Sunday, August 18, 2019
Health Promotion and Teaching as Tools for Nursing Essay -- Healthy He
Laying the Foundation for a Healthier Future Health promotion and teaching are important tools for nursing. By promoting health and health teaching, nurses can help lay the foundation for a healthier future. Major Concepts and Definitions Beliefââ¬âa statement of sense, declared or implied, that is intellectually and/or emotionally accepted as true by a person or group. Attitudeââ¬âa relatively constant feeling, predisposition, or a set of beliefs that is directed toward an object, a person, or a situation. Valueââ¬âa preference that is shared and transmitted within a community. Behavioral diagnosisââ¬âthe delineation of the specific health actions that are most likely to effect a health outcome. Health Belief Modelââ¬âa paradigm used to predict and explain health behavior that is based on value-expectancy theory. Perceiveââ¬âhow one views oneselfââ¬â¢s health. Expectanciesââ¬âoutcomes and evaluation of how behavior is determined. Divided into three types. Environmental cuesââ¬âsubconcept of expectancies, beliefs how events are connected. Outcome expectationââ¬âsubconcept of expectancies, consequences of oneââ¬â¢s own actions. Efficacy expectationââ¬âsubconcept of expectancies, oneââ¬â¢s own competence to perform the behavior required to influence outcomes. Incentivesââ¬â value of a particular object or outcome. Domains of learningââ¬âinformation, skills, and attitudes needed to be taught to achieve the appropriate level of learning. Cognitive domainââ¬âsubconcept, development of new facts or concepts, building on or applying past knowledge to new situations. Psychomotor learningââ¬âsubconcept, development of physical skills from simple to complex actions. Affective learningââ¬ârecognition of values, religious and spiritual beliefs, family interaction patterns and relationships and personal attitudes that affect decisions and problem-solving progress. Teachingââ¬âa planned and purposeful activity that nurses use to increase the likelihood that individuals will learn. Major Assumptions Major assumptions are taken from Rosenstockââ¬â¢s (1966) Health Belief Model, Banduraââ¬â¢s (1986) Social Cognitive Theory (Edleman & Mandle, 1998), and the teaching process (Boyd, Graham, Gleit, & Whitman, 1998). According to Leddy & Pepper (1993), assumptions from the Health Belief Model include the following aspects: 1. Perceived susceptibility, the clientââ¬â¢s ... ... and the Social Cognitive Theory can help the nurse to analyze factors that contribute to manââ¬â¢s perceived state of health. Working with the client in the proper domain of learning, the nurse will be able to assist the client to achieve the optimal level of functioning. This model can also be used with chronically ill patients. Again, the goal for the client is to achieve the optimal level of functioning. Difficulties in application to nursing practice would be the comatose patient or the terminally ill patient with no cognitive skills. Health promotion and teaching are valuable nursing tools but only if applied properly so the client is able to make healthy behavior changes with the goal being to achieve his or her optimal level of functioning. References Boyd, M. D., Graham, B. A., Gleit, C. J., & Whitman, N. I. (1998). Health teaching in nursing practice: A professional model (3rd ed.). Stamford, CT: Appleton & Lange. Edleman, C. L., & Mandle, C. L. (1998). Health promotion throughout the lifespan (4th ed.). St Louis, MO: Mosby, Inc. Leddy, S., & Pepper, J. M. (1993). Conceptual bases of professional nursing (3rd ed.). Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott.
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