Finals

There has been a health outbreak! Choose an at-risk population, an epidemic, and respond to the following objectives from the CDC Epidemic Intelligence Service. You are to write a 2- 3 page paper, in APA format, include at least 5 references, and address the objectives below. You will include the primary NCHEC Area of Responsibility and Competency you are addressing in this assignment as a title on the first page of your document. What is the epidemic, who does it adversely affect, what is the first response to this epidemic, etc. 

After you complete the paper, create a 1-page outbreak communication flyer, radio announcement, commercial transcript, etc. to release to the public (this is the presentation portion and is a separate submission) (follow the CDC and WHO outline for help, located in the Module 5 Resources). 

Possible Epidemics in the US:

  • Salmonella
  • Lung injury associated with e-cigarette use or vaping
  • Listeria
  • Brucella
  • Measles
  • Hepatitis A
  • Hurricane

Possible Epidemics Outside the US:

  • Dengue
  • Polio
  • Chikungunya
  • Typhoid fever (drug-resistant)
  • Hurricane

Situational Awareness

At the start of an investigation, you will need to assess the situation (11). The following steps will help you perform this task quickly:

  • Identify affected or potentially affected populations (i.e., target audiences). Ask yourself, “Who is most at risk by the outbreak or public health threat?” “What populations are most vulnerable or at the highest risk and need to be reached first?”
  • Identify behavioral factors that might place persons at risk. Ask yourself, “Are behavioral factors placing persons at risk?” If so, “What are they?” Can you recommend actions that persons and healthcare providers can take to confront these behavioral factors and thus reduce their risk (e.g., get vaccinated or wash their hands frequently)? If the risk is unknown, can you provide information to the public and media about what is being done in the investigation to identify what places persons at risk?
  • Identify partners who might be able to reach affected persons or populations. In an ideal situation, strong relationships will exist. However, if such relationships do not yet exist, quickly identify what relationships are crucial for containing and stopping the outbreak. Ask yourself, “Are healthcare providers available who might reach the affected persons or populations quickly?” “Who are the community leaders who can help reach the affected persons or populations?” “Will the public look to specific partners or persons for advice or direction (e.g., religious leaders or local thought leaders)?” Decide who should talk with those influential persons and what the timing should be for doing so.
  • Identify perceptions in the community that might affect communications. Listen to community members. Work to get a better understanding of how local authorities, affected persons, and community leaders perceive the situation (7). Listen to concerns, critiques, and fears. When possible, have a discussion before issuing directives. Gain an understanding of what community members might know and believe about the illness and potential cause. Also work to understand the language, culture, and socioeconomic factors in the community that should be considered. Use this information to refine your communication efforts.
    • Tailor health-related recommendations or guidance and ensure that it is written in plain language to be more easily adopted or adhered to by the affected population and public health or healthcare entities.
    • Build strong relationships with key persons in the community who can help you contain or stop the outbreak and can provide ongoing insights.
    • Ensure that messages to the media and public resonate. The communications team will want to identify reliable information sources that can provide an ongoing assessment of current perceptions in the community (e.g., social media monitoring) (12). When you have this feedback loop in place, work to integrate the findings into ongoing decision making.

Communication Resources and Tools Often Used for Outbreak Responses

  • Internet site. The response effort might need an Internet site to convey relevant and rapidly changing information about the outbreak. The site should be the main repository of scientific facts, data, and resources. All other communications should be based on the content of that site. Key information for the site might include the following:
    • Data or case counts;
    • Maps of the affected area;
    • Guidance for affected populations, the public, travelers to or from the region, and healthcare providers who are caring for the affected persons;
    • A section highlighting the newest information; and
    • A multimedia section for the media and the general public.
  • Call center. The response effort might benefit from having a call center equipped to answer inquiries from the affected population, the worried well, and healthcare providers seeking information. Guidance is available for entities that are establishing a call center during an outbreak response.
  • Social media messages. Create social media messages from Internet site content. Communications staff should monitor social media regularly to identify and dispel myths and misperceptions.
  • Clinician outreach resources. The response might require substantial communications with healthcare providers. Webinars, conference calls with partner organizations, videos for online clinical communities, or other forums might be considered to allow healthcare providers to access up-to-date information, ask questions, and obtain advice from other clinicians associated with the response.
  • Digital press kit for the news media. A digital press kit with photos, videos, quotations from spokespersons, the latest data or information (e.g., graphics, charts, or maps), and information about how to obtain an interview is always helpful for reporters during an outbreak investigation.
  • Tailor communication resources. The response might require translation for specific audiences, and communication materials might need to be tailored for reaching affected populations. Some responses use photo novellas, simple line art, text messaging, or community events to convey important information for specific audiences.

