Famorca Et Al. (2013) - Nursing Care of The Community
Famorca Et Al. (2013) - Nursing Care of The Community
Famorca Et Al. (2013) - Nursing Care of The Community
, 2013) sacrodriguez2020
CHAPTER 1: FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS OF COMMUNITY HEALTH NURSING ❖
COMMUNITY/PUBLIC HEALTH NURSING — The synthesis of nursing practice and public health
practice.
❖ MAJOR GOAL OF CHN
• Preserve the health of the community and surrounding population by focusing on
health promotion and health maintenance of individual, family and group within
community.
• Thus CHN/ PHN is associated with health and identification of population at risks
rather than with an episodic response to patient demand.
❖ MISSION OF PUBLIC HEALTH
• Social justice that entitles all people to basic necessities, such as adequate income
and health protection, and accepts collective burdens to make possible.
❖ DEFINITION OF HEALTH ACCORDING TO:
• WHO
▪ “a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not
merely the absence of disease or infirmity.”
• Murray
▪ “a state of well-being in which the person is able to use purposeful,
adaptive responses and processes physically, mentally, emotionally,
spiritually, and socially.”
• Pender
▪ “actualization of inherent and acquired human potential through goal
directed behavior, competent self-care, and satisfying relationship with
others.”
• Orem
▪ “a state of person that is characterized by soundness or wholeness of
developed human structures and of bodily and mental functioning.”
❖ SOCIAL
• “of or relating to living together in organized groups or similar close
aggregates”
❖ SOCIAL HEALTH
• Connotes community vitality and is a result of positive interaction among groups
within the community with an emphasis on health promotion and illness
prevention.
❖ COMMUNITY
• Seen as a group or collection of locality-based individuals, interacting in social
units, and sharing common interests, characteristics, values, and/ or goals.
• COMMUNITY HEALTH
o Extends the realm of public health to include organized health efforts at the
community level through both government and private efforts
• Community-Based Nursing
o Application of the nursing process in caring for individuals, families and group
where they live, work go to go school, or they move through the health care
system
o Setting-specific, and the emphasis is on acute and chronic care and includes
practice areas such as home health nursing and nursing in outpatient or
ambulatory setting.
❖ POPULATION-FOCUSED NURSING
• Concentrates on specific groups of people and focuses on health promotion and
disease prevention, regardless of geographical location (Baldwin et al., 1998) •
Focused Practice:
1. Focuses on the entire population
2. Based on assessment of the populations’ health status
3. Considers the broad determinants of health
4. Emphasizes all levels of prevention
5. Intervenes with communities, systems, individuals and families
• Goal – promote healthy communities
❖ CHN PRACTICE REQUIRES THE FF. TYPES OF DATA FOR SCIENTIFIC
APPROACH AND POPULATION:
1. The epidemiology or body of knowledge of a particular problem and its solution
2. Information about the community
• Proposed in the late 1990s by nurses from the Minnesota Department of Health ▪
To describe the breadth and scope of public health nursing practice. ▪ Recognized
as a framework for community and public health practice • Consist of 17 health
interventions are grouped into 5 wedges
• 3 Important Elements:
▪ It is population-based
▪ It contains 3 levels of practice (Community, Systems, and Individual/Family) ▪
It identifies and defines 12 public health interventions
▪
❖ 17 PUBLIC HEALTH INTERVENTIONS AND DEFINITION (Keller et al.,
2004) 1. Surveillance – Monitors health events
2. Disease and other Health Event Investigation – Systematically gathers and analyzes
data regarding threats to the health of populations
3. Outreach – Locates populations of interests or populations at risk
4. Screening – Identifies individuals with unrecognized health risk factors 5.
Case Finding – Identifies risk actors and connects them with resources 6.
Referral and Follow-up – Assists individuals and families, families, groups,
organizations ad communities to identify and access necessary resources 7. Case
Management – Optimizes self-care capabilities of individuals and families
❖ ENTREPRENURSE
o A project initiated by the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE), in
collaboration with the Board of Nursing of the Philippines, Department of Health,
Philippines Nurses Association and other stakeholders to promote nurse
entrepreneurship by introducing a home health care industry in the Philippines. o It
aims to:
1. Reduce the cost of health care for the countries indigent population by
bringing primary health care services to poor rural communities
2. Maximize employment opportunities for the countries unemployed nurses
3. Utilize the countries unemployed human resources for health for the
delivery of public health services and the achievement of the country’s
Millennium Development Goals (MDG) on maternal and child health,
(DOLE, 2013)
o Main Purpose of Entreprenurse – To deliver home health care services
• The model explores many biopsychosocial factors that influence individuals to pursue
health promotion activities.
• The model depicts complex multidimensional factors which people interact with as they
work to achieve optimum health.
