Case Study: White Australian Male

Analyze and apply critical thinking skills in the psychopathology of mental health patients and provide treatment and health promotion while applying evidence-based research.

informatics

please focus on the following question:

 Based on your understanding of concepts of health and US values and the history of health care services, why do you think concepts like Social Determinants of Health have not been used as much in the health care industry? In your answer. you can consider the prevailing medical model (p. 53), anthro-cultural beliefs and values (pp. 84-86), and the history of health care services (132-134). 

W5 Dsee attachment

Chamberlain


NR599-11532

Week 5

Clinical Decision Support Systems

Preparing the Assignment

Post a written response in the discussion forum to EACH threaded discussion topic:

1. This week we learned about the potential benefits and drawbacks to clinical decision support systems (CDSSs). Create a “Pros” versus “Cons” table with a column for “Pro” and a separate column for “Con”. Include at least 3 items for each column. Next to each item, provide a brief rationale as to why you included it on the respective list.

2. The primary goal of a CDSS is to leverage data and the scientific evidence to help guide appropriate decision making. CDSSs directly assist the clinician in making decisions about specific patients. For this discussion thread post, you are to assume your future role as an APN and create a clinical patient and scenario to illustrate an exemplary depiction of how a CDSS might influence your decision. This post is an opportunity for you to be innovative, so have fun! 

Adhere to the following 
guidelines regarding quality for the threaded discussions in Canvas:

· Application of Course Knowledge: Demonstrate the ability to analyze, synthesize, and/or apply principles and concepts learned in the course lesson and outside readings.

· Scholarliness and Scholarly Sources: Demonstrates achievement of scholarly inquiry for professional and academic decisions using valid, relevant, and reliable outside scholarly source to contribute to the discussion thread. 

· Writing Mechanics: Grammar, spelling, syntax, and punctuation are accurate. In-text and reference citations should be formatted using correct APA guidelines.

· Direct Quotes: Good writing calls for the limited use of direct quotes. Direct quotes in discussions are to be limited to one short quotation (not to exceed 15 words). The quote must add substantively to the discussion. Points will be deducted under the grammar, syntax, APA category. 

For each threaded discussion per week, the student will select no less than 
TWO scholarly sources to support the initial discussion post.

Scholarly Sources: Only scholarly sources are acceptable for citation and reference in this course. These include peer-reviewed publications, government reports, or sources written by a professional or scholar in the field. The textbooks and lessons are 
NOT considered to be outside scholarly sources. For the threaded discussions and reflection posts, reputable internet sources such as websites by government agencies (URL ends in .gov) and respected organizations (often ends in .org) can be counted as scholarly sources. The best outside scholarly source to use is a peer-reviewed nursing journal.  You are encouraged to use the Chamberlain library and search one of the available databases for a peer-reviewed journal article.  The following sources should not be used: Wikipedia, Wikis, or blogs.  These websites are not considered scholarly as anyone can add to these. Please be aware that .com websites can vary in scholarship and quality.  For example, the American Heart Association is a .com site with scholarship and quality.  It is the responsibility of the student to determine the scholarship and quality of any .com site.  Ask your instructor before using any site if you are unsure. Points will be deducted from the rubric if the site does not demonstrate scholarship or quality. Current outside scholarly sources must be published with the last 5 years.  Instructor permission must be obtained BEFORE the assignment is due if using a source that is older than 5 years.

Informed Consent and Cultural Competence

Case Study:Dr. Emily Clark, a seasoned cardiologist at Mercy General Hospital, is presented with a challenging case involving Mr. Rajan Patel, a 58-year-old man who recently immigrated from India. Mr. Patel has been diagnosed with a significant heart condition that requires a surgical procedure. While the surgery has a high success rate, like all medical procedures, it comes with its own set of risks and benefits. Mr. Patel, whose primary language is Gujarati, has limited proficiency in English. He nods and smiles politely during consultations, giving Dr. Clark the impression that he understands. However, when asked to explain the procedure back to her, it becomes evident that he does not fully grasp the intricacies of the surgery or its potential complications. Dr. Clark recognizes the importance of informed consent and wants to ensure that Mr. Patel truly understands the procedure, its risks, and its benefits. She believes in the ethical principle of autonomy, which dictates that every patient has the right to make decisions about their own body and health. However, she also acknowledges the principle of beneficence, which compels her to act in the best interest of her patient.  

Instructions

Note: The requirements outlined below correspond to the grading criteria in the scoring guide. At a minimum, be sure to address each point. For this assessment, develop a solution to a specific ethical dilemma faced by a health care professional. In your assessment:1. briefly summarize the facts surrounding the case study. Identify the problem or issue that presents an ethical dilemma or challenge and describe that dilemma or challenge.