What to Include When Developing Outbreak-Related Messages

  • Expression of empathy.
  • What’s known and a call for action, including Who? What? When? Where? Why? How?
  • What’s known and what’s not known, and how answers will be obtained for what’s not yet known
  • Explanations of what public health actions are being taken and why.
  • A statement of commitment.
  • When additional information will be provided.
  • Where to find more information in the meantime.

fema

 

  • After reviewing the FEMA website, select an area that you think is the most helpful for a public health nurse to use. Explain your choice.
  • 1page

Mental Health Disorders

 

assignment mental health disorders

A 38-year-old woman presents to the office with complaints of weight

loss, fatigue, and insomnia of 3-month duration. She reports that she has

been feeling gradually more tired and staying up late at night because

she can’t sleep. She does not feel that she is doing as well in her occupation

as a secretary and states that she has trouble remembering things.

She does not go outdoors as much as she used to and cannot recall the

last time she went out with friends or enjoyed a social gathering. She

feels tired most of the week and states she feels that she wants to go to

sleep and frequently does not want to get out of bed. She denies any

recent medication, illicit drug, or alcohol use. She feels intense guilt

regarding past failed relationships because she perceives them as faults.

She states she has never thought of suicide, but has begun to feel increasingly

worthless.

Her vital signs and general physical examination are normal, although

she becomes tearful while talking. Her mental status examination is significant

for depressed mood, psychomotor retardation, and difficulty attending

to questions. Laboratory studies reveal a normal metabolic panel, normal

complete blood count, and normal thyroid functions.

Questions:

➤ What is the most likely diagnosis?

➤ What is your next step?

➤ What are important considerations and potential complications of

management?

Nurs435promptw3

Conversation in Negotiations 

Difficult conversations are a form of negotiation. Research scholarly articles on negotiating difficult conversations and discuss strategies for listening techniques. Be sure to address the following questions:

  • What do you think is the most effective listening technique? Why?
  • How could you demonstrate listening for feelings? Explain how this helps lead to resolution.
  • What could you do to show you are listening for content? Explain why this is helpful.

Please use those articles for the answers, select what match the best. 

1    Twenty-Five  Years of Group Decision and Negotiation: A Bibliometric Overview     by Sigifredo  Laengle, Nikunja  Mohan Modak, Jose  M Merigo, Gustavo  Zurita    Format: ArticlePublication year: 2018 | Peer-reviewed Journal: 

  • Group Decision and Negotiation : Published in cooperation with the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences and its Section on Group Decision and Negotiation v27 n4 (201808): 505-542

Twenty-five years ago, in 1992, a journal named Group Decision and Negotiation was established in association with the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences with the vision of promoting theoretical and empirical research, real-world  applications and case studies on group decision and negotiation processes. To celebrate its 25 years of continuous and outstanding contributions, this study aims to develop a bibliometric analysis of the publications of the journal between 1992 and 2016. The  Web of Science Core Collection database is used to identify the leading trends of the journal in terms of impacts, topics, authors, universities and countries. Moreover, it utilizes the visualization of similarities viewer software to analyze the bibliographic  couplings, co-citations, citations, co-authorships and co-occurrences of keywords.

