Knowledge Gaps in Applying Evidence to Practice

 

The DNP scholar, who is seeking to learn more about the different types of inquiry, Research, Quality Improvement, and Evidence-based practice, will bridge the gap between knowledge, research, application, and translation of evidence to nursing practice. There will be interrelationships between nursing practice, education, theory, and research. A systematic review is an important tool for the DNP scholar who is seeking evidence (Polit & Beck, 2017). Dang & Dearholt inform us that systematic reviews utilize meta-synthesis and meta-analysis to analyze the results of several studies. Therefore, these two most reliable methods and the highest standards in evidence-based care could lead the DNP scholar; further determine the effects of nursing interventions, prevention, treatment, and rehabilitation. Case-controlled studies, case series, and case reports make the DNP do in depth research of individual units, which gives insight into the specific intervention. Cohort studies considered observational studies where the DNP scholar can be able to answer questions on the disease etiology, diagnosis, and prognosis except interventions. DNP scholar uses random control trials to measure the different interventions therefore make the best clinical decision on the outcome of each intervention. Critically appraised individual articles are less reliable however, it helps to assess the outcomes for evidence doing an individual study. Critically appraised topics help to understand the strength of evidence provided and creates an understanding on how to evaluate and synthesize multiple research studies. The least reliable evidence yet helpful for the DNP scholar is the ideas, opinions anecdotes, and editorials. It is crucial as a DNP scholar to understand the pyramid of evidence (all seven levels) and to identify the levels needed for their study. 

 I need a comment for this post at least 2 paragraphs and 2 sources no later than 5 years. 

Assessment

  Male & Female Reproductive System  

As in all assignments, cite your sources in your work and provide references for the citations in APA format. Support your work, using your course lectures and textbook readings. 

Mr. B is a 77-year-old African American man who complains of difficulty urinating.

What could be the underlying cause of these symptoms?
What are his risk factors?
What laboratory tests would be needed to confirm possible differential diagnoses?
What interventions would you expect?

Ques check 2

QUESTION 1
1. A 45-year-old male comes to the clinic with a chief complaint of epigastric abdominal pain that has persisted for 2 weeks. He describes the pain as burning, non-radiating and is worse after meals. He denies nausea, vomiting, weight loss or obvious bleeding. He admits to bloating and frequent belching.  
PMH-+ for osteoarthritis, seasonal allergies with frequent sinusitis infections.  
Meds-Zyrtec 10 mg po daily and takes it year-round, ibuprofen 400-600 mg po prn pain 
Family Hx-non contributary  
Social history-recently divorced and expressed concern at how expensive it is to support 2 homes. Works as a manager at a local tire and auto company. He has 25 pack/year history of smoking, drinks 2-3 beers/day, and drinks 5-6 cups of coffee per day. He denies illicit drug use, vaping or unprotected sexual encounters.  
Breath test in the office revealed + urease. 
The healthcare provider suspects the client has peptic ulcer disease.
1 of 2 Questions:
What factors may have contributed to the development of PUD? 
1 points   
QUESTION 2
1. A 45-year-old male comes to the clinic with a chief complaint of epigastric abdominal pain that has persisted for 2 weeks. He describes the pain as burning, non-radiating and is worse after meals. He denies nausea, vomiting, weight loss or obvious bleeding. He admits to bloating and frequent belching.  
PMH-+ for osteoarthritis, seasonal allergies with frequent sinusitis infections.  
Meds-Zyrtec 10 mg po daily and takes it year-round, ibuprofen 400-600 mg po prn pain 
Family Hx-non contributary  
Social history-recently divorced and expressed concern at how expensive it is to support 2 homes. Works as a manager at a local tire and auto company. He has 25 pack/year history of smoking, drinks 2-3 beers/day, and drinks 5-6 cups of coffee per day. He denies illicit drug use, vaping or unprotected sexual encounters.  
Breath test in the office revealed + urease. 
The healthcare provider suspects the client has peptic ulcer disease.
2 of 2 Questions:
How do these factors contribute to the formation of peptic ulcers? 
1 points   
QUESTION 3
1. A 36-year-old morbidly obese female comes to the office with a chief complaint of “burning in my chest and a funny taste in my mouth”. The symptoms have been present for years but patient states she had been treating the symptoms with antacid tablets which helped until the last 4 or 5 weeks. She never saw a healthcare provider for that. She says the symptoms get worse at night when she is lying down and has had to sleep with 2 pillows. She says she has started coughing at night which has been interfering with her sleep. She denies palpitations, shortness of breath, or nausea. 
PMH-HTN, venous stasis ulcers, irritable bowel syndrome, osteoarthritis of knees, morbid obesity (BMI 48 kg/m2) 
Family history-non contributary   
Medications-amlodipine 10 mg po qd, dicyclomine 20 mg po, ibuprofen 600 mg po q 6 hr prn 
Social hx- 15 pack/year history of smoking, occasional alcohol use, denies vaping    
The health care provider diagnoses the patient with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD). 
Question:
The client asks the APRN what causes GERD. What is the APRN’s best response? 
   