  • Identify who is involved or affected by the ethical problem or issue.
  • Access and use the three components of the ethical decision-making model (moral awareness, moral judgment, and ethical behavior) to analyze the ethical issues.
    • Apply the three components outlined in the Ethical Decision-Making Model media.
  • Analyze the factors that contributed to the ethical problem or issue identified in the case study.
    • Describe the factors that contributed to the problem or issue and explain how they contributed.
  1. Apply academic peer-reviewed journal articles relevant to an ethical problem or issue as evidence to support an analysis of the case.
    • In addition to the readings provided, use the Capella library to locate at least one academic peer-reviewed journal article relevant to the problem or issue that you can use to support your analysis of the situation. The NHS-FPX4000: Developing a Health Care Perspective Library Guide will help you locate appropriate references.
      • Cite and apply key principles from the journal article as evidence to support your critical thinking and analysis of the ethical problem or issue.
      • Review the Think Critically About Source Quality resource.
        • Assess the credibility of the information source.
        • Assess the relevance of the information source.
  2. Discuss the effectiveness of the communication approaches present in a case study.
    • Describe how the health care professional in the case study communicated with others.
    • Assess instances where the professional communicated effectively or ineffectively.
    • Explain which communication approaches should be used and which ones should be avoided.
    • Describe the consequences of using effective and non-effective communication approaches.
  3. Discuss the effectiveness of the approach used by a professional to deal with problems or issues involving ethical practice in a case study.
    • Describe the actions taken in response to the ethical dilemma or issue presented in the case study.
    • Summarize how well the professional managed professional responsibilities and priorities to resolve the problem or issue in the case.
    • Discuss the key lessons this case provides for health care professionals.
  4. Apply ethical principles to a possible solution to an ethical problem or issue described in a case study.
    • Describe the proposed solution.
    • Discuss how the approach makes this professional more effective or less effective in building relationships across disciplines within his or her organization.
    • Discuss how likely it is the proposed solution will foster professional collaboration.
  5. Write clearly and logically, with correct use of spelling, grammar, punctuation, and mechanics.
    • Apply the principles of effective composition.
    • Determine the proper application of the rules of grammar and mechanics.
  6. Write using APA style for in-text citations, quotes, and references.
    • Determine the proper application of APA formatting requirements and scholarly writing standards.
    • Integrate information from outside sources into academic writing by appropriately quoting, paraphrasing, and summarizing, following APA style.

W10 os

 

The surrogate role is not one that is frequently mentioned in recent nursing practice literature.  Is that role as defined by Peplau relevant to nursing practice as currently experienced.  If so, in what way.  If not, why? 

400 word, 1 reference

Nursing Homework Assignment

Nursing Opportunities Assignment:  Total Possible Points = 110

Students will select a Contemporary Nursing Career Opportunity to write about.  Careers should focus on the role that requires education at the Bachelor’s level or higher. You must get approval from the instructor for the topic.  Students are expected to discuss all of the following:

  • expectations and responsibilities of the role itself
  • education requirements for the chosen career path,
  • salary ranges and demand for the role
  • pros/cons of the role
  • impact of the role on nursing or healthcare trends/issues

Career chosen: CERTIFIED NURSE MIDWIFE

Health Promotion week1

Health promotion 1week discussion:

Week 1 Discussion (USLO 1.1)

As we begin to explore the concept of health promotion, please respond to the following:

· Define health promotion in your own words.

· Discuss the differences in primary, secondary, and tertiary prevention.

· Identify two patient-focused topics of interest from the Healthy People 2030 website that interest you.

· For each topic, identify an objective from the Healthy People 2030 website on which you would like to focus.

· Why are these topics of interest to you? Provide a rationale for your selections.

Additional Instructions

Please note that you need to support your post with a scholarly source that is referenced using APA format and include in-text citations where you are using the referenced material in your post.  You are expected to respond to the discussion prompt with your initial post by the 3rd day of the unit week.  After submitting your initial post, respond to at least two other student posts.  Your responses should be thoughtful, respectful, and substantially add value to the discussion.  You should respond to your peers throughout the unit week, but all responses need to be submitted no later than the last day of the unit week.

