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Community Development - It Must Be Defined and Visualized by The

This document outlines the process of community organizing. It discusses the goals of allowing active community participation and empowerment to improve quality of life. The core principles are that community organizing is people-centered, participative, democratic, developmental, and process-oriented. The phases of community organizing include pre-entry, entry, social analysis, identifying leaders, community organization, action, and evaluation. Key aspects are gathering data on the community, integrating with residents, and facilitating their participation in addressing issues.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
296 views5 pages

Community Development - It Must Be Defined and Visualized by The

This document outlines the process of community organizing. It discusses the goals of allowing active community participation and empowerment to improve quality of life. The core principles are that community organizing is people-centered, participative, democratic, developmental, and process-oriented. The phases of community organizing include pre-entry, entry, social analysis, identifying leaders, community organization, action, and evaluation. Key aspects are gathering data on the community, integrating with residents, and facilitating their participation in addressing issues.

Uploaded by

mara
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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COMMUNITY ORGANIZING  Human rights – a universally help principles anchored mainly on the

belief in the worth and dignity of people


 A process that consists if steps/activities that instill and reinforce  Social justice – equitable access to opportunities for satisfying
the people’s self confidence on their own collective strengths and people’s basic needs and dignity
capabilities  Social responsibility – is premised on the belief that people as social
 Aims for the development of the comm. beings must not limit themselves to their own concerns but reach
 A process of educating and mobilizing members of the community out with others
to enable them to resolve community problems
Core Principles of CO:
 CO is people-centered: people are the means and the end
Community Organizing in the concept of Nursing Process:  CO is participative – it is the entire process
GOALS:  CO is democratic
 Allowing active participation of the community  CO is developmental
 People empowerment  CO is process-oriented
 Development of self-reliance
 Improving of quality of life Phases of CO (Community Organizing Participatory Action Research)
RESULTS:  Pre-entry
 The community become the health care professionals partners in  Entry
health care delivery and overall community development  Considerations in the entry phase
 Community integration
Emphasis on C.O in PHC  Social analysis
 People from the community working together to solve their  Identifying potential leaders
problems  Core group formation
 Internal organizational consolidation as a prerequisite to external  Community organizing
expansion  Action phase
 Social movement first before technical change  Evaluation
 Health reforms occurring within the context of broader social  Exit and expansion phase
transformation
1. PRE-ENTRY PHASE
Community Development – it must be defined and visualized by the - Preparations of organizers
community members and their participation is crucial in attaining their - Choosing a community
vision - Knowing the goals of the community organizing activities
- Delineate criteria for site selection
Human Rights- are based on the worth and dignity inherent to all human - Making list of source of information and possible facility
being resources
 Right to life - Proper selection of the community
 Right to development as person and as a community - Identifying barriers, threat, strength and opportunities
 Freedom to make decisions for oneself
Means of identifying community:
Values in CO:
- Initial data gathering through ocular survey - Data on health patterns (morbidity, mortality, fertility)
- Review of records of a health facility - Data on health resources
- A review of barangays profile
Participatory Data Gathering (COPAR)
2. ENTRY PHASE 1. Transect walk – organizers ask a group from the community to lead
- Forms the start of organizing process their visiting the community while observing the surrounding
- Organizers get to know the community and vice versa 2. Mapping – drawing a detailed map of the community. It allows the
- Making courtesy calls to LGU community to view their community in a different perspective.
 Resources mapping – sketching depending on livelihood or physical
3. CONSIDERATION IN THE ENTRY PHASE resources
- Introduce oneself to the community  Health map – drawing a spot map highlighting households with
- The organizers must know the target community identified health problems
- Initial visit happens  Seasonal/calendar map – people are asked to make a calendar
 Gather basic data such as socio-economic status, traditions, showing activities or events significant to the community
practices, etc 3. Venn Diagram – a method that focuses on relationships within the
- Avoid unrealistic expectations for the community community, outside groups or agencies. It shows the social support
4. COMMUNITY INTEGRATION of the community
- “pakikipamuhay”
- The phase when organizers actually live within the community 6. IDENTIFYING POTENTIAL LEADERS
- Erase the “guest” or “visitor” image in the side of organizer Characteristics of potential leaders:
- They represent the target group
INTEGRATIONS STYLES: - They have the trust and confidence of the community
- “Now you see, now you don’t” - Possesses leadership quality
- Boarder style - They believe to the need for a good change
- Elitist style - Willing to invest time
How to facilitate community integration: - Have potential management skills
- Pagbabahay-bahay or occasional home visits
- Huntahan – informal conversation 7. CORE GROUP FORMATION
- Participation in the production process – to enhance more the - Forming groups with only healthy competition
camaraderie
- Participation in social activities 8. COMMUNITY ORGANIZATION
Characteristics of good CO:
5. SOCIAL ANALYSIS - With organizational name and structure
 The process of gathering, collating and analyzing data to gain - With set of officers
extensive understanding of community conditions - With mission, vision, goals, objectives
 Analysis of the ff. factors:
- Demographic data 9. ACTION PHASE
- Sociocultural data - Mobilization phase
- Economic “ - The implementation of the plan
- Environmental data Considerations:
 Allow the community to determine the scope and pace of project PRINCIPLES OF COMMUNITY HEALTH NURSING
 Important as the outcome
 Regular monitoring and community formation programs A COMMUNITY MUST HAVE:
- Common interest
10. EVALUATION - Interact with one another
- A systematic, critical analysis of the current state of the - Function collectively according to social structure
organization and/or projects compared to desired/planned
outcome Principles of CHN:
- Focus on the community as the unit of care
11. EXIT AND EXPANSION PHASE - Give priority to community needs
- “The best entry plan is an exit plan” (Manalili, 1990) - Work with the community as a partner of the health team
- The organizers can expand to new locations while in this last - Focus on primary preventions first
phase from the previous location - Promote a healthful physical and psychosocial environment
- Reach out to all who may benefit from a specific service
- Promote optimum use of resources
- Collaborate with others