QUESTION 4
1. A 34-year-old construction worker presents to his Primary Care Provider (PCP) with a chief complaint of passing foul smelling dark, tarry stools. He stated the first episode occurred last week, but it was only a small amount after he had eaten a dinner of beets and beef. The episode today was accompanied by nausea, sweating, and weakness. He states he has had some mid epigastric pain for several weeks and has been taking OTC antacids. The most likely diagnosis is upper GI bleed which won’t be confirmed until further endoscopic procedures are performed.
Question:
What factors can contribute to an upper GI bleed? 
1 points   
QUESTION 5
1. A 64-year-old steel worker presents to his Primary Care Provider (PCP) with a chief complaint of passing bright red blood when he had a bowel movement that morning. He stated the first episode occurred last week, but it was only a small amount after he had eaten a dinner of beets and beef. The episode today was accompanied by nausea, sweating, and weakness. He states he has had some left lower quadrant pain for several weeks but described it as “coming and going”. He says he has had a fever and abdominal cramps that have worsened this morning. The likely diagnosis is lower GI bleed secondary to diverticulitis.
Question:
What can cause diverticulitis in the lower GI tract? 
1 points   
QUESTION 6
1. A 48-year-old man presents to his gastroenterologist for increasing abdominal girth and increasing jaundice. He has a long history of alcoholic cirrhosis and has multiple admissions for encephalopathy and GI bleeding from esophageal varices. He has been diagnosed with portal hypertension and tells the APRN that he was told he had chronic, non-curable cirrhosis.    
Question:
How does cirrhosis cause portal hypertension? 
1 points   
QUESTION 7
1. A 48-year-old man presents to his gastroenterologist for increasing abdominal girth and increasing jaundice. He has a long history of alcoholic cirrhosis and has multiple admissions for encephalopathy and GI bleeding from esophageal varices. He has been diagnosed with portal hypertension. The increased abdominal girth has been progressive, and he says it is getting hard to breathe. The APRN reviews his last laboratory data and notes that the total protein is 4.6 gm/dl and the albumin is 2.9 g/dl. Upon exam, he has icteric sclera, jaundice, and abdominal spider angiomas. There is a significant fluid wave when percussed. The APRN tells the patient that he has ascites.  
Question:
Discuss how ascites develops as a result of portal hypertension. 
UESTION 8
1. A 45-year-old man with known alcoholic cirrhosis, portal hypertension, and ascites is brought to the ED by his family due to increasing confusion. The family states that he had been stumbling for several days but had not fallen. The family also noted that he had been “flapping his hands” as well. Labs in the ED reveal Hgb 9.4 g/dl, Hct 28.0 %, ammonia (NH3) level is 159 μmol/L. The APRN informs the family that the patient has developed hepatic encephalopathy (HE). 
Question:
Explain how hepatic encephalopathy develops in patients with cirrhosis of the liver.
1 points   
QUESTION 9
1. A 65-year-old man with a history of atrial fibrillation presents to his PCP’s office 2 months after suffering from a myocardial infarction.  He declined anticoagulation due to fear he would bleed to death. He has had sudden-onset, moderately severe diffuse abdominal pain that began 18 hours ago. He has been vomiting, and he has had several episodes of diarrhea, the last of which was bloody. He has a fever of 100.9 ˚ F. CBC reveals WBC of 15,000/mm3. 
Question:
What is the most likely mechanism behind his current symptoms?  
1 points   
QUESTION 10
1. A 46-year-old Caucasian female presents to the PCP’s office with a chief complaint of severe, intermittent right upper quadrant pain for the last 3 days. The pain is described as sharp and has occurred after eating french fries and cheeseburgers and radiates to her right shoulder. She has had a few episodes of vomiting “green stuff”. States had fever and chills last night which precipitated her trip to the office. She also had some dark orange urine, but she thought she was dehydrated.  
Physical exam: slightly obese female with icteric sclera as well as generalized jaundice. Temp 101˚F, pulse 108, respirations 18. Abdominal exam revealed rounded abdomen with slightly hypoactive bowel sounds. + rebound tenderness on palpation of right upper quadrant. No tenderness or rebound in epigastrium or other quadrants. Labs demonstrate elevated WBC, elevated serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and aspartate aminotransferase (AST) levels. Serum bilirubin (indirect) 2.5 mg/dl.  Abdominal ultrasound demonstrated enlarged gall bladder, dilated common bile duct and multiple stones in the bile duct. The APRN diagnoses the patient with acute cholecystitis and refers her to the ED for further treatment. 
Question 1 of 2:
Describe how gallstones are formed and why they caused the symptoms that the patient presented with. 
1 points   
QUESTION 11
1. A 46-year-old Caucasian female presents to the PCP’s office with a chief complaint of severe, intermittent right upper quadrant pain for the last 3 days. The pain is described as sharp and has occurred after eating french fries and cheeseburgers and radiates to her right shoulder. She has had a few episodes of vomiting “green stuff”. States had fever and chills last night which precipitated her trip to the office. She also had some dark orange urine, but she thought she was dehydrated.  
Physical exam: slightly obese female with icteric sclera as well as generalized jaundice. Temp 101˚F, pulse 108, respirations 18. Abdominal exam revealed rounded abdomen with slightly hypoactive bowel sounds. + rebound tenderness on palpation of right upper quadrant. No tenderness or rebound in epigastrium or other quadrants. Labs demonstrate elevated WBC, elevated serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and aspartate aminotransferase (AST) levels. Serum bilirubin (indirect) 2.5 mg/dl.  Abdominal ultrasound demonstrated enlarged gall bladder, dilated common bile duct and multiple stones in the bile duct. The APRN diagnoses the patient with acute cholecystitis and refers her to the ED for further treatment. 
Question 2 of 2:
Explain how the patient became jaundiced.
1 points   
QUESTION 12
1. Ruth is a 49-year-old office worker who presents to the clinic with a chief complaint of abdominal pain x 2 days. The pain has significantly increased over the past 6 hours and is now accompanied by nausea and vomiting. The pain is described as “sharp and boring” in mid epigastrum and radiates to the back. Ruth admits to a long history of alcohol use, and often drinks up to a fifth of vodka every day.  
 