Nursing

The TF-CBT model includes conjoint sessions in which the child and parent meet with the therapist to review educational information, practice skills, share the child's trauma narrative, and engage in more open communication. These sessions are intended to provide opportunities for parents and children to practice skills together, thereby enhancing the parent-child relationship, while also gradually increasing the child's comfort in talking directly with the parent about the child's traumatic experience (s) as well as any other issues the child (or parent) wants to address. In general, conjoint sessions should be carefully structured and parents should be very well prepared in order to increase the likelihood that the parent-child interactions experienced during these sessions feel safe, productive, and positive. Conjoint sessions are not convened until parents have gained sufficient emotional control to participate in such a way that they serve as effective role models of coping for their children. Thus, it is important to assess parents' and children's readiness for conjoint sessions. This assessment may be done primarily through continued observa tion of clients' coping, responsiveness to skills assignments, and emotional reactions to trauma-related material in individual sessions. Some parents, for example, may be well prepared emotionally to begin to engage in brief conjoint sessions with their children focused on psychoeducation and/or coping skill building early on in treatment, and then after some individual session preparation, are very comfortable with the conjoint sessions to share the child's trauma narration and processing later in treatment. Other parents need quite a bit of time to gradually face the trauma the child experienced, while developing their coping and parenting skills, before they are ready for any conjoint sessions.

Conjoint Child-Parent Sessions to Share Trauma Narration and Processing

The conjoint sessions in which children's trauma narratives are shared require considerable preparation in advance with parents in individual sessions. The approach, preparation, and sharing of the trauma narrative in conjoint sessions, however, may vary considerably depending on the dynamics, emotional adjustment, and the coping styles of the parent and child. With foster parents, for example, the preparation may involve having the participating foster parent read the child's narrative in individual sessions with the therapist as the child is developing the narrative. This can help the foster parent gain compassion for all the child has been through and understand the connections between the child's behavior problems and the traumas. Other parents require more time to master the coping and parenting skills in individual sessions before reading the child's narrative. In particular, parents whose children experienced sexual abuse and parents who struggle with sorrow and guilt about the traumas endured may respond better to hearing a fully processed narrative

when it is almost completed in individual parent sessions with the thera-pist. Although the therapist should have started to address the parent's personal maladaptive cognitions related to the child's traumas during the cognitive coping and processing skills component (Chapter 10), the parent may need more time to address additional maladaptive thoughts and/or painful feelings that arise from hearing the child's trauma nar-rative. Thus, it may be helpful to share the child's narration, as the child is developing it, with the parent as well. Either way, the reviewing of the narrative by parents in individual sessions can often take a couple of sessions so that parents can read, process, and prepare how they would like to respond when their children share their narratives in conjoint sessions, so as to best support their children during these sessions. Finally, it should be emphasized that sharing the child's narrative during the conjoint sessions is not a mandatory aspect of TF-CBT. In fact, in some cases, parents are not emotionally able to participate much in conjoint sessions and the sharing of the trauma narrative is contrain-dicated. Though this is relatively rare, in some cases, despite therapists' efforts to assist these parents in coping, the parents due to their own experience of childhood trauma, untreated PTSD, or depression and/ or a history of recent substance abuse) may be unprepared to cope with

hearing the details of the child's traumas. Such parents are often in their own individual therapy or may be given a referral for additional individual support. However, they may still be able to support their children to successfully complete TF-CBT. In some cases, for example, although the therapist may not feel the parent is emotionally prepared to hear the entire narrative, the child can be encouraged to read his her final narrative chapter about what was learned in the course of therapy or what he/she would tell other children about participating in treatment. Other parents may not be able to hear details of the child's traumar expert-ences but can supportively participate in other conjoint activities with the child, such as addressing safety planning or other aspects of positive parent-child communication, as described below. In sum, as noted above, the planning, preparing, and structuring of conjoint sessions should be determined based on therapists' clinical judgment on a case-by-case basis. Conjoint sessions designed for the sharing of the narrative typically occur after the child and parent have completed cognitive processing of the child's trauma experiences in individual sessions with the thera-pist. The therapist and family should decide together whether conjoint sessions would be helpful, the timing of the initiation of such sessions, and/or whether there should be relatively fewer or more conjoint sessions than individual sessions. For many families, it is easier to begin conjoint sessions with the practicing of

skills) and/or more general discussions about the trauma (e.g., playing a question-and-answer game in which parents and children compete to see who knows more general information about the trauma(s) experienced). This gradual exposure approach allows them to experience meeting together to practice skills and to gain comfort in talking about the trauma in the abstract, which in turn prepares them for reading and reviewing the trauma narrative together later in treatment For 1-hour sessions, the conjoint sessions are typically divided so that the therapist first meets with the child for 15 minutes, then with the parent for 15 minutes, and finally, with the child and parent together for 30 minutes. The therapist should be flexible in adjusting this division of time to each individual family's needs. If the goal of the conjoint sessions in the final phase of treatment is to share the child's narrative, then prior to having each set of conjoint ses-sions, the child should have completed the trauma narrative, be comfort I able reading it aloud and discussing it in therapy with the therapist, and be willing to share it with the parent. The parent should have heard the therapist read the complete trauma narrative in previous individual parent sessions, be able to emotionally tolerate reading the trauma narrative (i.e., without sobbing or using extreme avoidant coping mechanisms), and