Conditions affecting health of the community:


- People
- Location
- Social system

Characteristics of healthy community


- Share sense of being
- Have feeling empowering one another
- Allowing individuals in the community to participate various
activities
- Has open channel of communication
- Equitable and efficient use of community resources

Data to be collected
- Community profile: demographic, educational and economical
- Morbidity and mortality rate
- Behavioral data
- Opinion data from community leaders

Tools for assessment


- Collecting primary data
- Observation
- Survey
- Informant interview e.g., birthday, employment status, smokers
- Community forum
- Focus group (elder, women)  Maternal mortality rate
 Secondary data # deaths of due to pregnancy, delivery and post partum cases
- Registry of vital events ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- x 100
- Health records and reports (FHSIS) Field Health Service # of live birth in the same year
Information System
(prenatal, post partum, children < 1 yr old, family planning, sick  Crude birth rate (CBR) – records how fast people are growing thru
children, NTP, NLCP) birth
- Disease registers # of registered live births in a year
- Census data ----------------------------------------- x 100
- Midyear population
Field Health Service Information System (FHSIS):
- Individual treatment record (ITR) Sources of health care data
- Target client list - Census (hospital)
- Summary table - Vital registration system (health insurance)
- Monthly and quarterly consolidation - Disease notification (school health programs)
FHSIS REPORTED BY: - Disease registry
- Monthly - Surveillance system (morbidity and mortality)
- Quarterly
- Annually EVALUATION
 A process that systematically and objectively assess compliance to
 Morbidity – relative incidence of disease the design of the program, the performance, relevance and success
P = # of existing cases of a disease at a particular time of a project
------------------------------------------------------------------------ x 100
# of people examined at that time LEVEL OF HEALTH CARE
 Primary care facility – 1st contact health care facility that offers basic
 Crude Death Rate services including emergency services and normal deliveries
# of death rate in a year  Custodian care facility – provides long term care
------------------------------- x 1000  Diagnostic or therapeutic facility – facility for the examination of the
Midyear population human body, specimen or sometimes treatment

 Infant mortality rate RURAL HEALTH UNIT


Deaths under 1 yr old in a yr  Municipal health officer
---------------------------------------- x 1000  Public health nurses (1:5000)
# of live births in the same year  Rural health midwife

 COHORT REFERRAL
- Group of people sharing the common defining characteristics
- A set of activities undertaken by a HCP in response to provide
necessity of the patient and providing continuity of care to a
large facilitated hospital.

COMMUNITY -> BARANGAY HEALTH STATION -> RHU – PRIVATE HOSPITAL


-> MUNICIAPL DISTRICT HOSPITAL -> PROVINCIAL/CITY HOSPITAL ->
MEDICAL REGIONAL CENTER

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