CONSTRUCTS/VARIABLES OF HPM
Health Promoting • This is the goal or outcome of the HPM. The aim
Behavior of health promoting behavior is the attainment
of positive health outcomes
STAGES OF DESCRIPTION
CHANGE
Decisional balance
❖ PRECEDE-PROCEED MODEL
Nursing Care of the Community (Famorca et al., 2013) sacrodriguez2020
• It provides a model for community assessment, health education planning, and
evaluation.
• PRECEDE, which stands for predisposing, reinforcing, and enabling constructs in
educational diagnosis and evaluation is used for community diagnosis.
• PROCEED, stands for policy, regulatory, and organizational constructs in education and
environmental development, is a model for implementing and evaluating health
programs based on PRECEDE.
• Predisposing factors: people’s characteristics that motivate them toward health
related behavior.
• Enabling factors: conditions in people and the environment that facilitate or impede
health related behavior.
• Reinforcing factors: feedback given by support persons or groups resulting from the
performance of health-related behavior
❖ R.A. 8423 - Traditional and Alternative Medicine Act of 1997 (Juan Flavier)
MEDICINAL USE/INDICATION PREPARATION
PLANTS
❖ PRIMARY CARE
o Includes health promotion, disease prevention, health maintenance, counseling, patient
education and diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic illness in different health
settings (American Association of Family Medicine)
o Refers to the first contact of a person with a professional
o A model of nursing care that emphasizes continuity of care
o Nursing care is directed towards meeting all the patient’s need.
PRIMARY HEALTH CARE PRIMARY CARE
❖ HEALTH PROTECTION
• Parse (1990)
▪ Behaviors in which one engages with the specific intent to prevent disease,
detect disease in the early stages or to maximize health within constraints of
disease
▪=
❖ HEALTH RISK – The probability that a specific event will occur in a given time frame
🙫 To improve the nutritional status of the population, nutrition and education is essential. The 10
NUTRITIONAL GUIDELINES FOR FILIPINOS were developed to facilitate dissemination simple
and practical messages to encourage healthy diet and lifestyle.
1. Eat variety of foods everyday
2. Breast feed infants exclusively from birth to 4-6 months and give appropriate foods while
continuing breastfeeding
3. Maintain children’s normal growth through proper diet and monitor their growth regularly 4.
Consume fish, lean meat, poultry or dried beans
5. Eat more vegetables, fruits and root crops
6. Eat foods cooked in edible/cooking oil daily
7. Consume milk and milk products and other calcium rich foods such as small fish and dark
leafy vegetables everyday
8. Use iodized salt but avoid intake of excessive intake of salty foods
9. Eat clean and safe food
10. For a healthy lifestyle and good nutrition, exercise regularly, do not smoke and avoid drinking
alcoholic beverages
Adults ✓ 9 hours
🙫 Alcohol Consumption
• Health authorities have defined moderation as:
o Not more than 2 drinks a day for the average sized man
o Not more than 1 drink a day for the average size woman
• Heavy Drinking
o consuming more than 2 drinks/day on average for men and more than 1 drink per day
for women
• Binge drinking
o drinking 5 or more drinks on a single occasion for men / 4 or more drinks on a single
occasion for women
• Excessive Drinking
o can take the form of heavy drinking/ binge drinking/ both.
❖ HEALTH EDUCATION
o a process of changing people’s knowledge, skills and attitudes for health promotion
and risk reduction.
o The nurse participates in health education by empowering people so that they are able
to achieve optimum health and prevent disease by bringing out lifestyle changes and
reducing exposure to health risk in the environment
❖ BASIC PRINCIPLES THAT GUIDE THE EFFECTIVE NURSE EDUCATOR (based onKnowles
Theory on adult learning)
1. Message
• send a clear/understandable message to the learner.
• Consider factors that may affect learner’s ability to receive and retain info. 2.
Format
• strategy must match the objectives
3. Environment
• conducive environment for learning, therapeutic and supportive relationship
with the learner
4. Experience
• organize positive and meaningful learning experience
5. Participation
• engage learner in participatory learning by involving then in the discussion,
solicit feedback
6. Evaluation
• use tools such as quizzes, individual conferences and return demonstration
• Family Environment
✓ Refers to the physical environment inside the family’s home/residence and its
neighborhood.