Physical Exam: 
Temp 102.2F, BP 90/60, respirations 22. Pulse Oximetry 92% on room air. 
General: thin, pale white female in obvious pain and leaning forward. Moving around on exam table and unable to sit quietly. 
CV-tachycardic. RRR without gallops, rubs, clicks or murmurs 
Resp-decreased breath sounds in both bases with poor inspiratory effort 
Abd- epigastric guarding with tenderness. No rebound tenderness. Negative Cullen’s and + Turner’s signs observed.  Hypoactive bowel sounds x 2 upper quadrants, and no bowel sounds heard in both lower quadrants.  
 
The APRN makes a tentative diagnosis of acute pancreatitis based on history and physical exam and has the patient transferred to the ER where laboratory and radiographic exams reveal acute pancreatitis. 
Question:
Explain how pancreatitis develops and the role alcohol played in this patient’s case.
1 points   
QUESTION 13
1. A 23-year-old bisexual man with a history of intravenous drug abuse presents to the clinic with a chief complaint of fever, fatigue, loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and dark urine. He says the symptoms started about a month ago and have gotten steadily worse. He admits to reusing needles and had unprotected sexual relations with a man “a couple months ago”.  
PMH-noncontributory.   
Social/family history-works occasionally as a night clerk in a hotel. Parents without illnesses. Admits to bisexual sexual relations and intravenous heroin use. He has refused drug rehabilitation. 3 year/pack history of tobacco but denies vaping.  
Physical exam unremarkable except for palpable liver edge 2 fingerbreadths below costal margin. No ascites or jaundice appreciated.  
The APRN suspects the patient has Hepatitis B given the strong history of risk factors. She orders a hepatitis panel which was positive for acute Hepatitis B. 
Question:
What are the important hepatitis markers that indicated the patient had acute hepatitis B? 
1 points   
QUESTION 14
1. Hannah is a 19-year-old college sophomore who came to Student Health with a chief complaint of lower abdominal pain. She says the pain has been present for 2 months and she has had multiple episodes of diarrhea alternating with constipation, and anorexia. She says she has lost about 10 pounds in these 2 months without dieting. The abdominal pain has gotten worse in the last 2 hours, but she thought she had “the GI bug” like other students at her Synagogue had.  
Physical exam-noncontributory except for the abdomen which was lightly distended with no visible masses. Normoactive BS x 4. Diffuse tenderness throughout but increased pain on deep palpation LUQ & LLQ. Slight guarding but no rebound tenderness or rigidity. 
Rectal-tight anal sphincter and patient grimacing in pain during exam. Slightly + guaiac stool. 
 
