Due tomorrow please help

Step 1 Explain three difficult concepts.

As you review the activities and the information presented in this lesson and the textbook, identify the three most difficult concepts (or parts of a concept) in respiratory anatomy and respiration for most anatomy and physiology students. Select one difficult concept from each of these topic areas:

  • Anatomy of the Respiratory System
  • Mechanics of Breathing
  • Respiration

Step 2 Write an explanation of each concept.

Write a clear one-paragraph explanation of each of these three concepts. Use images from the Internet or those that you scan into the document, if possible.  Your response should be a  500-word paper.

Sexuality Assignment

Write a full 1-2 page paper with references…

How is sex represented in our culture?

Do you think many men and women are sexually assaulted?

Do you think everyone talks about it? Why or why not?

Do you think viewing pornography has anything to do with it? Why or why not?

Do we have a rape culture?

How do you feel society views breastfeeding compared to women dressing in a sexualized way? Is there less acceptance for breastfeeding?

What can we do to have more conversations about the way sex and sexual themes are represented in our society?

Health assessment

The needs of the pediatric patient differ depending on age, as do the stages of development and the expected assessment findings for each stage. In a 500-750-word paper, examine the needs of a school-aged child between the ages of 5 and 12 years old and discuss the following:

  1. Compare the physical assessments among school-aged children. Describe how you would modify assessment techniques to match the age and developmental stage of the child.
  2. Choose a child between the ages of 5 and 12 years old. Identify the age of the child and describe the typical developmental stages of children that age.
  3. Applying developmental theory based on Erickson, Piaget, or Kohlberg, explain how you would developmentally assess the child. Include how you would offer explanations during the assessment, strategies you would use to gain cooperation, and potential findings from the assessment.

Prepare this assignment according to the guidelines found in the APA Style Guide, located in the Student Success Center. An abstract is not required.

This assignment uses a rubric. Please review the rubric prior to beginning the assignment to become familiar with the expectations for successful completion. 

Nursing Information Management And Technology Discussion W3

TASK

Post your initial response to the topic below.

Technology’s Impact on Population Health

Topic 1

Advances in technology have fed the explosion of wearable devices and patient self-monitoring.

How can nurses leverage this technology to promote healthy lifestyles and improved compliance with self-care and monitoring?

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. Helpful APA guides and resources are available in the University Online Library. Below are guides that are located in the library and can be accessed and downloaded via the  University Online Citation Resources: APA Style page. The American Psychological Association website also provides detailed guidance on formatting, citations, and references at APA Style.

Peer Response Post, 2 References APA, Less 5% Similarities

SOAP NOTE

Name: N.C

Date: 10/26/2020

Time: 09.30 h

Age: 5-year-old

Sex: M

CC: “I have sore throat”

HPI: 

A 5 y/o Hispanic male presents to the clinic complaining of sore throat that started 3 days ago. Describes that occasionally feels like “piercing or burning” pain that it is constant. Also, that is very painful to swallow. Mother states patient developed cold symptoms (cough, sneezing) about 5 days ago, sore throat started 3 days ago, and fever of 101.5 F began 24h ago. Patient added that the pain varies in intensity, rated anywhere from 8 to 9 on a Wong-Baker scale when eating or drinking, but at this moment rated his pain at 5. Reports that pain is not radiating to any surrounded area and “is better when drinking sips of a cold liquids like water or Kool-Aid or takes Ice cream”. Mother also states that fever somehow is relieved by rest and Tylenol. Confirms that his appetite has decreased in the last 3 days.

Medications: 

Tylenol OTC PO PRN

PMH 

Allergies: NKDA

Medication Intolerances: None

Chronic Illnesses/Major traumas: None

Hospitalizations/Surgeries: None

Immunizations: 

– According to CDC for his age group, he is up to date with the following vaccines

•          Influenza 2019

•          Tdap 5th dose

•          MMR 2nd dose

•          Polio IVP 4th dose

•          Chickenpox (Varicella) 2nd dose

Family History:

Mother: Alive – no significant medical history

Father: Alive – HTN

Sister: 8 years old healthy

Brother: 2 days old healthy

Social History

Lives with both parents and siblings. Appears comfortable and happy with mother in the room. Neither parents smoke. Patient began kindergarten this year at local public school.

General 

Patient reports sore throat, but overall healthy, appropriate weight and height for age, usually very active but mostly lying around the past few days per mom.