❖ NINE AREAS OF ASSESSMENT OF THE FAMILY COPING INDEX (Freeman and Heinrich,
1981): i. Physical Independence
→ Family members’ mobility and ability to perform activities of daily living (personal
hygiene)
ii. Therapeutic Competence
→ Ability to comply with prescribed or recommended procedures and treatments to
be done at home.
iii. Knowledge of Health Condition
→ Understanding of the health condition or essentials of care according to the
developmental stages of family members.
iv. Application of Principles of Personal and General Hygiene
→ practice of general health promotion and recommended preventive measures.
v. Health Care Attitudes
→ family’s perception of health care in general.
vi. Emotional Competence
→ Degree of emotional maturity of family members according to their developmental
stage.
vii. Family Living Patterns
→ Interpersonal relationships among family members, management of family
finances, and the type of discipline in the home.
viii. Physical Environment
→ includes home, school, work, and community environment that influence the health
of family members.
ix. Use of Community Facilities
→ ability of the family to seek and utilize, as needed, both environment-run and
private health.
• ASPECTS OF EVALUATION:
✓ Effectiveness – determination of whether goals and objectives were attained.
✓ Appropriateness – suitability of the goals/objectives and interventions ✓
Adequacy – degree of sufficiency of goals/objectives and interventions ✓
Efficiency – relationship of resources used to attain the desired outcomes
Nursing Care of the Community (Famorca et al., 2013) sacrodriguez2020
❖ FAMILY-NURSE CONTACTS
➢ The family-nurse relationship is developed through family-nurse contacts, which may
take the form of a:
▪ Clinic Visit
▪ Group Conference
▪ Telephone Contact
▪ Written Communication
▪ Home Visit
• CLINIC VISIT
o takes place in a private clinic health center, barangay health station.
o Major advantage:
▪ A family member takes the initiative of visiting the professional health worker,
usually indicating the family readiness to participate in the health care process. ▪
Because the nurse has greater control over the environment, distractions are
lessened, and the family may feel less confident to discuss family health
concerns.
• GROUP CONFERENCE
o Appropriate for developing cooperation, leadership, self-reliance and or community
awareness among group members.
o The opportunity to share experiences and practical solutions to common health
concerns is a strength of this type of family-nurse contact.
• WRITTEN COMMUNICATION
o used to give specific information to families, such as instructions given to parents
through school children.
• HOME VISIT
o Home visit is a professional, purposeful interaction that takes place in the family’s
residence aimed at promoting, maintaining, and restoring the health of the family or its
members.
o Advantages:
1. It allows first-hand assessment of the home situation.
2. The nurse can seek out previously unidentified needs.
3. It gives the nurse an opportunity to adapt interventions according to family
resources.
4. It promotes family participation and focuses on the family as a unit.
5. Teaching family members in the home is made easier by the familiar
environment and the recognition of the need to learn as they are faced by the
actual home situation.
6. The personalized nature of home visit gives family a sense of confidence in
themselves and in the agency.
o Disadvantages:
1. The cost in terms of time and effort.
2. There are more distractions because the nurse is unable to control the
environment.
3. Nurse’s safety.
❖ For infection control the ff. activities should be practiced during home visits:
1. Remember to proceed from “clean” to “contaminated”.
2. The bag and its contents should be well protected from contact with any article in the
patient’s home.
3. Line the table/flat surface with paper/washable protector on which the bag and all of
the articles to be used are placed.
4. Wash your hands before and after physical assessment and physical care of each
family member.
5. Bring out only the articles needed.
6. Do not put any of the family’s articles on your paper lining/washable protector. 7.
Wash your articles before putting them back into you bag.
8. Confine the contaminated surface by folding the contaminated side inward.
9. Wash the inner cloth lining of the bag, as necessary.
❖ Aims
1. Achieve a good quality life
2. Create a health supportive environment
3. Provide basic sanitation
4. Supply access to health care
❖ COMMUNITY ASSESSMENT
o the data needed to be collected depend on the objectives of community assessment. o
In general, the nurse needs to collect data on the three categories of community health
determinants: people, place, and social system.
🙫 The Reporting Forms (as Enumerated in The FHSIS Manual of Operations) i. Monthly
Forms (Regularly prepared by the midwife and summited to the nurse) a. Program
Report (M1)
▪ Contains indicators categorized as maternal care, childcare, and
family planning
b. Morbidity Report (M2)
▪ contains list of all cases of disease by age and sex.
• In this phase, the health workers make a judgement about the community’s health status,
resources and health action potential or likely hood that the community will act to meet
health needs to resolve health problems.
• This consist of:
▪ The health risk or specific problem to which the community is exposed. ▪ The
specific aggregate or community with whom the nurse will be working to deal
with the risk or problem.
▪ Related factors that influence how the community will respond to the health risk or
problem application of this nursing diagnosis
• Planning Phase – involves priority setting, formulating goals and objectives, and
deciding on community interventions.
→ Active participation of the people
→ To foster participation, the community should have genuine representation in
the planning group.
→ Deciding on community representatives will be facilitated if the community has
been organized earlier.
• Priority Setting
▪ Provides the nurse and the health team with a logical means of establishing
priority among the identified health concerns.
