Master the essentials of health promotion in community and public health nursing! Foundations for Population Health in Community/Public Health Nursing, 6th Edition provides clear, concise coverage of the nurse’s role in preventing disease, promoting health, and providing health education in community settings. Case studies and critical thinking activities make it easier to apply concepts to community nursing practice. New to this edition are Healthy People 2030 guidelines and coverage of the latest issues, trends, and approaches. Written by well-known nursing educators Marcia Stanhope and Jeanette Lancaster, this streamlined text covers the fundamentals of designing effective nursing strategies for vulnerable and special populations. Focus on health promotion throughout the text emphasizes initiatives, strategies, and interventions that promote the health of the community. QSEN boxes illustrate how quality and safety goals, competencies, objectives, knowledge, skills, and attitudes can be applied in nursing practice in the community. Levels of Prevention boxes identify specific nursing interventions at the primary, secondary, and tertiary levels, reinforcing the concept of prevention as it relates to community and public health care. Applying Content to Practice boxes highlight how chapter content is applied to nursing practice in the community. Practice Application scenarios present practice situations with questions and answers to help you apply concepts to community practice. Genomics coverage provides a history of genetics and genomics and how they impact public/community health nursing care. Coverage of ongoing health care reform issues includes the impact of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (ACA) on public health nursing. Evidence-Based Practice boxes highlight current research findings, their application to practice, and how community/public health nurses can apply the study results. NEW! COVID-19 pandemic information has been added. NEW! Healthy People 2030 objectives are highlighted throughout the book, addressing the health priorities and emerging health issues expected in the next decade. NEW! Updated content and figures reflect the most current data, issues, trends, and practices. NEW! Expanded Check Your Practice boxes use Clinical Judgment (Next Generation NCLEX®) steps to guide your thinking about practice scenarios.
The book uses a practical, community-oriented approach and places an emphasis on health promotion and disease prevention.
OF HOUSES DEATHS FROM CHOLERA DEATHS PER 10,000 HOUSEHOLDS Southwark and Vauxhall 40,046 1263 315 Lambeth 26,107 98 37 Rest of London 256,423 1422 59 2.3 Unintentional injuries Chronic nephritis and renal sclerosis Vascular lesions.
Note: This synopsis may refer to a different edition of this book.
Achieving this is dependent on nurses and public health practitioners implementing the core functions of practice—assessment, assurance, and policy development.
Foundations of Community Health Nursing: Community-Oriented Practice
Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Education, Inc. Poirier, P. A. (2012). Humanbecoming: Transcending the now to explore the possibles in health policy. Nursing Science Quarterly, 25(1), 104—110, doi: 10.1177/0894318411429036.
This money-saving package includes the 8th edition of Community/Public Health Nursing Online for Stanhope and Lancaster, Public Health Nursing (User Guide and Access Code) and Public Health Nursing, 8th edition textbook.
Tarlov, A. R., Kehrer, B. H., Hall, D. P., Samuels, S. E., Brown, G. S., Felix, M. R., & Ross, J. A. (1987). Foundation work: The health promotion program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. American Journal of Health Promotion, ...
A nurse’s field guide to improving health outcomes for distinct patient populations This practical text is distinguished by its in-depth coverage of populations, ranging from opioidaddicted veterans to young children suffering from ...
For example , in England , where there had been at least 450 charitable foundations before the Reformation , only a few survived the reign of Henry VIII , who closed most of the monastic hospitals ( Donahue , 1985 ) .