Cardiovascular

Denies chest pain or palpitations.

Skin

Denies rash, inflammation, pain, tenderness, or skin lesion.

Respiratory

Denies any cough, wheezing, hemoptysis, dyspnea, pneumonia hx, TB exposure or symptoms per mom, or SOB.

Eyes

Denies use of corrective lenses or glasses, blurred vision, or visual changes of any kind.

ENT

Denies ear pain, hearing loss, ringing in ears, discharge. Reports no sinus problems, or nose bleeding. Complains of sore throat and aggravating pain when swallowing. Goes to dentist every 6 months per mom.

Gastrointestinal

Denies diarrhea, abdominal pain, or heartburn. He had his last bowel movement this morning and goes at least once a day.

Genitourinary

Denies urgency, frequency or burning and pain with urination. Reports no hematuria or change in color of urine. Denies penile pain.

Musculoskeletal

Denies back pain, joint swelling, stiffness, or muscle pain.

Heme/Lymph/Endo 

Denies fatigue. Mother states swollen/tender cervical lymph nodes. Patient is appropriate size and weight for his age.

Neurological

Denies any syncope, seizures, transient paralysis, paresthesia or black out spells per mom.

Psychiatric

Denies any nightmares; patient seems happy and answers questions appropriately when asked directly.

OBJECTIVE – 

Weight  47.6 lbs.    BMI 15.1          Temp 100.1F  BP 103/67

Height 47”     Pulse 108       Resp 18

General Appearance

Happy. Alert and oriented in all spheres; answers questions appropriately when asked directly, but otherwise shy. Cooperative.

Skin

Skin is warm, dry, no rashes or lesion noted.

HEENT

Head is normocephalic, atraumatic and without lesions. EYES: Extra ocular muscles intact, PERRLA. Ears: TM’s shiny, EAC clear, hearing intact, mild tympanic membrane bulging. Nose: Bilateral turbs red and swollen, septum midline. Throat: Posterior pharyngeal erythema, white pus pockets noted on swollen tonsils.

Cardiovascular

S1, S2 with regular rate and rhythm. No extra sounds, clicks, rubs, or murmurs.

Respiratory

Symmetric chest wall. Respirations regular and unlabored; lungs clear to auscultation in all fields bilaterally.

Gastrointestinal

Abdomen is flat, BS normoactive in all 4 quadrants. No hepatosplenomegaly, soft no tender on palpation. Bowel sound normoactive in all 4 quadrants.

Lymphatic

Swollen cervical nodes bilaterally, tenderness on palpation.

Genitourinary

Bladder is non-distended, non-tender. External genitalia normal, no lesions observed. Tanner Stage 1.

Musculoskeletal

Full ROM seen in all 4 extremities without any difficulties.

Neurological 

Speech clear. Good tone. Posture is erect, balance stable and gait is normal.

Psychiatric

Alert and oriented. Maintains good eye contact. Speech is soft, and clear and of normal rate and cadence for age. Answers questions appropriately when asked directly, otherwise shy. Displays no mood disorders.

Lab Tests

CBC, CMP: pending

Special Tests

Strep Swab: Positive

Culture and sensitivity of tonsils exudate: pending

Primary Diagnosis

•          J02.0 Streptococcal Pharyngitis: Common signs and symptoms of streptococcal pharyngitis include sore throat, temperature greater than 100.4°F (38°C), tonsillar exudates, and cervical adenopathy. Cervical node lymphadenopathy and pharyngeal or tonsillar inflammation or exudates are common signs. Palatal petechiae and scarlatiniform rash are highly specific but uncommon; a swollen uvula is sometimes noted. Available diagnostic tests include throat culture and rapid antigen detection testing. Throat culture is considered the diagnostic standard, although the sensitivity and specificity of rapid antigen detection testing have improved significantly.

Differential Diagnoses: 

•          J03.90 Acute Tonsillitis: Tonsillitis is most often a viral infection caused by cold viruses and starts suddenly and lasts for a week or two. Patients with tonsillitis typically present with a sore throat, swollen tonsils that are erythematous, and have a yellowish coating, difficulty swallowing, fatigue, fever, and loss of appetite (IQWiG, 2019). The patient in this case study does not have any coating of the tongue, loss of appetite, or fatigue noted so this is not likely to be the primary diagnosis.