▪ AVAILABILITY OF RESOURCES
🙫 For a realistic and useful outcome, the priority-setting process requires the joint effort of the
community, the nurse, and other stakeholders, such as the other members of the health team.
▪ The group defines guidelines for discussion, particularly on the manner of reconciling
differences of opinion.
▪ Shuster and Goeppinger (2004) suggested a flexible process using the nominal group
technique wherein each group member has an equal voice in decision making, thereby
avoiding control of the process by the more dominant members of the group.
▪ This technique is appropriate for brainstorming and ranking ideas, when consensus
building is desired over making a choice based on the opinion of the majority. ▪ The group
makes a list of the identified community health problems or conditions. Each of the
identified problems is treated separately according to a set of criteria agreed upon by the
group such as those suggested by the WHO.
🙫 As suggested by Shuster and Goeppinger (2004), the following steps are carried out: 1.
From a scale of 1 to 10, being the lowest, the members give each criterion a weight
based on their perception of a weight based on their perception of its degree of
importance in solving the problem.
2. From a scale of 1 to 10, being the lowest, each member rates the criteria in terms of the
likelihood of the group being able to influence or change the situation. 3. Collate the weights
(from step 1) and ratings (from step 2) made by the members of the group.
4. Compute the total priority score of the problem by multiplying collated weight and
rating of each criterion.
5. The priority score of the problem is calculated by adding the products obtained in step 4
After repeating the process on all identified health problems, compare the total priority
scores of the problems. The problem with the highest total priority score is assigned top
priority, the next highest is assigned to second, and so on.
❖ STANDARD OF EVALUATION
▪ The bases for a good evaluation are its utility, feasibility, propriety, and accuracy. (CDC,
2011)
i. Utility
→ the value of the evaluation in terms of usefulness of results.
❖ DETERMINANTS
o include all the biological, chemical, physical, social, cultural, economic, genetic, and
behavioral factors that influence health.
❖ HEALTH INDICATORS
o These are quantitative measures usually expressed as rates, ratio, or proportions that
describe and summarize various aspects of the health status of the population. o Also
used to determine factors that may contribute to a causation and control of diseases,
indicates priorities for resource allocation, monitors implementation off health programs,
and evaluates outcomes oh health programs.
❖ MORBIDITY INDICATORS
o Generally based on the disease specific incidence or prevalence for the common and
severe diseases such as malaria, diarrhea, and leprosy.
- Improved diagnostic
facilities
❖ MORTALITY INDICATORS
▪ Crude Death Rate (CDR)
▪ The rate with which mortality occurs in a given population.
▪ It is computed as:
▪ Factors affecting CDR includes age, sex composition of the population, the
adverse environmental and occupational conditions.
🙫 Neonatal mortality rate and postnatal mortality rate add up to the IMR. The reason for such
division is that the causes of neonatal deaths, that is, deaths among infants less than 28 days
old are due mainly to prenatal or genetic factors.
▪ Maternal Death
▪ Death of a female from any cause related to or aggravated by pregnancy or its
management during pregnancy and childbirth or within 42 days of termination of
pregnancy, irrespective of the duration and the site of the pregnancy.
▪ It can be calculated as:
❖ POPULATION INDICATORS
➢ Include not only the population growth indicators but also other population dynamics
that can affect the age-sex structure of the population and vice versa.
▪ A CBR greater than or equal to 45/1,000 live births implies high fertility while a
level less than or equal to 20/1,000 live births implies low fertility.
❖ EXAMPLES OF HEALTH MILLENIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS AND HEALTH INDICATORS
GOAL/TARGET HEALTH TARGETS HEALTH INDICATORS
- Proportion of population
in malaria risk areas using
effective malaria
prevention and treatment
measures
- Prevalence and death
rates associated with TB
- Proportion of TB cases
detected and cured
under DOTS
❖ Population Pyramid
▪ A graphical representation of the age-sex composition of the population that should
also be examined during the assessment of the health status of the community.
❖ Disease Registry
▪ A compilation of information about a particular disease.
▪ The aim of disease registry is to include all cases of the disease in the registry without
duplication.
❖ DISEASES SURVEILLANCE SYSTEMS IN THE PHILIPPINES
1. Notifiable Disease Reporting System (NDRS)
2. Field Health Service Information System (FHSIS)
3. National epidemiology Sentinel Surveillance System (NESSS)
4. Expanded Program on Immunization Surveillance System (IPE Surveillance)
5. HIV/AIDS Registry
LEVELS OF PREVENTION
❖ World Health Organization (WHO) as this specialized agency of the United Nations (UN)
provides global leadership on health matters.
