Case Study 3 and 4

Case Study 3 & 4 (10 Points) 

Students much review the case study and answer all questions with a scholarly response using APA and include 2 scholarly references. Answer both case studies on the same document and upload 1 document to Moodle.

Case Studies will be uploaded to Moodle and put through TURN-It-In (anti-Plagiarism program)

Turn it in Score must be less than 25 % or will not be accepted for credit, must be your own work and in your own words. You can resubmit, Final submission will be accepted if less than 25 %. Copy-paste from websites or textbooks will not be accepted or tolerated. Please see College Handbook with reference to Academic Misconduct Statement.

UNit 9 551

 

Fifty-four-year-old Fred is complaining of a headache that started about 2 weeks ago. For the past 2 days, the headache has increased in severity, and he is photophobic and has uncial rigidity and projectile vomiting. CT scan results show an arteriovenous malformation in the basal artery and a small hemorrhagic bleed in the middle meningeal artery.

  1. How is the concept of “disorders of brain function” related to Fred’s presenting symptoms?
  2. What aspects of cerebral circulation would come into play in Fred’s case?

Instructions: 1 page or 1 page and half of length is fine. APA style. Discussion post. MUST have 3 references.

Short Answer Pharm

Assignment, you will review and apply your understanding of psychopharmacologic treatments for patients with multiple mental health disorders.

1. In 3 or 4 sentences, explain the appropriate drug therapy for a patient who presents with MDD and a history of alcohol abuse ( use an SSRI Sertraline and an alcohol cessation medication naltrexone). Which drugs are contraindicated, if any, and why? Be specific. What is the timeframe that the patient should see resolution of symptoms?

2. List 4 predictors of late onset generalized anxiety disorder.

3. List 4 potential neurobiology causes of psychotic major depression.

4. An episode of major depression is defined as a period of time lasting at least 2 weeks. List at least 5 symptoms required for the episode to occur. Be specific.

5. List 3 classes of drugs, with a corresponding example for each class, that precipitate insomnia. Be specific. 

References x 3 to include:

Morgenthaler, T. I., Kapur, V. K., Brown, T. M., Swick, T. J., Alessi, C., Aurora, R. N., Boehlecke, B., Chesson, A. L., Friedman, L., Maganti, R., Owens, J., Pancer, J., & Zak, R. (2007). Practice parameters for the treatment of narcolepsy and other hypersomnias of central origin. 


SLEEPLinks to an external site.


, 30(12), 1705–1711. https://j2vjt3dnbra3ps7ll1clb4q2-wpengine.netdna-ssl.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/PP_Narcolepsy.pdf

Sateia, M. J., Buysse, D. J., Krystal, A. D., Neubauer, D. N., & Heald, J. L. (2017). Clinical practice guideline for the pharmacologic treatment of chronic insomnia in adults: An American Academy of Sleep Medicine clinical practice guideline. 


Journal of Clinical Sleep MedicineLinks to an external site.


, 13(2), 307–349. https://jcsm.aasm.org/doi/pdf/10.5664/jcsm.6470

Nursing Assignment 2

Please follow directions 

Research

 

*  Research a bioterrorist incident. Provide the name of the incident you have chosen, and support your answers with evidence/examples. Please provide a working link and a citation for your source

* Give an example and details from national/international news of a bioterrorist attack.

 Address all of the following questions:

1) What was the classification of the biological agent used in the attack?

2) Discuss the implications of the biological agent.

3) Discuss the therapy for the biological agent.

4) What are the decontamination procedures for the biological agent used in the attack?

5) Define the appropriate level of PPE required for this type of biological agent?

Choose a source that is scholary and peer reviewed. If you want to use my library then use my credentials
For this one you need to research a bioterrorist incident and answer all of the questions posted
Choose a source that is scholary and peer reviewed. If you want to use my library then use my credentials
Remember to cite and in text citation

Discusssion

 Read

APRNs are primary care providers, pivotal in providing primary health care and preventive services in communities. Advanced practice nursing is defined by the Nurse Practice Act but governed by the Board of Nursing in different states or territories. Where the Nurse Practice Act falls short in interpretation, the Board of Registered Nursing guides the form of an opinion (American Nurses Association, n.d.). Advanced practice nurses should understand how these laws and regulations shape practice.

