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Capella University Nursing Traumatic Brain Injury Care Report

 

Write a 4-6 page evidence-based patient-centered care report on the patient scenario presented in the Evidence-Based Health Evaluation and Application media piece. Base your report on the information provided by the traumatic brain injury expert from the population health improvement initiative (PHII) described in the media activity and your own evidence-based research on this population health issue.

In this assessment, you will apply evidence-based practice in patient-centered care and population health improvement contexts. You will be challenged to think critically, evaluate what the evidence suggests is an appropriate approach for a personalized patient care plan, and determine which aspects of the approach could be applied to similar situations and patients.

Review the Assessment Case Study: Traumatic Brain Injury Care Report media activity. i WILL SEND YOU IETHER LINK OR INFORMATION GIVEN IN LINK 

Review relevant evidence-based research from 3–5 additional scholarly or professional sources about traumatic head injuries to support your evaluation, recommendations, and plans.

The following requirements correspond to the grading criteria in the scoring guide, so be sure to address each point:

*******Demonstration of Proficiency****

By successfully completing this assessment, you will demonstrate your proficiency in the following course competencies and assessment criteria:

Competency 1: Apply evidence-based practice to plan patient-centered care.

Evaluate the outcomes of a population health improvement initiative.

Develop a personalized patient care plan that incorporates lessons learned from a population health improvement initiative.

Competency 2: Apply evidence-based practice to design interventions to improve population health.

Propose a strategy for improving the outcomes of a population health improvement initiative, or for ensuring that all outcomes are being addressed, based on the best available evidence.

Competency 3: Evaluate outcomes of evidence-based interventions.

Propose an evaluation strategy for the outcomes of personalized patient care plan and determine what aspects of the approach could be applied to similar situations and patients.

Competency 4: Evaluate the value and relative weight of available evidence upon which to make a clinical decision.

Identify the level of evidence and describe the value and relevance it brings to personalized care for your patient.

Competency 5: Synthesize evidence-based practice and academic research to communicate effective solutions.

Write clearly and logically, with correct grammar and mechanics.

Integrate relevant and credible sources of evidence to support assertions, correctly formatting citations and references using APA style.

**********Instructions*********

Review the Assessment Case Study: Traumatic Brain Injury Care Report media activity.

Review relevant evidence-based research from 3–5 additional scholarly or professional sources about traumatic head injuries to support your evaluation, recommendations, and plans.

The following requirements correspond to the grading criteria in the scoring guide, so be sure to address each point:

Evaluate the expected outcomes of the population health improvement initiative (PHII) that the community expert reported based on data.

Describe the outcomes that were achieved, their positive effects on the community’s health, and any variance across demographic groups.

Describe the outcomes that were not achieved, the extent to which they fell short of expectations and any variance across demographic groups.

Identify the factors (for example: institutional, community, environmental, resources, communication) that may have contributed to any achievement shortfalls.

Propose a strategy for improving the outcomes of the PHII for traumatic head injuries.

Describe the corrective measures you would take in the PHII to address the factors that may have contributed to achievement shortfalls.

Cite the evidence (from similar projects, research, or professional organization resources) that supports the corrective measures you are proposing.

Explain how the evidence illustrates the likelihood of improved outcomes if your proposed strategy is enacted.

Develop a personalized patient care plan for the patient from the scenario that incorporates lessons learned from the PHII outcomes.

Identify a personalized care approach that addresses the patient’s:

Individual health needs.

Economic and environmental realities.

Culture and family.

Explain how the lessons learned from the PHII informed the decisions you made in your personalized care plan for the patient.

Incorporate references to the best available evidence from the population health improvement initiative and other relevant sources.

Identify the level of evidence and describe the value it brings to personalize care for your patient.

Identify the level of evidence for each resource you referenced.

Explain why each piece of evidence is valuable and appropriate for the community health issue you are trying to address and for the unique situation of your patient and his family.

Propose an evaluation strategy to assess the outcomes of your personalized care approach.

Identify measurable criteria that are relevant to your desired outcomes.

Explain why the criteria are appropriate and useful measures of success.

Determine the specific aspects of your approach that are most likely to be transferable to other individual cases.********

*********Resources******

American Nurses Association. (n.d.). ANA research toolkit for evidence-based care. Retrieved from https://www.nursingworld.org/practice-policy/innov…

Berwick, D. M., Nolan, T. W., & Whittington, J. (2008). The Triple Aim: Care, health, and cost. Health Affairs, 27(3), 759–769.