Twenty-five years ago, in 1992, a journal named Group Decision and Negotiation was established in association with the Institute for  Operations Research and the Management Sciences with the vision of promoting theoretical and empirical research, real-world applications and case studies on group decision and negotiation processes. To celebrate its 25 years of continuous and outstanding contributions,  this study aims to develop a bibliometric analysis of the publications of the journal between 1992 and 2016. The Web of Science Core Collection database is used to identify the leading trends of the journal in terms of impacts, topics, authors, universities  and countries. Moreover, it utilizes the visualization of similarities viewer software to analyze the bibliographic couplings, co-citations, citations, co-authorships and co-occurrences of keywords. Read  Less     
  Laengle, Sigifredo, Nikunja Mohan Modak, Jose M. Merigo, and Gustavo Zurita. 2018. “Twenty-Five  Years of Group Decision and Negotiation: A Bibliometric Overview.” Group  Decision and Negotiation : Published in Cooperation with the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences and Its Section on Group Decision and Negotiation 27(4):505–42.
  
  2    The  role of patient narratives in healthcare innovation: supporting translation and meaning making     by Anne  Reff Pedersen    Format: ArticlePublication year: 2016 | Peer-reviewed Journal: 

  • Journal of Health Organization and Management v30 n2 (20160411): 244-257

– The purpose of this paper is to investigate the process and impact of patient involvement in locally defined improvement projects in two hospital clinics. The paper particularly aims to examine how patient narratives, in the form of diaries and radio montage,  help to create new insights into patient experience for healthcare professionals, and support professionals’ enrolment and mobilisation in innovation projects. – Two case studies were undertaken. These drew upon qualitative interviews with staff and participant  observation during innovation workshops. Patient diaries and a recorded montage of patient voices were also collected. – The findings illuminate translation processes in healthcare innovation and the emergence of meaning making process for staff through the  active use of patient narratives. The paper highlights the critical role of meaning making as an enabler of patient-centred change processes in healthcare via: local clinic mangers defining problems and ideas; collecting and sharing patient narratives in innovation  workshops; and healthcare professionals’ interpretation of patient narratives supporting new insights into patient experience. – This study demonstrates how healthcare professionals’ meaning making can be supported by articulating, constructing, listening  and interpreting patient narratives. The two cases demonstrate how patient narratives serve as reflective devices for healthcare professionals. – This study presents a novel demonstration of the importance of patient narratives for translating healthcare innovation  in a clinical practice setting.

– The purpose of this paper is to investigate the process and impact of patient involvement in locally defined improvement projects in two hospital clinics. The paper particularly aims to ex… Read  More  
  
  Pedersen,  Anne Reff. 2016. “The Role of Patient Narratives in Healthcare Innovation: Supporting Translation and Meaning Making.” Journal  of Health Organization and Management 30(2):244–57.
  
  3     Building  an Inclusive Climate for Intercultural Dialogue: A Participant-Generated Framework     by Benjamin  J Broome, Ian  Derk, Robert  J Razzante, Elena  Steiner, Jameien  Taylor, Aaron  Zamora    Format: ArticlePublication year: 2019 | Peer-reviewed Journal: 

  • Negotiation and Conflict Management Research v12 n3 (August 2019): 234-255

This study investigates the question of how to build an inclusive environment for intercultural dialogue. Using the university campus as a context for our research, we conducted a facilitated idea generation workshop in which participants identified a set of  dialogic competencies, followed by individual interviews in which we explored participants’ perceptions of the relationships among these competencies. Interviews were conducted utilizing a software-assisted, idea-structuring methodology referred to as Interpretive  Structural Modeling (ISM). Based on our results, we constructed a framework that depicts the overall flow of influence among the set of dialogic competencies identified by the participants. While findings confirm the importance placed in current literature  on factors such as listening and empathy, they provide a more sophisticated and nuanced perspective on how to accomplish one of the oft-stated goals of intercultural dialogue, which is to help participants examine their unconscious biases, prejudices, and  privileges.

This study investigates the question of how to build an inclusive environment for intercultural dialogue. Using the university campus as a context for our research, we conducted a facilitate… Read  More   
  
    Broome, Benjamin  J. et al. 2019. “Building an Inclusive Climate for Intercultural Dialogue: A Participant-Generated Framework.” Negotiation  and Conflict Management Research 12(3):234–55.
  
  
  
  

True or False?

Due: Sunday night at 11:59pm Mountain Time

In this assignment, you will identify soundness, bias, and reliability in statements.