            I am from California, and I chose Iowa for comparison. In both states, APRN nursing regulations allow advanced practice nurses to function as primary care providers with permission to certify disability pursuant to the unemployment insurance code section2708 (California Legislative Information, n.d.). Similarly, in both states, APRNs also sign POLST forms.

            APRNs in California can prescribe controlled substances after fulfilling specific requirements, including six months of physician supervision, a pharmacology course, and another specific course about schedule II-controlled drugs. Iowa Board of Registered Nursing also allows nurse practitioners to prescribe Schedule II drugs after registering with the pharmaceutical board. Both states require the prescriber to be registered with the Drug Enforcement Agency.

           Advanced Registered Nurse Practitioners in Iowa have autonomy in practice; alternately, they can collaborate with a physician or surgeon, but this is not a requirement of the Iowa Board of Nursing. APRNs in Iowa practice autonomously. California has a standardized procedure arrangement for advanced practice nurses to diagnose, treat, and prescribe. APRNs in California have career-long supervision, delegation, or team management by a physician. Largely, California regulations allow advanced nurse practitioners to approve, sign, or modify treatment plans after consultation with a physician.

          California Board of Registered Nursing allows for using marijuana by nurses as long as it is not used within the workstation. The legislation makes it unlawful for an employer to eliminate hiring someone based on that person using Cannabis away from their workstation. The legislation further guides that a nurse who uses cannabis for medical purposes should also be exempted from this policy. On the contrary, recreational use of marijuana is illegal under Iowa law. A nurse may be affected even if the positive drug screen was done in another state that allows the use of marijuana. Potential employers usually forward positive marijuana screens where a nurse has a license.

           Advanced Practice Registered Nurses with full legal authority to practice at full scope will have issues practicing autonomously in California because of the restricted practice legislation. One of the objectives of the ANA is to fight barriers to nursing practice so that nurses practice to the full extent of their education and training despite being in different territories. All nurses are licensed by their state of practice or by a multistate license. The Nurse Licensure Compact provides APRNs with a multistate license that allows nurses to practice in the home state and other compact states (NCSBN. (n.d.). Not all states are compact states.

            Nurses adhere to the rules through continuous education to keep up with the latest practices and technology. Many approved colleges provide the necessary certification; some are state-specific, and others can be found online. Joining Professional organizations is also useful for sources of the latest information in the medical world.

explain how the regulatory environment and the regulations selected by your colleague differ from your state/region. Be specific and provide examples. 

Laboratory for Diagnosis, Symptom and Illness Management

 

Case Study 3 & 4 (10 Points) 

Students much review the case study and answer all questions with a scholarly response using APA and include 2 scholarly references. Answer both case studies on the same document and upload 1 document to Moodle.

Case Studies will be uploaded to Moodle and put through TURN-It-In (anti-Plagiarism program)

Turn it in Score must be less than 25 % or will not be accepted for credit, must be your own work and in your own words. You can resubmit, Final submission will be accepted if less than 25 %. Copy-paste from websites or textbooks will not be accepted or tolerated. Please see College Handbook with reference to Academic Misconduct Statement.

Discussion questions

1. Because the patient’s reported hallucinations are not persecutory, as a clinician, what medications would you start with?

2. What treatments (pharmacological and non-pharmacological) are most effective for patients with extensive trauma history?

3. What symptoms could be co-occurring in relation to PTSD vs schizophrenia for this patient?  

Unit 8 Medications for Sleep Disorders. 800w. 4 references. Due 10-22-23

Unit 8 Medications for Sleep Disorders. 800w. 4 references. Due 10-22-23

1. What screening tools can be used to affirm your initial diagnosis that a patient may meet the diagnostic criteria for a sleep disorder?