Based on her history and current symptoms, the APN arranges for a consult with a gastroenterologist who diagnoses Hannah with ulcerative colitis (UC). 
Question:
How does ulcerative colitis develop in a susceptible person?  
1 points   
QUESTION 15
1. A 64-year-old woman with long standing coronary artery disease presents to the clinic with lower extremity swelling, abdominal distension, and shortness of breath. Patient states she has a 30-pound weight gain in 6 weeks and is now requiring 3 pillows to sleep.  
On physical exam the patient is a well-developed, well-nourished female exhibiting signs of respiratory distress with use of accessory muscles. Blood pressure 150/80, pulse 105, respirations 28 and labored. Body weight 89 kg. HEENT was unremarkable. Cardiac exam had an S1, S2 and S3 without S4 or murmur. Respiratory exam was positive for bilateral rales 1/2 up both lung fields. Abdomen was enlarged with a positive fluid wave. Lower extremities were remarkable for 3+ pitting edema. 
Laboratory data was significant for an increase in K+ from 3.4 mmol/l to 6.1 mmol/l in 2 weeks, BUN increased from 18 mg/dl to 104 mg/dl, and creatinine increased from 0.8 mg/dl to 6.9 mg/dl.  
CXR revealed congestive heart failure. The APRN calls the cardiologist on call who admits the patient to the hospital and orders a nephrology consult.  
She was diagnosed with exacerbation of congestive heart failure (CHF) and acute kidney injury (AKI).  
Question:
What type of acute kidney injury does the patient have and what factors contributed to this diagnosis? 
1 points   
QUESTION 16
1. The APRN is giving a pathophysiology lecture to APRN students on renal blood flow, related hormones, and glomerular filtration rate.  
Question:
What would be the most important concept of glomerular filtration rate that the APRN should address? 
1 points   
QUESTION 17
1. The APRN is giving a pathophysiology lecture to APRN students on renal blood flow, glomerular filtration rate, autoregulation, and related hormone factors regulating renal blood flow 
Question:
What would be the most important concept of autoregulation that the APRN should address? 
1 points   
QUESTION 18
1. The APRN is giving a pathophysiology lecture to APRN students on renal blood flow, glomerular filtration rate, autoregulation, and related hormone factors regulating renal blood flow 
Question:
What would be the most important concept of hormonal regulation that the APRN should address? 
1 points   
QUESTION 19
1. A 28-year-old female comes to the clinic with a chief complaint of right flank pain, urinary frequency, and foul-smelling urine. The symptoms have been present for 3 days but this morning, the patient states she had a fever of 101 F and thought she should get it checked out. Physical exam noncontributory with the exception of right costovertebral angle (CVA) tenderness upon percussion. Urine dipstick shows + blood, + bacteria and + white blood cells. Renal ultrasound reveals right staghorn renal calculus and the patient was diagnosed with acute pyelonephritis.  
Question:
How does a renal calculi calculus contribute to acute pyelonephritis? 
1 points   
QUESTION 20
1. Mr. Kent is a 45-year-old African American male with a history of Type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and hyperlipidemia. His renal function has slowly decreased over the past 4 years and his nephrologist has told him that his GFR has decreased to 15cc ml/min and will soon need renal dialysis for chronic renal failure.  
Question:
How does chronic renal failure develop? 
1 points   
 

Discussion question 2

Consider the following patient scenario:

A mother comes in with 9-month-old girl. The infant is 68.5cm in length (25th percentile per CDC growth chart), weighs 6.75kg (5th percentile per CDC growth chart), and has a head circumference of 43cm (25th percentile per CDC growth chart). 

Describe the developmental markers a nurse should assess for a 9-month-old female infant. Discuss the recommendations you would give the mother. Explain why these recommendations are based on evidence-based practice.

NR103 Transition to the Nursing Profession 3-Minute Reflection (2-3 Paragraphs)

Week 6: 3-Minute Reflection (2-3 Paragraphs APA Format)

TOPIC: 3 TECHNIQUES TO REDUCE STREE FOR NURSING STUDENT (For example, Meditation, exercise, breathing technique, get enough sleep, eat well), etc…

Criteria

1. Writes about the assigned topic:

2. Demonstrates strong evidence of reasoned reflection.

3. Demonstrated depth of original thought.

4.Grammar and spelling are correct

5. APA formatting to be used for this assignment

Case study

 

Please see the attached Case study.

All Case studies /assignments must be done in APA format with a separate sheet for references. 

