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MN 505 PU Promoting Safety & Reducing Risk Program Evaluation Outline
Topic 1: Promoting Safety and Reducing Risk: Program Evaluation
Read the required readings. Next visit the CDC Injury Prevention and Control website; Child safety and injury prevention. https://www.cdc.gov/safechild/. Additionally review the CDC Childhood Injury report. https://www.cdc.gov/safechild/child_injury_data.ht…
For this discussion create an outline with supportive content for the implementation of a simple educational program or intervention to promote health and reduce injury risk for the childhood and/or adolescent population. Focus can be for an individual, specific group or population. Include the topic, target audience /learner characteristics. Introduction may include statistics of why the topic is important, population affected and pertinent risk factors. Include, objectives, goals, the intervention and means you will use to evaluate the program. Show evidence based support for the intervention. Comment on others projects and share ideas and interventions supported by studies
.After completing this unit, you should be able to:
- Evaluate a person’s growth and development, and determine normal and abnormal areas.
- Analyze safety and risk factors that contribute to the heightened vulnerability of toddlers and school aged children.
- Analyze safety and risk factors that contribute to risk-taking behaviors and situations during adolescence.
- Communicate immunization schedules and other safety and health promotion measures to a community group including parents.
Course Outcome practiced in this unit:
MN505-4: Develop an evidence-based health promotion program to reduce health risks of a vulnerable population.
Growth and Development
Understanding human growth and development facilitates nursing assessment of health knowledge and behavior. Health education is more effective when the Master’s-prepared Registered Nurse acknowledges and incorporates growth and developmental needs as well as the individual’s prior understanding of and beliefs about health and health-related concepts. Anticipating potential health problems during infancy and providing effective interventions can promote health. Early detection and reduction of risk factors may lead to avoidance of many health problems. Health promotion during growth and development would not be complete without the inclusion of Healthy People 2020. The goals of the advanced practice nurse, when working with infants and their families, is to promote individual motivation for health, to assist families in identifying health needs, and to develop problem-solving skills using the family’s resources. The Master’s-prepared Registered Nurse must identify a family’s perception of good or bad health practices which can influence participation in health promoting activities. Age, gender, educational level, cultural orientation, financial status, and occupation combine to influence health perception.
Application of Health Promotion
Toddlers eventually develop a sense of self and a desire to separate from their parents. Respecting this evolving independence is a common parental challenge. The Master’s-prepared Registered Nurse plays an important role in encouraging health-promotion efforts and behaviors by educating parents and other primary care providers about the many physical and developmental changes that occur in toddlers, and how these changes contribute to their vulnerability to injury, their overall health, and that of the family unit. The Master’s-prepared Registered Nurse must also be knowledgeable of the physical changes of preschoolers, and the need for preventative health care during the preschool years, beginning at ages 4 and 5. This should include an ongoing history of growth, physical, and developmental assessment.
The school-age child brings development from the immaturity of a preschooler, to the beginning of adolescence and eventual adulthood. The desire to master tasks, and the ability to develop moral judgment, dramatically increases due to advancing cognitive abilities. The Master’s-prepared Registered Nurse can teach health promotion behaviors directly to the school-age child, through demonstration, monitoring, and reinforcing a preventative health practice, such as hand washing, dental hygiene, nutrition, and/or physical activity.
Adolescence is a time when the integration of family, peer, educational, social, cultural, and community experiences begins to take form resulting in a teen’s sense of self. Adolescents face developmental struggles with physical and cognitive changes, autonomy, body image, peer relations, and identity. The Master’s-prepared Registered Nurse can be critical in influencing health promotion, preventative screening and disease prevention activities with the adolescent. The Master’s-prepared Registered Nurse must be cognizant of the important time of transition from childhood to adulthood, and should provide education to the adolescent about expected changes and how to deal with them. Primary prevention is effective when the Master’s-prepared Registered Nurse partners with the adolescents treating them with respect and enabling them to assume more responsibility in their role of health promotion and disease prevention.