2. Describe the pharmacological actions of non-z sleep medications?

3. What problems can occur when benzodiazepines are used to help with sleep?

Responses need to address all components of the question, demonstrate critical thinking and analysis and include peer-reviewed journal evidence to support the student’s position.

Please be sure to validate your opinions and ideas with in-text citations and corresponding references in APA format.

Please review the rubric to ensure that your response meets the criteria.

https://www.apa.org/monitor/2022/07/ce-sleep-disorders

CONTINUING EDUCATION

Diagnosing and treating sleep disorders

Psychologists have a leading role to play in treating insomnia and other common sleep disturbances

By 

Kirsten Weir
Date created: July 1, 202214 min read

Vol. 53 No. 5
Print version: page 40

·
Sleep

9

graphic depicting a young man with sheep floating around his head

CE credits: 1

Learning objectives: After reading this article, CE candidates will be able to:

1. Describe symptoms of common sleep disorders.

2. Understand and access tools available for screening clients for sleep disorders.

3. Describe evidence-based behavioral treatments for insomnia and other sleep disorders.

4. Know when to refer clients to sleep specialists.

For more information on earning CE credit for this article, go to 

CE Corner
.

Psychologists have a leading role to play in treating insomnia and other common sleep disturbances.

Sleep is a biological necessity. But for all its importance, it can be surprisingly hard to get enough. As many as 50 to 70 million U.S. adults have a sleep disorder, according to the American Sleep Association. Those disorders frequently go hand in hand with problems such as depression, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). “Sleep disorders are very common and are often comorbid with mental health conditions. But psychologists get very little training in sleep,” said Jennifer Mundt, PhD, director of the Northwestern University Behavioral Sleep Medicine Training Program, who presented the continuing-education session “Sleep and Its Disorders: A Primer for Mental Health Professionals” for APA in 2021.

In a recent survey of clinical psychologists in the United States and Canada, practitioners reported a median of just 10 hours of sleep training across their education and career, and 95% reported no clinical sleep training during graduate school, internship, or fellowship (Zhou, E. S., et al., 


Behavioral Sleep Medicine

, Vol. 19, No. 6, 2021
). “In medicine, psychology, and society as a whole, we’ve paid so little attention to sleep for so long,” Mundt said.

It is time to start paying attention, Mundt and other sleep experts say. “Sleep is critical to physical and emotional health, and when it’s disrupted, it cuts across both,” said Susan Rubman, PhD, a behavioral sleep medicine specialist and assistant professor of psychiatry at the Yale School of Medicine. “As a basic part of psychological assessment, it’s important to know what normal sleep is and what disordered sleep is so you can treat all aspects of an individual’s concerns appropriately.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Sleep facts and fictions

Sleep disorders come in all shapes and sizes. The most common is insomnia, which is characterized by difficulty falling or staying asleep. About 30% of adults in the United States have symptoms of insomnia, and about 10% have insomnia that is severe enough to cause daytime consequences, according to the American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM). And insomnia comes with a host of complications, including increased risk of accidents, poor performance at work or school, and elevated risk of conditions including high blood pressure, heart disease, depression, and substance use disorders. It is also associated with an increased risk of suicide as well as death from other causes.

Insomnia and other sleep disorders often coexist with other psychological complaints. Up to 90% of people with depression have sleep complaints, and two thirds of people undergoing a major depressive episode experience insomnia, according to a review by University of Pittsburgh researchers Peter Franzen, PhD, and Daniel Buysse, MD. Sleep disturbances often precede depressive symptoms, they found, and are associated with worse clinical and treatment outcomes among people with depression (


Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience

, Vol. 10, No. 4, 2008
).

All that is to say that clinical psychologists are certain to treat patients who have trouble sleeping whether they know it or not. And there are three good reasons to address sleep in practice, said Michael Grandner, PhD, MTR, director of the Sleep and Health Research Program at the University of Arizona. “First, we know that sleep affects health and functioning. Second, sleep is often a way into mental health issues. Asking how someone is sleeping is a great way to start talking about mental health,” he said. “And the third reason is that sleep problems are highly fixable, without medications. And psychologists are in a prime position to fix them.”

