: An Introduction to Nursing. Welcome N. Rymut, RN, MS, CEN

Scottish Parliament Health and Sport Committee s Inquiry into Teenage Pregnancy in Scotland Evidence from CHILDREN 1 ST

OSTEOPATHIC CARE OF CHILDREN

Scottish Families Affected by Alcohol and Drugs

Depression. Introduction Depression is a common condition that affects millions of people every year.

Competencies for entry to the register: Adult Nursing

ASSOCIATE OF SCIENCE IN NURSING PROGRAM

SOS CHILDREN S VILLAGES A loving home for every child WHO

Expected Competencies of graduates of the nursing program at Philadelphia University

Develop students abilities to serve as Christian leaders in professional nursing roles and to be contributing members of the profession of nursing.

End the Cycle of ADDICTION W 7th Ave, Eugene, OR

Introduction.

The Rewards of Nursing (DRAFT) Speech Appropriate for Middle and High School Students

Delusions are false beliefs that are not part of their real-life. The person keeps on believing his delusions even when other people prove that the be

Definition of Foundational Public Health Services

How To Become A Registered Psychiatric Nurse

Mission Statement on Health and Human Service United Church of Christ

Hospitality I Compassion I Respect I Justice I Excellence

What Can We Learn About Teen Pregnancy from Rural Adolescents?

White Paper: Holistic Nurse Coaching. Authors. Darlene Hess, PhD, RN, AHN-BC, PMHNP-BC, ACC Brown Mountain Visions

Mama Maggie: The Egyptian Mother Teresa

Promoting Family Planning

Jane Addams. The good we seek for ourselves is uncertain until it is secure for all of us

Education programme standards for the registered nurse scope of practice Approved by the Council: June 2005

NMC Standards of Competence required by all Nurses to work in the UK

Measures have been taken, by the Utah Department of Health, Bureau of Health Promotions, to ensure no conflict of interest in this activity

Family Therapy and Substance Abuse Treatment Post Test

What is a Living Will?

2016 SUMMER SCHOOL COURSES

Questions and Answers on Universal Health Coverage and the post-2015 Framework

How To Be A Baccalaureate Prepared Nurse

SOROPTIMIST INTERNATIONAL OF TAHOE SIERRA THE MORNING CLUB CHARTERING AND PURPOSE

BACHELOR OF NURSING - COURSE PHILOSOPHY

TEST OF COMPETENCE PART 1 - NURSING TEST. Please do NOT book your online Test of Competence until you have studied and reviewed the following modules.

School Nursing: Scope and Standards of Practice

TUFTS UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Institutional Educational Objectives

Prayer for Everyone Christianity Social Toolkit -

Ambitions for Palliative and End of Life Care:

Nursing Process. Assessment. Planning. Implementation. Evaluation

Welcome to the Series on Palliative Care for the Licensed Vocational Nurse.

Arkansas State PIRC/ Center for Effective Parenting

THE READING HOSPITAL SPEAKERS BUREAU. Permit No Non-Profit Org. U.S. Postage PAID. Reading, PA

Running head: DRIVING MISS DAISY MOVIE ANALYSIS 1

Standards for competence for registered nurses

Leading Self. Leading Others. Leading Performance and Change. Leading the Coast Guard

Hospice Case Management

How To Become A Clinical Psychologist

Clinical Menu Population-Based Public Health Nursing Competencies

Westminster Campus Nursing Program Curriculum Organizing Framework

The Transpersonal (Spiritual) Journey Towards Leadership Excellence Using 8ICOL

The Distinctiveness of Chaplaincy within a Framework of School Support Services

Health Promotion. Prerequisites for health. Advocate. Enable. Ottawa Charter for Health Promotion, 1986

Declaration of Practices and Procedures

Improving end of life care in hospital

LEAN ON ME. He took me to this gas station in Colorado Springs and dropped me off with all my stuff. I called my mom and she came and got me.