Bodenheimer, T., & Sinsky, C. (2014). From Triple Aim to Quadruple Aim: Care of the patient requires care of the caregiver. Annals of Family Medicine, 12(6), 573–576.
Institute for Healthcare Improvement. (2016). Triple Aim for populations. Retrieved from http://www.ihi.org/Topics/TripleAim/Pages/default….
Stiefel, M., & Nolan, K. (2012). A guide to measuring the triple aim: Population health, experience of care, and per capita cost [PDF]. IHI Innovation Series white paper. Cambridge, MA: Institute for Healthcare Improvement. Retrieved from http://www.jvei.nl/wp-content/uploads/A-Guide-to-M…

Assessment Case Study: Traumatic Brain Injury Care Report

Public health improvement initiatives (PHII) provide invaluable data for patient–centered care, but their research is often conducted in a context different from the needs of any individual patient. Providers must make a conscious effort to apply their findings to specific patients’ care.

In this activity, you will learn about a PHII, and explore its application to a particular patient’s care plan.

Patient Profiles

From: Janie Poole

To: Ashley Taggart

Good morning!

At last week’s conference I spoke with Alicia Balewa, Director of Safe Headspace. They’re a relatively new nonprofit working on improving outcomes for TBI patients, and I immediately thought of Mr. Nowak. At his last biannual cholesterol screening he mentioned having trouble with his balance. This may be related to his hypertension, but he believes it’s related to the time he was hospitalized many years ago after falling out of a tree, and expressed distress that this might be the beginning of a rapid decline.

Ms. Balewa will be on premises next week, and I’d like to set aside some time for you to talk.

— Janie

Alicia Balewa

Director of Safe Headspace

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Director of Safe HeadspaceI have a patient who might benefit from some of the interventions for TBI and PTSD you recently studied. What populations did your public health improvement initiative study?

My father came home from Vietnam with a kaleidoscope of mental health problems. That was the 1970s, when treatment options for things like PTSD, TBI, and even depression were very different. Since then there has been a lot of investment in treatment and recovery for combat veterans. That’s excellent news for veterans in treatment now, but they’re not looking at my dad, and how his TBI and PTSD have affected him through mid–life and now as a senior. That’s why I started Safe Headspace: to focus on older patients who are years or decades past their trauma, and find ways to help them.

Director of Safe HeadspaceWhich treatments showed the strongest improvement?

Exercise. We were able to persuade about half of our participants — that’s around 400 people, mostly men ages 45–80 — to follow the CDC’s recommendations for moderate aerobic exercise. Almost everyone showed improvement in mood, memory, and muscle control after four weeks. After that a lot of participants dropped out, which is disappointing. But of the 75 who stuck with it for another three months, muscle control improved 15%, mood improved 22%, and short–to–medium term memory improved 61%. We didn’t specify what kind of exercise, but we did ask them to record what they did every week, so that data is available.

Second was medication and therapy. Most of our participants didn’t receive any kind of psychotherapy in the years immediately following their trauma, so we had everyone assessed by a team of psychotherapists. As a result of those assessments, 40% of participants started on anti–depressant medication and 9% started taking anti–psychotics. Those who started taking medications now have regular contact with a therapist to manage that care. With some help at home to stick to the regimen, all but a few have successfully followed their treatment plans. They’ve reported a 26% improvement in mood over six months, and a 6% improvement in memory.

The third treatment I want to mention is meditation. We only had a small group interested in trying it, but the results were dramatic. We prescribed daily meditation at home, just 10 to 15 minutes, with a weekly hour–long guided group meditation for all 23 participants. After three weeks we lost two to disinterest, but the other 21 showed improvements of over 70% in mood and memory, and 32% in muscle control.

Director of Safe HeadspaceHave you tried anything that hasn’t worked?

Sure. There are memory exercises for patients in elderly care, and things like Sudoku and crossword puzzles. We didn’t see any gains with those. Some of our participants preferred strength training to aerobic exercise, and the only improvement we saw in that group was in muscle control, but only 4%, which is significantly less than the aerobic group.

I should also say that we were working with a willing group of participants. They knew they needed help, and were motivated to get it. One of the hurdles we see with veterans, especially in older generations, is an unwillingness to acknowledge that they have a problem. We haven’t had to wrestle with that because everyone who volunteers to participate wants to be there.

Director of Safe HeadspaceYour organization is intervening with people who have TBI and PTSD simultaneously. We have a patient with moderate TBI suffered almost 40 years ago, but no history of PTSD. Have you separated your population and studied each separately?

We haven’t, no. In some cases we could, for those who come in with previous diagnoses and medical records. But we have participants who either weren’t diagnosed, were under–diagnosed at the time, or don’t have records to show us.