Yet there are some common misconceptions about sleep—among the public as well as health care professionals—that prevent people from getting the treatment they need for insomnia and other sleep disorders. One is the belief that good sleep hygiene can cure disordered sleep, Grandner said. Sleep hygiene includes practices like going to bed and waking up at a consistent time, removing electronic devices from the bedroom, and avoiding caffeine, alcohol, and heavy meals near bedtime. While these efforts can improve sleep, they are not a treatment for disordered sleep. “A lot of people confuse sleep hygiene with behavioral sleep therapies. This is a huge misconception,” Grandner said. Hygiene, by nature, is preventive. “Washing your hands can prevent you from getting sick, but it won’t cure an infection. And sleep hygiene can remove some barriers to good sleep, but it’s mostly useless for fixing insomnia,” he added.

Another fallacy is that insomnia is a symptom of mental health disorders. While the two often coexist, they are best thought of as comorbid conditions, said Michael Perlis, PhD, director of the Behavioral Sleep Medicine Program at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine. “When sleep disorders are viewed as a symptom of an illness, people believe there’s no need for targeted action. They believe that by treating the PTSD, anxiety, or depression, insomnia will abate. The past 10 years of research shows us that doesn’t happen,” he said.

While treating mental health conditions does not guarantee improvement of comorbid insomnia, the reverse is more likely: Treating insomnia can make mental health disorders more manageable. A meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials showed that poor sleep is causally related to mental health difficulties and that greater improvements in sleep quality lead to greater improvements in mental health (Scott, A. J., et al., 


Sleep Medicine Reviews

, Vol. 60, 2021
). For that reason, some sleep experts argue that insomnia should be treated even before other mental health problems, if the patient is not in crisis. “When insomnia is left alive, it complicates the treatment of everything else,” said Donn Posner, PhD, adjunct clinical associate professor at Stanford University School of Medicine and founder of Sleepwell Consultants, which offers sleep interventions for patients and workshops for providers. “Every time you see chronic insomnia, you need to treat it.”

CBT-I: Front-line insomnia treatment

Almost anything can trigger a night of tossing and turning, from stress to pain to stormy weather. “There are a million causes of short-term insomnia. But there is one main culprit behind chronic insomnia—conditioned arousal,” said Grandner. “When sleep becomes problematic, the bed becomes the war zone. And then the expectation that sleep will be stressful creates the very activation that makes sleep difficult.”

The best treatment to address that conditioned arousal is cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I), a targeted intervention that typically lasts four to eight sessions. In fact, CBT-I is one of psychology’s best success stories. The treatment is so effective that it is recommended as a front-line treatment for insomnia by a variety of professional groups, including the Department of Veterans Affairs/Department of Defense Health Affairs, the American College of Physicians, and the AASM.

Even in cases of short-term insomnia, CBT-I is about as effective as sleeping pills. In a meta-analysis that included 21 studies, researchers concluded that behavioral therapy produces similar outcomes as pharmacotherapy for the acute treatment of primary insomnia (Smith, M. T., et al., 


The American Journal of Psychiatry

, Vol. 159, No. 1, 2002
). But for chronic insomnia, CBT-I is at a distinct advantage. A meta-analysis concluded that the intervention is an effective treatment for adults with chronic insomnia, with clinically meaningful effect sizes (Trauer, J. M., et al., 


Annals of Internal Medicine

, Vol. 163, No. 3, 2015
). “In the long term, there’s an advantage for CBT-I because it actually addresses the underlying behavioral and thought patterns that perpetuate the insomnia,” Mundt said. “And it has a high rate of success.”