Running head: PROGRAM DESCRIPTION 1. Program Description. Bachelor of Science and Master of Science Degree Programs in Nursing

How To Be A Nurse

Palliative Nursing. An EssEntiAl REsouRcE for HospicE And palliative nurses

Chapter 6 The Specialty of Gerontological Nursing

The Salvation Army National Disaster Training Program CURRENT COURSE LIST AND DESCRIPTIONS

Population-Based Public Health Nursing Practice: The Intervention Wheel

Compassionate Care Right at Home.

The INEE Minimum Standards Linkages to the Sphere Minimum Standards

Definition of Terms. nn Mental Illness Facts and Statistics

Non-Governmental Organizations and Primary Health Care Position Paper Passed by the WFPHA General Assembly

PRAYING FOR OTHER PEOPLE

Substance-Exposed Newborns

Health education as a new compulsory school subject in Finnish schools

Course Descriptions and Clinical Project Description

A. The master of arts, educational studies program will allow students to do the following.

Nursing History. Name: Dr. Ali Kareem /Ph.D in Nursing, MSN, BSN Address: University of Kerbala/Nursing College

WRITTEN STATEMENT ON BEHALF OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS PRESENTED TO THE INSTITUTE OF MEDICINE COMMITTEE ON DISABILITY IN AMERICA

HEALTH TRANSITION AND ECONOMIC GROWTH IN SRI LANKA LESSONS OF THE PAST AND EMERGING ISSUES

ADVANCE HEALTH DIRECTIVE

When Your Ethical Boundaries Meet Other Cultures and Traditions. Jerry Buie MSW, LCSW St George September 2014

Saint Francis. International School.

GENDER-RESPONSIVE ASSESSMENT AND TREATMENT FOR JUSTICE-INVOLVED WOMEN IN COMMUNITY SUPERVISION

GENDER AND DEVELOPMENT. Uganda Case Study: Increasing Access to Maternal and Child Health Services. Transforming relationships to empower communities

The Role of Nursing in Palliative Care. Todd Hultman, Ph. D., ACNP, ACHPN

2010 RCL-BENZIGER FAMILY LIFE AND LOYOLA CHRIST OUR LIFE CORRELATION CHRIST OUR LIFE FIRST SEMESTER CHAPTERS

caring CHILD substance abuse FOR A who has been impacted by

The Saint John Vianney Center s comprehensive programs and services include:

NATIONAL NURSING PIN PROGRAM

Transcription:

Cornerstones of Public Health Nursing Public Health Nursing Practice: Focuses on the health of entire populations Reflects community priorities and needs Establishes caring relationships with communities, systems, individuals and families Grounded in social justice, compassion, sensitivity to diversity, and respect for the worth of all people, especially the vulnerable Encompasses mental, physical, emotional, social, spiritual, and environmental aspects of health Promotes health through strategies driven by epidemiological evidence Collaborates with community resources to achieve those strategies, but can and will work alone if necessary Derives its authority for independent action from the Nurse Practice Act Cornerstones from Public Health Population based Grounded in social justice Focus on greater good Focus on health promotion and prevention Does what others cannot or will not Driven by the science of epidemiology Organizes community resources Long-term commitment to the community Cornerstones from Nursing Relationship based Grounded in an ethic of caring Sensitivity to diversity Holistic focus Respect for the worth of all Independent action Revised 2007 1 Minnesota Department of Health Adpated from Original by Center for Public Health Nursing, 2004