❖ In the Philippines, health services are provided by the government and the private sector –
for profit as well as nonprofit, with the latter frequently referred to as nongovernmental
organizations or NGO’s.
o In the national level, director is set by department of health (DOH) by virtue of mandate
of the Local Government Code (R.A.7160) LGU’s should have operating mechanism to
meet the priority needs and service requirements of their communities.
o Basic Health Services are regarded as priority services for which LGU’s are primary
responsible.
❖ A Health System consists of all organizations, peoples, and actions whose primary intent is to
promote, restore, or maintain health.
o A health system has six building blocks or components:
1. Service delivery
2. Health workface
3. Information
4. Medical products, vaccines, and technologies
5. Financing
6. Leadership and governance or Stewardship.
⇒ Shaping the research agenda and stimulating the generation, translation, and
disseminating valuable knowledge.
o The WHO strategy on research for health has 5 goals:
1. Capacity – In reference to capacity-building to strengthen the national
health research system
2. Priorities – To focus research on priority health need particularly in
low- and middle-income countries
3. Standards - To promote good research practice and enable the greater
sharing of research evidence, tools, and materials
4. Translation - To ensure that quality evidence is turned into products
and policy
5. Organization – To strengthen the research culture within WHO and
improve the management and coordination of WHO research activities.
⇒ Setting norms and standards and promoting and monitoring their implementation. o
WHO develops norms and standards for various health and health –related
issues, such as:
• Pharmaceutical products including vaccines and other biological
products used in immunization
• Practices in maternal and childcare
• Environmental conditions.
o Provincial governments
▪ responsible for administration of provincial and district hospitals.
o Municipal and City governments
▪ In charge of primary care through rural health units (RHUs) or health
centers.
▪ Satellite outposts known as barangay health stations (BHSs) provide
health services in the periphery of the municipality or city.
➢ The private sector
o Composed of for-profit and nonprofit agencies this sector provides all levels of
services and accounts for a large segment of health service providers in the
country.
o About 30% of Filipinos utilize private health facilities. Estimated 60% of national
health expenditure goes to the private sector which employs more than 70% of
the health professionals in the Philippines.
➢ DOH Mission
o “To lead the country in the development of a productive, resilient, equitable and
people-centered health system”
▪ To guarantee equitable, sustainable and quality health for all Filipinos,
especially the poor, and to lead the quest for excellence in health.
➢ In the pursuit of its vision and execution of its mission, the following has the major
roles:
1. Leader in health
2. Enabler and capacity builder
3. Administrator of specific services
➢ The DOH core values reflect adherence to the highest standards of work namely:
1. Integrity – doing what is morally right and proper.
2. Excellence – Striving for the best and taking pride in the calling and practice of
one’s profession according to ethical standards and applying appropriate
technical knowledge to best serve the public.
3. Compassion and respect for human dignity – serving with sympathy and
benevolence to anybody irrespective of race, sex, creed or religion and
upholding the sanctity of human life.
4. Commitment – unselfishly delivering the services required.
5. Professionalism – performing one’s duties with the highest degree of excellence,
intelligence, skills and utmost devotion and dedication.
6. Teamwork – giving full coordination and cooperation with the mindset of
achieving optimum result.
7. Stewardship of Health – advocate, protect and provide health care services for
all.
8. Political Neutrality – providing service to everyone without discrimination and
regardless of party affiliation or preference.
9. Simple living – leading a modest life appropriate to one’s position and income
and shall not indulge in extravagance or ostentatious display of wealth in any
form.
❖ The BHS is the first contact health care facility that offers basic services at the barangay
level.
o It is a satellite station of the RHU.
o It is manned by Volunteer Barangay Health Workers (BHW’s) under the supervision of
Rural Health Midwife (RHM).
⇒ The revised implementing rules and regulations (IRRSs) of R.A. 7305 or the Magna
Carta of Public Health Workers
o stipulate that there be one rural health physician to a population of 20,000.
I. Pre-pregnancy package
1. Nutrition
• Nutritional counselling
• Promotion of use of iodized salt
III.Childbirth Package
1. Skilled birth attendant/ skilled health professional- assisted delivery
and facility-based deliveries including the use of partograph
2. Proper management of pregnancy and delivery complications and
newborn complications.
3. Access to basic emergency obstetric and newborn care (BEmONC) or
comprehensive emergency obstetric and newborn care (CEmONC)
services.
IV.Postpartum Package
1. Postpartum visits: within 72hours and on the 7th day postpartum check for
conditions such as bleeding or infections
2. Micronutrient supplementation
3. Counseling on nutrition, childcare, family planning and other available
services
VI.Childcare Package
1. Immunizations
2. Nutrition
• Exclusive breastfeeding up to 6 months
• Sustained breastfeeding up to 24 months with complementary
feeding
• Micronutrient supplementation
3. IMCI (Integrated Management of Childhood Illnesses)
4. Injury prevention
5. Oral health
6. Insecticide-treated nets for mothers and children in malaria-endemic
areas
❖ The reproductive health program of the Philippines adopts the life-span approach. It
recognizes the fact that RH is a concern that affects different age brackets.