CBT-I is also a successful option for patients with insomnia and depression. In a study of internet-delivered CBT-I, Kerstin Blom, PhD, at the Karolinska Institutet in Sweden, and colleagues found that in patients with both diagnoses, CBT-I was more effective than CBT for depression when treating insomnia. More surprising, the two were equally effective for reducing depression severity. At a 3-year follow-up, both the CBT-I and CBT for depression groups continued to experience similar reductions in depression severity, but the insomnia treatment continued to have superior effects on sleep (


Sleep

, Vol. 38, No. 2, 2015



Sleep

, Vol. 40, No. 8, 2017
).

Other research also supports the idea that CBT-I can improve depression. A systematic review of 18 studies concluded that CBT-I is a promising treatment for depression in people who also have insomnia and produces effects of roughly the same magnitude as antidepressant medications. In-person therapy had the most evidence supporting its efficacy, while evidence for telehealth CBT-I was mixed. However, the authors concluded there is promise for a stepped-care approach in which telehealth progresses to in-person therapy for patients as needed (Cunningham, J. E. A., & Shapiro, C. M., 


Journal of Psychosomatic Research

, Vol. 106, 2018
).

There’s further evidence that treating insomnia might even prevent depression from developing in the first place. In a study by researchers at Henry Ford Health and the University of Oxford, participants with insomnia were randomized to receive either digital CBT-I or sleep education. In those with minimal to no depression at baseline, the incidence of moderate-to-severe depression one year later was reduced by half in the CBT-I group compared with the sleep education control condition (Cheng, P., et al., 


Sleep

, Vol. 42, No. 10, 2019
).

Research also supports the use of CBT-I in patients with insomnia and other mental health conditions. One randomized trial by Lisa Talbot, PhD, at the San Francisco VA Medical Center, and colleagues found that an eight-session CBT-I intervention improved sleep and overall psychosocial functioning in people with PTSD compared with participants in a waiting list control group. There was also some evidence that CBT-I may reduce the frequency of nightmares in people with PTSD (


Sleep

, Vol. 37, No. 2, 2014
).

Meanwhile, Grandner and colleagues explored the connection between COVID-19 pandemic-related stress and anxiety, suicidal ideation, and sleep. They found that COVID anxiety was correlated with suicidal ideation—but that association was fully accounted for by insomnia severity. Treating the insomnia, in other words, may help to reduce suicide risk in people with high stress or anxiety (


Psychiatry Research

, Vol. 290, No. 113124, 2020
).

Recognizing other sleep disorders

Insomnia, while common, is hardly the only sleep disorder that psychologists are likely to encounter in their practice. About 25 million adults in the United States—more than a quarter of adults ages 30 to 70—have obstructive sleep apnea, according to the AASM. This disorder occurs when muscles in the throat relax, blocking the airway. People with obstructive sleep apnea repeatedly stop breathing for short periods during sleep, disrupting sleep continuity and causing daytime fatigue. Untreated, sleep apnea can increase the risk of serious conditions, including diabetes, heart disease, and mood and psychiatric disorders.

The front-line treatment for obstructive sleep apnea is positive airway pressure (PAP), a face mask device that pushes air into the airway to keep it open during sleep. While PAP treatment is effective, adherence can be an issue. Psychologists can help patients learn to tolerate the device. “People who specialize in behavioral sleep medicine can help with adherence and anxiety for PAP. When patients are struggling to wear the mask or have anxiety or claustrophobia, we can use exposure treatments to help them get comfortable using the device,” Mundt said.

Nightmares are another common complaint, especially in people who have been exposed to trauma. Counter to popular belief, nightmares are treatable. Imagery rehearsal therapy (IRT) is one of the most used and well-supported interventions for nightmares in people with PTSD, and several protocols are available. A meta-analysis of these cognitive behavioral interventions found IRT had large effects on the frequency of nightmares, sleep quality, and PTSD symptoms. Further, the combination of IRT and CBT-I resulted in even greater improvements in sleep quality (Casement, M. D., & Swanson, L. M., 


Clinical Psychology Review

, Vol. 32, No. 6, 2012
). “It’s helpful to ask patients about nightmares because they are so common, especially with trauma,” Mundt said. “And patients aren’t necessarily going to bring them up, because they don’t even know that treatments are out there.”