Managing care in a Culturally Considerate manner

CASE STUDY 2

Patient Profile
F.M. is a 68-year-old white man who comes to the emergency department (ED) in the early afternoon with a 2-day history of severe chest pain. The pain started on wakening the previous day. The pain increased during the night, but his wife could not convince him to go to the hospital. He comes to the ED today because the pain is severe and no longer relieved by rest.

Subjective Data

  • Describes recurring chest pain for the past 6 months that was relieved by rest; the pain is a feeling of heaviness in chest with no radiating pain to arm or jaw or accompanying complaints of nausea or dizziness
  • Recently the chest pain has become severe and is no longer relieved by rest; is now complaining of being slightly nauseated
  • His father died of a heart attack at age 62
  • Denies alcohol or drug use
  • Smokes one pack of cigarettes per day
  • Describes his lifestyle as sedentary

Objective Data

Physical Examination

  • Blood pressure 180/96, pulse 98, temperature 99.8° F, respirations 20
  • Height 5’11”, weight 210 lbs, BMI 29.3 kg/m2
  • Alert and oriented to person, place, and time
  • Skin diaphoretic and clammy
  • Heart rhythm regular, no murmurs or extra heart sounds
  • Lungs are clear to auscultation

Diagnostic Studies

  • Hemoglobin 14 g/dL
  • Chemistry panel is normal
  • Cardiac markers – pending
  • Electrocardiogram showing changes that correlate with non-ST-segment-elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI)

Collaborative Care

  • 9% NaCl infusing into IV catheter at 75 mL/hr
  • Nitroglycerin and morphine given with relief of pain
  1. What are F.M.’s modifiable risk factors for coronary artery disease (CAD)? What are his non-modifiable risk factors?
  2. What is the difference between chronic stable angina pain and pain associated with myocardial infarction?
  3. What are diagnostic studies indicated for F.M.?
  4. F.M. is diagnosed as having a myocardial infarction (MI).
  5. What is the priority nursing care for F.M.?
  6. What other interventions do you anticipate for F.M. at this time?

Facebook, WhatsApp, and Twitter

Write a five- paragraph argumentative essay:

 Take your stance and defend whether Facebook, WhatsApp, and Twitter be banned permanently?  

 Follow APA style 7th edition guidelines . Plagiarism is academic misconduct. While citing sources, rephrase the sentences and then cite them per APA format. You all must have at least 3 references. 

Health Policy Analysis Paper

Instructions from our professor:

Topic: Health Policy Analysis Paper

1.  Select a Health Policy on a Local, State, or Federal policy that you have explored along with recommendations based upon the analysis.

2.  Analyze the Health Policy selected.

3.  Evaluate the Health Policy selected.

4.  Identify application of health policy into clinical practice.

Ø Your paper must have an Introduction and a Conclusion

Ø Maximum of 6 pages (not including Title and Reference page).

Ø APA format

Ø At least 5 references within 5 years.

Note: 

I need the paper to follow all of the professor’s instructions, my professor is very strict with this.

Plagiarism is not tolerated, and they use turn it in.

The paper has to cover all of first four points:

1. Select a Health Policy on a Local, State, or Federal policy that you have explored along with recommendations based upon the analysis.

2.Analyze the Health Policy selected.

3. Evaluate the Health Policy selected.

4. Identify application of health policy into clinical practice.

And also, these:

Ø Your paper must have an Introduction and a Conclusion

Ø Maximum of 6 pages (not including Title and Reference page).

Ø APA format (APA 7 is the one the school is using)

Ø At least 5 references within 5 years.

I attached the grading rubric for this homework (for your guide)

New Works 10/26

Work #1:

Describe in 500 words discuss the scope of a cloud computing audit for your business.

Use at least three sources. Use the Research Databases available from the Danforth Library not Google. Include at least 3 quotes from your sources enclosed in quotation marks and cited in-line by reference to your reference list.  Example: “words you copied” (citation) These quotes should be one full sentence not altered or paraphrased. Cite your sources using APA format. Use the quotes in your paragaphs.  Stand alone quotes will not count toward the 3 required quotes.

Copying without attribution or the use of spinbot or other word substitution software will result in a grade of 0. 

Write in essay format not in bulleted, numbered or other list format. 

It is important that you use your own words, that you cite your sources, that you comply with the instructions regarding length of your post. Your goal is to help your colleagues write better. Do not use spinbot or other word replacement software. It usually results in nonsense and is not a good way to learn anything. . I will not spend a lot of my time trying to decipher nonsense. Proof read your work or have it edited. Find something interesting and/or relevant to your work to write about.