❖ Family Planning is means to prevent high- risk pregnancies brought about by the
following conditions:
1. Being too young (less than 18 years old) or too old (over 34 years old)
2. Having had too many (4 or more) pregnancies
3. Having closely spaced (too close) pregnancies (less than 36 months)
4. Being too ill or unhealthy/ too sick or having an existing disease or disorder like
iron deficiency anemia.
➢ EPI vaccines and the special diluents have the following cold chain requirements:
• OPV: -15 to 25oC; must be stored in the freezer.
• All other vaccines must be stored in the refrigerator at a temperature of +2 to +8oC •
Hepatitis B, Pentavalent vaccine, Rotavirus vaccine and TT should not be stored in the
freezer. Wrap the container with paper before putting in the vaccine bag with cold packs.
• Keep diluents cold by storing them in the refrigerator in the lower or door shelves
➢ A child protected at birth (CPAB) – used to describe a child whose mother has received: a. 2
doses of tetanus toxoid during this pregnancy, provided that the 2nd dose was given at least
a month prior to delivery; or
b. at least 3 doses of tetanus toxoid any time prior to pregnancy with this child.
❖ Ensuring the nutritional needs are met requires complementary foods be: • Timely –
complementary foods are introduced when the energy and nutrients exceed when can
be provided through exclusive and frequent breastfeeding.
• Adequate – they should provide sufficient energy, protein, and macronutrients to meet a
growing child’s nutritional goal.
• Properly fed – food are given consistent with a child’s signal of appetite and satiety, and
that meal frequency and feeding method – actively encouraging the child, even during
illness, to consume sufficient food using finger, spoon, or self-feeding – are suitable for
age.
🙫 DEWORMING
❖ Deworming
▪ Children aged 1-2years is done every 6months.
▪ 12-24months are given Abendazole 200mg or half tablet or Mebendazole 500mg
tablet.
❖ Possible adverse effect of antihelminthic drug:
• Local sensitivity or allergy – give an antihistamine.
• Mild abdominal pain – give an antispasmodic
• Diarrhea – give oral rehydration solution
• Erratic worm migration – pull out worms from mouth/nose or from other orifices. 🙫 Vitamin A
NON-COMMUNICABLE DISEASES
I. Cancer (Malignant Neoplasm)
→ A group of various diseases involving unregulated cell growth
→ In cancer, cells divide, grow uncontrollably forming malignant tumors and invade
parts of the body.
→ Breast cancer- leading cancer killer in both men and women and 1st among women →
Lung cancer- was 2nd cause of cancer deaths for both sexes combined and 1st among
men
❖ Warning Signals of Cancer (American Cancer Society) — “CAUTION US”
C- change in bowel or bladder habits
A- a sore throat that does not heal
U- unusual bleeding or discharge
T- thickening or lump in breast
I- Indigestion or difficulty swallowing
O- Obvious change in a wart or mole
N- Nagging cough or hoarseness
U- Unexplained anemia
S- Sudden weight loss
III. Diabetes
o A group of metabolic disease in which an individual has high blood sugar because the
pancreas does not produce enough insulin, or the cells do not respond to the insulin
produced.
o Diagnosis:
▪ FBS of >7.0 mmol/L (>126 mg/dL) or
▪ 2- hour blood sugar test of >11.1 mmol/L (200 mg/dL)
o Symptoms:
▪ 3Ps- polydipsia, polyuria, polyphagia
▪ Weight loss
▪ Vision changes
▪ Fatigue
Law Description
🙫 CHAIN OF INFECTION
❖ Pathogen or Causative Agent
▪ Biologic agent (organism) capable of causing disease
▪ Eliminate organism by:
• Sterilizing surgical instruments and anything that touches sterile
spaces of the body
• Using good food safety methods
• Providing safe drinking water
• Vaccinating people so they do not become reservoirs of illness
• Treating people who are ill
❖ Reservoir
▪ Any person, animal, arthropod, plant, soil, or substance (or combination of these)
in which an causative agent normally lives and multiplies, on which it depends
primarily for survival, and where it reproduces in such numbers that it can be
transmitted to a susceptible host
▪ Eliminate reservoirs by:
• Treating people who are ill
• Vaccinating people
• Handling and disposing of body fluids responsibly
• Handling food safely
• Monitoring soil and contaminated water in sensitive areas of the
hospital and washing hands carefully after contact with either
❖ Portal of Exit
▪ The way the causative agent gets out of the reservoir (body fluid or skin) ▪
Reduce risk from portals of exit by:
• Covering coughs and sneezes with a tissue
• Handling body fluids with gloves, then doing hand hygiene