Another challenging condition is hypersomnia, which causes excessive sleepiness even after a full night’s sleep. Examples of central disorders with hypersomnolence include conditions such as narcolepsy and Kleine-Levin syndrome, a rare disorder that causes excessive sleep, hunger, and behavioral changes. Hypersomnia can also be idiopathic, meaning it has no known cause. Secondary hypersomnia can be associated with certain medical disorders (such as epilepsy, hypothyroidism, or nervous system disorders), mood disorders such as depression and bipolar disorder, or other causes, such as side effects from medications. “These disorders are less common, but they frequently go undiagnosed or misdiagnosed for years,” Mundt said.

She and her colleagues are developing a cognitive behavioral therapy for hypersomnia (CBT-H). An initial pilot study suggested the treatment may reduce depressive symptoms and improve self-efficacy in people with hypersomnia and coexisting depression (Ong, J. C., et al., 


Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine, Vol. 16, No. 12, 2020

). “The main treatment for hypersomnia is medication to help with alertness. This is an adjunctive treatment to address the psychosocial impacts of hypersomnia,” Mundt said.

“There’s often comorbid depression and anxiety and issues with stigma and navigating work and relationships. CBT-H is designed to help people deal with those challenges.”

Sleep training for psychologists

Given the frequency of sleep disruption in the general population—and among people with mental health disorders in particular—it is important for clinicians to recognize the signs. Clinical psychologists should make a point to inquire about their patients’ sleep habits, Grandner said. “Sleep problems are part of practically every diagnosis in the DSM,” he said.

Yet it is also important to recognize that treating insomnia and other sleep disorders requires specialized training. For psychologists who are trained in CBT, learning CBT-I is not especially difficult, Grandner said. “The treatment is highly manualized, and you don’t need to be board certified in behavioral sleep medicine to become competent in CBT-I.” However, being competent in CBT-I does require training in principles of sleep medicine that go beyond the traditional behavioral and cognitive tools, and various training options are available online and in person at institutions such as the University of Pennsylvania, University of Oxford, University of Arizona, and others. (See 

Screening tools and other resources
.)

Perlis and Posner, who lead training courses in CBT-I and are coauthors of a treatment manual on the intervention, argue that many more psychologists would benefit from these trainings—and so would their patients. Currently, most of the participants in Perlis’s training courses come from allied fields such as social work and occupational therapy, he said. “We clinical psychologists designed CBT-I. We produced the evidence base. Why are we not the ones delivering it?” he asked. “We need more people in clinical psychology to come aboard and start seeking training.”

Addressing sleep hygiene is something all clinicians can do with their patients. But sleep hygiene alone is not sufficient for treating clinically significant insomnia, Rubman said. If sleep problems persist for more than a few weeks, it is important to refer patients to a physician or psychologist who is certified in behavioral sleep medicine or has training in CBT-I. Too often, patients receive sleep education but do not improve, and then they mistakenly conclude that behavioral interventions didn’t work for them and may turn to sleeping pills instead. That is a missed opportunity, since their insomnia is likely to improve or resolve if they are treated with CBT-I. “Clinicians need a good understanding of variations in normal sleep and the limits of sleep hygiene, and they need to recognize when to refer someone to a specialist,” she said. “The goal is to intervene to prevent an acute problem from becoming a chronic problem.”