Step 1: Consider the scenario:

You are a speechwriter for the mayor of Oakland. This is an election year and already the mayor’s opposition is out in force. Henry Levine, the leading GOP candidate, recently aired an advertisement on local television blasting the mayor for his handling of the city’s recent demonstrations, most of which are aimed at overturning the current financial structure of Oakland:

We know that Mayor Brooks, a graduate of Johns Hopkins Business School, is an intelligent man. He graduated first in his class and received the 1997 Young Economists’ Essay Award, becoming the youngest recipient in history to do so. Why then do we, the upstanding residents of Oakland, find our streets littered with young and disgruntled vagrants calling for anarchy as a solution to the status quo? We need look no further than the house of cards built by our current mayor. Oaklanders deserve better than what this mayor can offer. They deserve what I, Henry Levine, can offer each and every Oaklander next year.

Step 2: Assess the candidate’s speech.

Before you can begin writing the mayor’s rebuttal, you must first analyze the qualities present in Henry Levine’s initial argument. In a two-page (minimum) letter to Mayor Brooks, address the following as it pertains to Levine’s speech:

  • When does Henry Levine’s speech consist of primarily cognitive content? When is it primarily emotive?
  • What are the primary benefits of using primarily cognitive content within this political context? What are the benefits of emotive content?
  • Identify any occurrence of bias within Levine’s speech. How can bias influence reliability?
  • Evaluate the soundness of Henry Levine’s message. Do you believe his ideas are being clearly conveyed? Why or why not?

5 MOST CONTAGIOUS DISEASE

THIS IS A POWER POINT ABOUT THE MOST CONTAGIOUS DISEASES AND ITS PHARMACOLOGICAL MANAGEMENT, YOU MAY SELECT 5 AMONG THEM AND ELABORATE A POWER POINT WITH NO LESS OF 12 SLIDES.

PICOT formation

In the adult critical care population, does a research-based skin care integrity bundle, compared to standard care, influence the incidence of hospital-acquired pressure injuries over an 8-10 week time period?

· Identify the PICOT elements.

· What are key search terms identified in the practice question?

Conduct a library search using these search terms to locate a research study addressing this practice problem and consider the following.

· What is the research-evidence based intervention in the study?

· What is the quantifiable outcome(s)? How will the outcome(s) be measured? What potential reliable and valid measurements/tools may be used to measure this quantifiable data?

· Is this practice question answerable within 8-10 weeks? Why or why not?

Community And Nursing (Due 24 Hours)

 

1) Minimum 8 full pages (Follow the 3 x 3 rule: minimum three paragraphs per part)

Parts 4, 5, and 6 must be different. Different writing and perspective, but always answering questions objectively

              Part 1: Minimum 1 page

              Part 2: minimum 1 page

              Part 3: minimum 1 page

              Part 4: minimum 1 page 

              Part 5: Minimum 1 page

              Part 6: minimum 1 page

              Part 7: minimum 1 page

              Part 8: minimum 1 page

Submit 1 document per part

2)¨******APA norms

          All paragraphs must be narrative and cited in the text- each paragraphs

          Bulleted responses are not accepted

          Dont write in the first person 

          Dont copy and pase the questions.

          Answer the question objectively, do not make introductions to your answers, answer it when you start the paragraph

         Submit 1 document per part

3)****************************** It will be verified by Turnitin (Identify the percentage of exact match of writing with any other resource on the internet and academic sources, including universities and data banks) 

********************************It will be verified by SafeAssign (Identify the percentage of similarity of writing with any other resource on the internet and academic sources, including universities and data banks)

4) Minimum 3 references per part not older than 5 years

5) Identify your answer with the numbers, according to the question.

Example:

Q 1. Nursing is XXXXX

Q 2. Health is XXXX

6) You must name the files according to the part you are answering: 

Example:

Part 1.doc 

Part 2.doc 

__________________________________________________________________________________

Part 1: Community Nursing

In thinking of five social determinants of health as identified in Healthy People 2020

1. List and identify (Define) the social determinants specifically that may be barriers to home care and case or care management services. Explain your answer with examples.