• Keeping draining wounds covered with a dressing
• Not working when you have exudative (wet) lesions or weeping
dermatitis
🙫 STAGES OF DISEASE
❖ Incubation Period
▪ Time interval between the initial infection and the 1st appearance of any signs
and symptoms
❖ Prodromal Period
▪ Early, mild symptoms of disease
❖ Period of Illness
▪ Overt signs and symptoms of disease
▪ WBC may increase or decrease can result to death if immune response or
medical intervention fails
❖ Period of Decline
▪ Signs and symptoms subside
▪ Vulnerable to secondary infection
❖ Period of Convalescence
▪ Regains strength and the body returns to its
▪ Pre diseased state
▪ Recovery has occurred
❖ Susceptible Host
o Recognition of high-risk patients
• Immunocompromised
• DM
• Surgery
• Burns
• Elderly
➢ Diagnostics
o Tourniquet test or Rumpel Leeds Test – presumptive test for capillary fragility -
keep cuff inflated for 6-10 mins (child), 10-15 min (adults)
- count the petechiae formation 1 sq inch (>10-15 petechiae/sq inch)
➢ Laboratory Procedures
- CBC
- Bleeding Parameters
- Serologic test
- Dengue blot, Dengue Igm
- Other:
• PT (Prothrombin Time)
• APTT (Activated Partial Thromboplastin Time)
• Bleeding time
• Coagulation time
➢ Management: Symptomatic & Supportive
- Specific Therapy – none
- Symptomatic/Supportive therapy
- Intravenous Fluids (IVF)
- With hemoconcentration, 5-7 ml/kg/hr
- With shock, 10-30ml/kg in <20mins
- Use of Blood/Blood Products
- Platelet concentrate – 1 unit/5-7 kg
- Cryoprecipitate, 1 unit/5 kg
- Flash Frozen Plasma (FFP) – 15ml/kg x 2-4hrs
- Given in patient in impending shock and unresponsive to isotonic or colloid
transfusion.
- Prolonged PT
- Fresh Whole Blood (FWB) – 20cc/kg
- Active bleeding
- check serum calcium
- PRBC 10cc/kg
Nursing Care of the Community (Famorca et al., 2013) sacrodriguez2020
➢ Nursing Intervention
- Paracetamol (no aspirin)
- Giving of cytoprotectors
- Gastric Lavage
- Trendelenburg position for shock
- Nasal packing with epinephrine
- No intramuscular injections
- manage anxiety of patient and family
➢ Preventive measures
o Department of Health program for the control of Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever ▪
S—eek and destroy breeding places
▪ S—ay no to left and right defogging
▪ S—eek early consultation
🙫 FILARIASIS
▪ The disease often progresses to become chronic, debilitating and disfiguring disease
since its symptoms are unnoticed or unfamiliar to health workers.
▪ High rates in region V (bicol), VIII (samar and leyte, II (davao)
▪ Wuchereria bancrofti and Bulgaria malayi
▪ Transmitted to the bite of infected female mosquito (Aedes, Anopheles, Mansonia) ▪ The
larvae are carried in the blood stream and lodged in lymphatic vessels and lymph glands
where they mature in adult form
➢ Clinical Manifestation
o Acute stage
▪ Filarial fever and lymphatic inflammation that occurs frequently as 10
times per year and usually abates spontaneously after 7 days
▪ Lymphadenitis (Inflammation of the lymph nodes)
▪ Lymphangitis (Inflammation of the lymph vessels)
o Chronic Stage (10-15 years from the onset of the first attack)
▪ Hydrocele (Swelling of the scrotum)
▪ Lymphedema (Temporary swelling of the upper and lower extremities) ▪
Elephantiasis (enlargement and thickening of the skin of the lower or
upper extremities)
➢ Laboratory Diagnosis
- Blood smear – presence of microfilaria
- Immunochromatographic Test (ICT)
- Eosinophil count
➢ Management Guidelines
- Specific Therapy
- Diethylcarbamazine (DEC) 6mg/KBW in divided doses for 12 consecutive days
- Ivermectin (Mectizan)
➢ Preventive Measures
o Health teachings
o Environmental Sanitation
➢ 2 TYPES:
-Anicteric Type (without jaundice)
- manifested by fever, conjunctival injection
- signs of meningeal irritation
-Icteric Type (Weil Syndrome)
- Hepatic and renal manifestation
- Jaundice, hepatomegaly
- Oliguria, anuria which progress to renal failure
- Shock, coma, CHF
- Convalescent Period
➢ Diagnosis
o Clinical history and manifestation
o Culture
o Blood: during the 1st week
o CSF: from the 5th to the 12th day
o Urine: after the 1st week until convalescent period
o LAAT (Leptospira Agglutination Test)
o Other laboratory tests:
▪ BUN, CREA, liver enzymes
➢ Treatment
o Specific
o Penicillin 50000 units/kg/day
o Tetracycline 20-40mg/kg/day
o Non-specific
o Supportive and symptomatic
➢ Nursing Responsibilities
1. Dispose and isolate urine of patient.
2. Environmental sanitation like cleaning the esteros or dirty places with
stagnant water, eradication of rats and avoidance of wading or bathing in
contaminated pools of water.