•          B27.9 Infectious mononucleosis: Mononucleosis is caused by the Epstein Barr Virus and it is common to have inflammation of the tonsils with exudates which can also present with a generalized abdominal pain (Ruppert, 2015). This patient is middle aged and therefore, it is less likely that this is the diagnosis as it is not commonly seen in adults, but rather in adolescent to young adults between 15 to 24 years old. There is a test for mononucleosis called the Monospot test; however, it takes several weeks for a positive result to appear. This often tends to be inconvenient and often it is treated based on symptoms alone (Lyden, 2017). This is not likely to be the diagnosis for this patient as patients with mononucleosis have severe malaise and fatigue, which this patient has not reported.

•          D24.1 Acute pharyngitis: Pharyngitis is caused by inflammation to the pharynx and can occur in both adults and children and is due to either infection or irritation (Lyden, 2017). This is a very common condition and can be either viral or bacterial in nature. Bacterial pharyngitis is most commonly a result of a group A strep infection and according to Lyden (2017), it presents with erythema of the tonsils or throat, exudate which can be discrete or patchy, white or yellow, pharyngeal petechiae, and tenderness in the anterior cervical adenopathy. Viral pharyngitis is almost always caused by the rhinovirus and presents with cough, mild erythema, nasal drainage or stuffiness, fever, but no tenderness or lymphadenopathy (Lyden, 2017). This patient most likely has bacterial pharyngitis as the neck is tender with enlarged anterior cervical lymph nodes.

Plan/Therapeutics/Referrals/Education

Plan

1.        Children’s Motrin Oral suspension q8h PRN for pain and fever

2.        Amoxicillin 400/5ml Oral suspension for 10 days

3.        Advised to follow-up in 1 week to ensure medication course was followed and was effective.

4.        Results of all tests to be reviewed with patient in 1-week follow-up appointment.

Referrals:

No referral currently.

Patient Education:

–          Stop Tylenol and start with the prescribed NSAID.

–          Take the prescribed antibiotics for full treatment even if symptoms seem better in a few days. Do not stop earlier.

–          Increase cold fluid intake.

–          Saltwater gargles at least 3 times daily.

–          Rest, and no school until fever free for 24 hours.

–          If symptoms worsen direct yourself to the nearest ER.

References

Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (IQWiG) (January 17, 2019). Tonsillitis: Overview. Retrieved from: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK401249/

Lyden, E. A. (2017). Chapter 101: Pharyngitis and Tonsillitis. In T. Buttaro, J. Trybulski, P. Polgar-Bailey, & J. Sandberg-Cook (Eds.), Primary care: A collaborative practice (5th ed., pp. 413-416). St. Louis, MO: Elsevier

Psychotherapy

As a psychiatric nurse practitioner, before you can recommend potential pharmacotherapeutics to address a patient’s condition or disorder, you must understand the basic function and structure of the neuron and central nervous system. For this Assignment, you will review and apply your understanding of neuroanatomy by addressing a set of short-answer prompts.

To Prepare:

· Review the Learning Resources for this week in preparation to complete this Assignment.

· Reflect on the basic function and structure of the neuron in relation to the central nervous system.

· Reflect on the inter-connectedness between neurons and the central nervous system, including the pathway and distribution of electrical impulses.

· Reflect on how neurons communicate with each other and review the concept of neuroplasticity.

To complete:

Address the following Short Answer prompts for your Assignment. Be sure to include references to the Learning Resources for this week.

1. In 4 or 5 sentences, describe the anatomy of the basic unit of the nervous system, the neuron. Include each part of the neuron and a general overview of electrical impulse conduction, the pathway it travels, and the net result at the termination of the impulse. Be specific and provide examples.

2. Answer the following (listing is acceptable for these questions):

o What are the major components that make up the subcortical structures?

o Which component plays a role in learning, memory, and addiction?

o What are the two key neurotransmitters located in the nigra striatal region of the brain that play a major role in motor control?

3. In 3 or 4 sentences, explain how glia cells function in the central nervous system. Be specific and provide examples.

4. The synapse is an area between two neurons that allows for chemical communication. In 3 or 4 sentences, explain what part of the neurons are communicating with each other and in which direction does this communication occurs? Be specific.

5. In 3–5 sentences, explain the concept of “neuroplasticity.” Be specific and provide examples.