Definitions Public Health Public health is what we, as a society, do collectively to assure the conditions in which people can be healthy. 1 "Public Health is the Science and Art of preventing disease, prolonging life, and promoting health and efficiency through organized community effort for the sanitation of the environment, the control of communicable disease, and the development of the social machinery to insure everyone a standard of living adequate for the maintenance of health, so organizing these benefits as to enable every citizen to realize his birthright of health and longevity." 2 Nursing [Nursing is defined to have] charge of the personal health of somebody and what nursing has to do is to put the patient in the best condition for nature to act upon him. 3 The unique function of the nurse is to assist the individual, sick or well, in the performance of those activities contributing to his health or recovery (or to peaceful death) that he would perform unaided if he had the necessary strength, will, or knowledge. And to do this in such a way as to help him gain independence as rapidly as possible... [The nurse] is temporarily the consciousness of the unconscious, the love of life for the suicidal, the leg of the amputee, the eyes of the newly blind, a means of locomotion for the infant, knowledge and confidence for the young mother, the [voice] for those too weak or withdrawn to speak. 4 Public Health Nursing Public health nursing is the synthesis of the art and science of public health and nursing. 5 One good community nurse will save a dozen policemen. Herbert Hoover 1 Adapted from The Future of Public Health. National Academy Press, 1988. 2 C.E.A. Winslow. The Untilled Field of Public Health, Modern Medicine, Vol. 2. pp. 183-191, 1920. 3 Nightingale, Florence. Notes on Nursing: What It Is and What It Is Not. London: Harrison and Sons, 1859, preface and p.75 (Commemorative Edition, Lippincott, 1992). 4 Henderson, VA. Basic principles of nursing care. London: International Council of Nurses, 1961. 5 Cornerstones of Public Health Nursing. Minnesota Department of Health, 1999. Revised 2007 2 Minnesota Department of Health

Applying the Cornerstones to Public Health Nursing Practice FOCUSES ON THE HEALTH OF ENTIRE POPULATIONS Population A population is a collection of individuals who have one or more personal or environmental characteristics in common. Population-based interventions are not limited to only those who seek service or who are poor or otherwise vulnerable. A population-of-interest is a population that is essentially healthy but who could improve factors which promote or protect health. A population-at-risk is a population with a common identified risk factor or riskexposure that poses a threat to health Examples of populations include: All families of newborn infants All older adults at risk for falls Everyone who drinks well water All children at risk for vaccine-preventable disease All adolescents at risk for depression REFLECTS COMMUNITY PRIORITIES AND NEEDS Population-based practice reflects the priorities of the community. Community priorities are determined through an assessment of the population s health status and a prioritization process. Community assessment is defined as: The regular and systematic collection, analysis, and dissemination of information on the health of the community; including statistics on health status, awareness of community health needs, and epidemiologic and other studies of health problems. A community assessment process: Assesses the health status of all populations and for all health-related areas in the community, regardless of whether the public health agency has responsibility or programmatic efforts in those areas Produces results that serve as the foundation for planning how public health and the community will address public health problems Revised 2007 3 Minnesota Department of Health

ESTABLISHES CARING RELATIONSHIPS WITH COMMUNITIES, SYSTEMS, INDIVIDUALS AND FAMILIES Caring is often considered the art of nursing, that part of nursing which creates the circumstances under which the curative parts can happen. More than just words, intents, beliefs, or values; it encompasses stance, touch, orientation thoughts and feelings fused with physical presence and action. 1 Relationships The foundation of any therapeutic or healing activity is the interactions among people, which may be described as relationship-centered care. All public health nursing interventions are provided in the context of a relationship. The relationships that public health nurses establish with the communities, families, individuals and systems they serve are grounded in personal integrity, honesty, consistency, and trustworthiness. Nobody cares how much you know until they know how much you care. GROUNDED IN SOCIAL JUSTICE, COMPASSION, SENSITIVITY TO DIVERSITY, AND RESPECT FOR THE WORTH OF ALL PEOPLE, ESPECIALLY THE VULNERABLE Social Justice Public health nurses commitment to the communities, families, and individuals they serve emanate from a combination of the passion underlying their social justice beliefs that all persons regardless of circumstances are entitled equally to a basic quality of life. Social justice is the foundation of public health that invincible human spirit that led so many of us to enter the field of public health in the first place: a spirit of that has a compelling desire to make the world a better place, free of misery, inequity, and preventable suffering, a world in which we all can live, love, work, play, ail, and die with our dignity intact and our humanity cherished. 2 Compassion The nurse is temporarily the consciousness of the unconscious, the love of life for the suicidal, the leg of the amputee, the eyes of the newly blind, a means of locomotion for the infant, knowledge and confidence for the young mother, the (voice) for those too weak or withdrawn to speak. 3 1 Patricia Benner, Christine Tanner, Catherine Chesla. Adapted from Expertise in Nursing Practice: Caring, Clinical Judgment, and Ethics. New York: Springer, 1996: p.233. 2 Krieger and Birn, Editorial, AJPH, November 1997 3 Henderson, VA. Basic principles of nursing care. London: International Council of Nurses, 1961. Revised 2007 4 Minnesota Department of Health