Part 2: Ethical and nursing

 

Case Study, Chapter 13, The Use of Social Media in Nursing: Pitfalls and Opportunities

Two registered professional nurses are attending a meeting where the focus is examining teaching methods that enable them to share information with newly diagnosed diabetic patients. One nurse initiates a discussion on the use of social media in teaching patients and the use of social media for all health care providers.

1. Discuss actions the nurse should take before using social media as a teaching tool.

2. What types of social media could benefit health care providers and patients?

3. What are the pitfalls to utilizing social media for both patients and health care providers? 

Part 3:  Nursing and the Aging Family

  

1.      Describe at least three possible reasons that reimbursement is provided for medical procedures for pain relief rather than for comforting strategies that nurses could provide.

2.     Describe two safety risks that could result from the following health problems: hypertension, arthritis, right-sided weakness, and Alzheimer’s disease.

 

Part 4:

1. Reflect on the role that the electoral process and government plays in one’s daily work and family life. 

As nurses, health policy can influence both arenas of our lives. 

1. What policy issues might drive nurses to lobby Congress and/or get involved in campaign politics? 

3. What strategies might nurses use to have their voices heard? 

Check:

The American Nurse: http://www.theamericannurse.org/2014/10/22/time-for-nurses-to-get-out-the-vote/ 

Part 5:

 

1. Reflect on the role that the electoral process and government plays in one’s daily work and family life. 

As nurses, health policy can influence both arenas of our lives. 

1. What policy issues might drive nurses to lobby Congress and/or get involved in campaign politics? 

3. What strategies might nurses use to have their voices heard? 

Check:

The American Nurse: http://www.theamericannurse.org/2014/10/22/time-for-nurses-to-get-out-the-vote/ 

Part 6:

 

1. Reflect on the role that the electoral process and government plays in one’s daily work and family life. 

As nurses, health policy can influence both arenas of our lives. 

1. What policy issues might drive nurses to lobby Congress and/or get involved in campaign politics? 

3. What strategies might nurses use to have their voices heard? 

Check:

The American Nurse: http://www.theamericannurse.org/2014/10/22/time-for-nurses-to-get-out-the-vote/ 

Part 7:

 

Compare vulnerable populations. 

1. Describe an example of one of these groups in the United States or from another country. 

2. Explain why the population is designated as “vulnerable.” 

      a. Include the number of individuals belonging to this group and the specific challenges or issues involved. 

3. Discuss why these populations are unable to advocate for themselves, the ethical issues that must be considered when working with these groups, and how nursing advocacy would be beneficial.  

Part 8:

 

1. How does the community health nurse recognize bias, stereotypes, and implicit bias within the community? 

2. How should the nurse address these concepts to ensure health promotion activities are culturally competent? 

3. Propose strategies that you can employ to reduce cultural dissonance and bias to deliver culturally competent care. 

4. Include an evidence-based article that address the cultural issue. 

Leadership and Managing

Leadership and Managing

This week you reflected upon the difference between a “manager” and a “leader” and discussed this concept with your classmates and professor in the discussion board. In a written essay please answer the following questions:

  • What are the differences between leaders and managers? What characteristics are similar and what are different?
  • Provide a total of three examples. First, of someone who has great managerial skills. Second, another individual with great leadership skills. Third, another person with poor managerial skills. These can be made up individuals or examples you have seen without any identifying information. Discuss how the staff of each individual would be affected by the skills of the leader/manager.
  • Complete the Emotional Intelligence Test Discuss your scores and what they mean. What did you learn about yourself as a leader? (Note that a 10 on the EI test means strong. On the score page, click on the blue “here” under “interpreting your GEIT scores, click here” for more information on each section and what it means. 

Assignment Expectations:

Length: 1500 to 2000 words total (at least 500 words per question prompt)

Structure: Include a title page and reference page in APA format. These do not count towards the minimum word count for this assignment. Your essay must include an introduction and a conclusion.

References: Use appropriate APA style in-text citations and references for all resources utilized to answer the questions. A minimum of three (3) scholarly sources are required for this assignment.

Rubric: This assignment uses a rubric for scoring. Please review it as part of your assignment preparation and again prior to submission to ensure you have addressed its criteria at the highest level.

Format: Save your assignment as a Microsoft Word document (.doc or .docx) or a PDF document (.pdf