and Counseling Page 4 *g Options – All comments be able to reflectively listen and or make supportive verbalizations when practicing responses during parent therapy sessions. In some instances, the therapist may need to review the child's narrative with the parent several times in order to help him/her gain sufficient emotional composure for the conjoint sessions to be productive. In addition, the therapist should role-play this interaction with the parent to ensure that his/her responses to the child are supportive and appropriate. The therapist can provide the parent with simple guidance to follow when responding to the child's reading of the narrative. For example, it is very helpful for parents to focus on utilizing reflective listening skills during the sharing of the narrative. The therapist, in fact, can encourage the child to pause after each chapter for the parent to reflect back some of what was shared. It is often helpful for parents to simply repeat back some of the actual words of the narrative. It can be explained to parents that by repeating some of their children's words, they are demonstrating very directly that they have heard what their children have shared, they are comfortable using the words needed (e.g., vagina, penis, intercourse, shoved, killed, burned, died) to discuss the trauma, and their children can come to them in the future to discuss related concerns. With young children's narratives, parents can repeat back the children's exact sentences, whereas with older children and teens, given the longer length of the narratives, it is more appropriate for parents to summarize what they have heard. Still, it is important for parents to reflect on the more challenging aspects of what was shared, using the language their teenagers used, again to demonstrate parental

willingness to discuss what was shared as openly as necessary. When the parent seems emotionally prepared to review the narrative with the child, the therapist should begin to work individually with the child to prepare him/her. The therapist should have the child read the trauma narrative out loud in individual sessions and suggest that the child is ready to share it with the parent. The therapist should have already mentioned, at previous trauma narrative sessions, that sharing the narra tive with the parent might occur.) The therapist should then suggest that the child write down questions or items that he/she would like to discuss with, or ask, the parent. These questions may pertain to trauma-related or other content about the child's traumatic experience(s) which the child would like to be able to talk with the parent about more openly. Some examples include how the parent feels about the petson who perpetrated the trauma; the parent's feelings or thoughts about the trauma; or any other questions about the trauma or family relationships the child may have. Despite being told that the child is not the cause of the trauma by the parent as well as others, it is surprising how often children continue to demonstrate a desire and need to ask their parents if they were, or are, mad at them for any reason. The therapist should have children discuss

these matters in individual sessions and assist them in formulating any questions that continue to trouble them. During the individual session with the parent (15 minutes before the conjoint session), the therapist should once again read the child's trauma narrative to the parent to ascertain that the parent is prepared to hear the child read the book or the section of the book to be shared directly with the parent. The therapist should then go over the child's questions with the parent and assist him/ her in generating optimal ways of responding. The parent may also have questions for the child, and the therapist should help the parent phrase these in appropriate ways. During the conjoint family session, the child may read the trauma narrative he she has written to the parent and therapist. However, sometimes children prefer the therapist read the narrative due to their desire to watch the parent's reactions and/or as a result of ongoing fears relating to upsetting the parent. The therapist may agree to read the narrative or suggest that the child and therapist take turns reading chapters. At the conclusion or during planned pauses after chapters have been read, the parent and therapist should praise the child for his/her courage in writing this trauma narrative and being able to read it to the parent. The child should then be encouraged to raise issues of concern from the list prepared earlier, taking time to discuss each issue to the satisfaction of both parent and child. If the parent has also prepared questions for the child, these should be asked after the child has completed his/her ques-

tions. The therapist's role in this interchange should be to allow the child and parent to communicate directly with each other, with as little intervention as possible from the therapist. If either the child or parent has difficulty, or if either expresses an inaccurate or unhelpful cognition that the other does not challenge, the therapist should intervene if judged clinically appropriate), so that the cognition does not go unquestioned. The therapist should also praise both the parent and child for completing the trauma narrative and conjoint family session components of treatment with such success. At the end of this conjoint session, the therapist, parent, and child should decide on the content of the conjoint session to occur the following week. Often the child and parent have enjoyed this session so much that they are enthusiastic about having another ard want to raise more issues to talk about together. If there was awkwardness or difficulty in communication, they may be less positive about the idea, but in this sit-uation, the therapist should actively encourage another joint session in order to improve the parent's and child's comfort with talking about these subjects. The conjoint sessions may also be used to provide and reinforce psychoeducation about the child's trauma-related symptoms, the specific type of traumatic event (s) the child experienced, etc.

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week 7 discussion answers

Please respond to each discussion post with 4 to 5 sentences with apa references for each 

Affordable Care Act

Discuss the components of the Affordable Care Act that you think will have a positive effect on improving health care outcomes and decreasing costs.