Sensitivity to Diversity Values cultural diversity in communities Possesses capacity for cultural self-assessment and competence in adapting to diversity. Respect for the worth of all people, especially the vulnerable Vulnerable populations are populations at risk of poor physical, psychological, or social health. ENCOMPASSES MENTAL, PHYSICAL, EMOTIONAL, SOCIAL, SPIRITUAL, AND ENVIRONMENTAL ASPECTS OF HEALTH Definition of holistic nursing: All nursing practice that has healing the whole person as its goal. 1 Historical precedents: The work we are speaking of has to do with maintaining health by removing things which disturb it dirt, drink, diet, damp, and drains. 2 Appalled at the conditions she found among the wives of the soldiers she tended, i.e., respectable women, living in 3-4 rooms of the damp basement of a hospital, where a fever broke out. In this place the sick were attended and 22 babies born. Ms. Nightingale: Procured a house Had it cleaned and furnished Organized a plan to give employment to soldiers wives Started a school for the children Got a chaplain to visit the families and help them Advocated in her writings that the wives and children not be forgotten when planning for the soldiers 3 Lillian Wald envisioned the Henry Street Settlement as an opportunity to unite people through their human and spiritual interests. As a result, the Settlement continually expanded to meet the needs of its community by supplementing the nursing activities with social programs that included: Dramatic activities Vocational training for boys and girls Three kindergartens Classes in carpentry, sewing, art, diction, music, and dance Clubs for boys, girls, men, young women, and mothers A drama club with its own theater Summer camps for children at a Settlement-owned farm 1 American Holistic Nurses Association. 2 Florence Nightingale. 3 Whall. The Family as the Unit of Care. Public Health Nursing. Volume 3. December, 1986. Revised 2007 5 Minnesota Department of Health

Two large scholarship funds Study rooms staffed with people to help children with their homework Playgrounds for children A neighborhood library 1 PROMOTES HEALTH THROUGH STRATEGIES DRIVEN BY EPIDEMIOLOGICAL EVIDENCE Levels of prevention Primary promotes health and prevents problems before they occur Secondary detects and treats problems early Tertiary limits further negative effects from a problem Epidemiology Describes the health status of populations Explains the causes of diseases Predicts the occurrence of disease Controls the distribution of disease COLLABORATES WITH COMMUNITY RESOURCES TO ACHIEVE THOSE STRATEGIES, BUT CAN AND WILL WORK ALONE IF NECESSARY Can and will work alone if others are unable or choose not to work on an issue Protecting the health of the public is a fundamental responsibility of government Core government functions of public health: Assessment, Policy Development & Assurance DERIVES ITS AUTHORITY FOR INDEPENDENT ACTION FROM THE NURSE PRACTICE ACT Legally established scope of practice Broad authority for action Professionally guided standards and expectations Cornerstones Endure across time and place Underlying meaning of our work Provides guidance and direction for our practice 1 www.jwa.org/jwa-1999/exhibit98/wald Revised 2007 6 Minnesota Department of Health

For additional information: Sue Strohschein, MS, BSN, APRN, BC Office of Public Health Practice Minnesota Department of Health PO Box 64975 St. Paul, MN 55164-0975 Phone: 320-223-7344 Sue.strohschein@state.mn.us Revised 2007 7 Minnesota Department of Health