Screening tools and other resources


Epworth sleepiness scale

(Johns, M. W., 
Sleep, Vol. 14, No. 6, 1991)


Insomnia Severity Index

(Morin, C. M., et al., 
Sleep, Vol. 34, No. 5, 2011)


Sleep Disorders Symptom Checklist-25

(Klingman, K. J., et al., 
Sleep Medicine Research, Vol. 8, No. 1, 2017)


STOP-Bang questionnaire for sleep apnea

(Tan, A., et al., 
Sleep Medicine, Vol. 27–28, 2016)


Society of Behavioral Sleep Medicine
 (resources, education, and provider directory)


International Directory of CBT-I Providers


Web-based course in CBT-I

Further reading


Cognitive behavioral treatment of insomnia

Perlis, M. L., et al., Springer, 2005


Principles and practice of sleep medicine, 7th edition

Kryger, M. H., et al., Elsevier, 2022


Behavioral treatments for sleep disorders

Perlis, M., et al. (Eds.), Elsevier, 2011


Treatment plans and interventions for insomnia: A case formulation approach

Manber, R., & Carney, C. E., Guilford Press, 2015


Emily Grace and the what-ifs: A story for children about nighttime fears

Gehring, L. B., Magination Press, 2016

1. What screening tools can be used to affirm your initial diagnosis that a patient may meet

the diagnostic criteria for a sleep disorder?

Having a sleep disorder can be crippling to a person’s life and relationships. Research has

expressed that it can exacerbated, or quality of life can be decreased, and fatigue and sleepiness

can have very bad consequences. The screening tool that I would use for distinguishing insomnia

would be the Athens Insomnia Screening (AIS). The consistency and reliability of the AIS

determines for me to be invaluable tool in the clinical practice. this tool helps determine the

factors that affect the inability to sleep. The AIS has 8 items that are used for screening insomnia.

The first 5 items pertain to sleep induction, awakening during the night, final awakening, total

sleep duration, and sleep quality. The last three refer to wellbeing, functioning capacity, and

sleepiness during the day

2. Describe the pharmacological actions of non-z sleep medications?

Zolpidem, Zaleplon, and Eszopiclone are examples of non-z sleep medications. Nonbenzodiazepines work by enhancing a very important neurotransmitter called GABA at the

GABA A receptor. The nonbenzodiazepine hypnotics facilitate GABA A transmission by

preferential binding to the 1a receptor subunits.

3. What problems can occur when benzodiazepines are used to help with sleep?

Benzodiazepines can be used for a short term for insomnia, however there are side effects from

the use of benzodiazepines such as addiction. There are additional medications to explore for

long term use for insomnia they are associated with residual daytime sedation, rebound

insomnia, and anterograde amnesia that can be controlled by their pharmacokinetic properties.

There is a low abuse potential for these classes of drugs when taken for an extended period,

withdrawal and tolerance to the hypnotic effects can become prevalent, and long-term use has

not been studied systematically.

image1.jpeg

week5 Proposed Intervention

 

What are the decisions you made in designing your proposed intervention? Include any ethical considerations or issues you felt were relevant, the setting in which the intervention will occur, the interventions that were selected and why, and how you plan to implement the intervention.

Cite any sources in APA format.

 

Step 5: Develop a Plan for Evaluating the Effectiveness of Your Intervention
Objective: To develop a method to determine if your Intervention achieved your goals.
For each goal, create an evaluation plan including:
 Change Team member responsible for data collection, analysis, and presentation
 A measure and target ranges for the measure.
 Study design (usually pre- and post-intervention study)
 Sample (study group) or data source with comparison group
 Methods for data collection, analysis, interpretation, and presentation.
 Timelines for baseline and for post-intervention data collection and analysis
 Resources required
Step 6: Develop an Implementation Plan
Objective: Part A: To develop a plan for training or educating your staff/patients to successfully
implement your intervention.
Part B: To develop a plan for putting your intervention into place.
Part A: Develop a Plan for Staff and/or Patient Training
 Identify your Instructors, trainee audience(s) and their specific training requirements.
Determine who needs to be trained on what knowledge/skills and by when in order to achieve
your aims.
Part B: Develop an Implementation Plan for the Intervention
 Ensure you have collected all baseline data before implementing the intervention.
 Identify the person(s) responsible for implementation.
 Determine how you will implement your intervention in order to achieve your aims.
 Identify who will use what team strategies and tools, when and where.
 Create an implementation timeline.