3. Give supportive and asymptomatic therapy
4. Administration of fluids and electrolytes.
5. Assist in peritoneal dialysis for renal failure patient
▪ The most important sign of renal failure is presence of oliguria.
🙫 MALARIA
- AKA “King of the Tropical Disease”
- An acute and chronic infection caused by protozoa plasmodia
- Infectious but not contagious
- Transmitted through the bite of female Anopheles mosquito
▪ Malaria Exacts Heavy Toll in Africa
▪ There are 300-500M new cases annually
▪ Over 1M die every year – almost 3000 per day
▪ 90% of deaths are in Sub-Saharan Africa
- Vector: (night biting)
▪ Anopheles mosquito or minimus flavire
➢ Life cycle:
- Sexual cycle/sporogony (mosquito)
- sporozoites injected into humans
- Asexual cycle/schizogony (human)
- gametes is the infective stage taken up by biting mosquito
➢ Plasmodium vivax
- more widely distributed
- causes benign tertian malaria
- chills and fever every 48 hours in 3 days
➢ Plasmodium falciparum
- common in the Philippines
- Causes the most serious type of malaria because of high parasitic densities in blood. -
Causes malignant tertian malaria
➢ Plasmodium malaria
- much less frequent
- causes quartan malaria, fever and chills every 72 hrs in 4 days
➢ Plasmodium ovale
- Rarely seen
➢ Clinical Manifestation
o Uncomplicated
▪ Fever, chills, sweating every 24 – 36 hours
o Complicated
▪ Sporulation or segmentation and rupture of erythrocytes occurs in the brain and
visceral organs.
▪ Cerebral malaria
▪ Changes of sensorium, severe headache and vomiting
▪ seizures
➢ Diagnosis
- Malarial smear
- Quantitative Buffy Coat (QBC)
➢ Nursing Care
1. Consider a patient with cerebral malaria to be an emergency
▪ Administer IV quinine as IV infusion
▪ Watch for neurologic toxicity from quinine transfusion like delirium, confusion,
convulsion, and coma
2. Watch for jaundice – this is related to the density of the falciparum parasitemia,
3. Evaluate degree of anemia
4. Watch for abnormal bleeding that are may be due to decrease production of clotting
factors by damage liver.
➢ Chemoprophylaxis
- doxycycline 100mg/tab, 2-3 days prior to travel, continue up to 4 weeks upon leaving
the area
- Mefloquine 250mg/tab, 1 week before travel, continue up to four weeks upon leaving
the area
- Pregnant, 1st trimester, chloroquine, 2 tabs weekly, 2 weeks before travel, during stay
and until 4 weeks after leaving
- 2nd and 3rd trimester, Pyrimethamine-sulfadoxine
➢ Category of Provinces
o Category A – no significant improvement in malaria for the past 10 years. (>1000)
▪ Mindoro, Isabela, Rizal, Zamboanga, Cagayan, Apayao, Kalinga
o Category B - <1000/year
▪ Ifugao, Abra, Mt. Province, Ilocos, Nueva Ecija, Bulacan, Zambales,
Bataan, Laguna
o Category C – significant reduction
▪ Pampanga, La Union, Batangas, Cavite, Albay
➢ PATHOLOGY
o Primary – spread of bacteria from the bloodstream to the meninges o Secondary
– results from direct spread of infection from other sources or focus of infection.
➢ Clinical manifestation
- Fever
- Rapid pulse, respiratory arrythmia
- Soreness of skin and muscles
- Convulsion/seizures
- Headache
- Irritability
- Fever
- Neck stiffness
- Pathologic reflexes: Kernig’s, Babinski, Brudzinski
➢ Diagnosis
- Lumbar puncture
- Blood C/S
- Other laboratories
o Lumbar Puncture
- To obtain specimen of CSF
- To reduce ICP
- To Introduce medication
- To inject anesthetic
o CSF Examination
- Fluid is turbid/purulent >1000cc/mm cells
- WBC count increase
- Sugar content markedly reduced
- CHON increased
- Presence of microorganism
- Treatment
Bacterial meningitis
- TB meningitis
- Intensive Phase
- Maintenance Phase
- Fungal meningitis
- cryptococcal meningitis – fluconazole or amphotericin B
➢ Treatment
o Supportive/Symptomatic
o Antipyretic
o Treat signs of increased ICP