Explain how the environmental factor you selected can potentially affect the health or safety of infants.

Details:

To prepare for this assignment view the following brief video from the American Medical Association titled, “Health Literacy and Patient Safety: Help Patients Understand.” The video can be accessed through the following link:

Part I: Pamphlet

Develop a pamphlet to inform parents and caregivers about environmental factors that can affect the health of infants.

Use the “Pamphlet Template” document to help you create your pamphlet. Include the following:

Select an environmental factor that poses a threat to the health or safety of infants.

Explain how the environmental factor you selected can potentially affect the health or safety of infants.

Offer recommendations on accident prevention and safety promotion as they relate to the selected environmental factor and the health or safety of infants.

Offer examples, interventions, and suggestions from evidence-based research. A minimum of three scholarly resources are required.

Provide readers with two community resources, a national resource, and a Web-based resource. Include a brief description and contact information for each resource.

In developing your pamphlet, take into consideration the healthcare literacy level of your target audience.

Part II: Pamphlet Sharing Experience

Share the pamphlet you have developed with a parent of an infant child. The parent may be a person from your neighborhood, a parent of an infant from a child-care center in your community, or a parent from another organization, such as a church group with which you have an affiliation.

Provide a written summary of the teaching / learning interaction. Include in your summary:

Demographical information of the parent and child (age, gender, ethnicity, educational level).

Description of parent response to teaching.

Assessment of parent understanding.

Your impressions of the experience; what went well, what can be improved.

While APA format is not required for the body of this assignment, solid academic writing is expected and in-text citations and references should be presented using APA documentation guidelines,

Community Advocacy Project—Health Policies

Course Project: Community Advocacy Project—Health Policies

To prepare for this section of the Course Project:

  • Review the Windome et al. article. Reflect on the authors’ seven lessons and how the lessons apply to advocacy work and policy formation.
  • Consider existing policies that impact the public health issue (TOBACCO USE) you selected in Week 1.. For instance, if you have identified tobacco use as an issue within your community, think about community policies that would curtail tobacco use such as tobacco-free zones and high taxes on tobacco products.
  • View the media titled “Improving Public Health Policy.” Think about new policies that might be enacted to address your selected public health issue. These policies must be able to be implemented. Do not suggest, for instance, that smoking should be made entirely illegal.
  • Identify potential stakeholders in the development and passage of ideas for health policy change within your community.

The Project (1–2 pages)

To complete this section of your Course Project, address the following:

  • Describe existing policies that impact your selected public health issue (TOBACCO USE). Explain whether these existing policies are adequate or need to be revised based on their strengths and limitations, and why.
  • Describe new policies that you consider important for addressing your selected public health issue, and explain why.
  • Describe potential stakeholders in the development and passage of ideas for public health policy change within your community, and explain why their role is important.

Support your Project with specific references to all resources used in its preparation. You are asked to provide a reference list for all resources, including those in the Learning Resources for this course.

Readings

  • Widome, R., Samet, J. M., Hiatt, R. A., Luke, D. A., Orleans, C. T., Ponkshe, P., & Hyland, A. (2010). Science, prudence, and politics: The case of smoke-free indoor spaces. Annals of Epidemiology, 20(6), 428–435.

Retrieved from the Walden Library databases.

  • National Prevention Council. (2011). National prevention strategy: America’s plan for better health and wellness. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Surgeon General, 25–50.

Foodborne Illness Trends

Worksheet 19: Foodborne Illness Trends (Internet Exercise)

Instructions: Go to this website and click on the relevant links to answer questions 1-9: http://www.cdc.gov/foodsafety/facts.html.

  1. FoodNet is a collaborative program that _____.
  2. works with health departments from every state in the United States
  3. works with approximately 15% of U.S. consumers
  4. started tracking food safety information in 2000
  5. tracks five different pathogens
  1. E. coli O157 infection is most commonly associated with consumption of raw or contaminated eggs.
  2. True
  3. False
  1. According to the CDC, in 2011Salmonella was the most acquired foodborne illness resulting in hospitalization.
  2. True
  3. False
  1. Foodborne microbes are present only in unhealthy animals.
  2. True
  3. False
  1. Infection withE. coli O157 can cause acute renal failure in children.
  2. True
  3. False
  1. Norovirus typically causes more vomiting rather than diarrhea and can resolve in 3 days.
  2. True
  3. False
  1. It is safe to leave leftovers unrefrigerated for up to 6 hours.
  2. True
  3. False
  1. The toxin that causesbotulismis inactivated by boiling.
  2. True
  3. False
  1. Hamburgers should be cooked to an internal temperature of at least 150°F.
  2. True
  3. False

Identify a case from your experience that contains an ethical issue.

Instructions for Preparing the Ethics Case Analysis

Select a Case: Identify a case from your experience that contains an ethical issue. What constitutes an ethics case or issue? Students often select cases in which there is a conflict of opinion regarding the best course of action or treatment to pursue. Such conflicts can arise between nurse and patients, among members of the health-care team, between nurses and family members, between patients and family members, and among family members. Conflicts of this type can often be analyzed by focusing on the competing values of each party (e.g., extending life versus minimizing suffering). Presentations of cases involving conflicts can lead to discussions of such ethical issues as autonomy, competence (decision-making capacity), informed consent, paternalism, and the rights and responsibilities of physicians, patients, and family members. Cases can be presented which do not involve any interpersonal conflicts. Students may wish to present a case because they believe that a decision was incompatible with an important ethical norm, value or principle. For example, decision makers who seek to promote a patient’s best interests (as perceived by the physician/nurse and family) may neglect the patient’s right to information regarding the diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment alternatives. Thus, even though a physician and a patient’s family may agree that the patient will not be told that she has cancer, the decision to withhold information may merit ethical examination. Almost any case contains ethical issues because the norms of the doctor/nurse-patient relationship are, ideally, based on ethical principles and motivations. To identify ethical issues, students can select a case and observe how the physician-patient relationship is conducted. Particular attention can be given to how the primary case staff interact with the patient, what and how information is conveyed, how and by whom treatment decisions are made, and how the patient’s decision-making capacity is assessed. If a surrogate decision maker is involved, students might consider the following questions: How and by whom was it decided that the patient lacked decision-making capacity? How was the surrogate selected? Was sufficient information given to the surrogate? Was sufficient consideration given to the patient’s values and best interests in the decision-making process?
What information should I present?
There should be six sections covered in your case presentation:
1. The Narrative of the Case: The student should attempt to present all relevant medical and social facts about the patient. Ethically sound decision-making is based on good medical care and a good factual basis regarding patient care. At all times maintaining confidentiality buy using a fictitious name or initials. (10 points).
2. The Language and Issues of the Case: Cases are often discussed in terms of a particular topic, e.g., informed consent, the decision-making capacity (competence) of the patient, forgoing life-sustaining treatment, physician-assisted suicide, etc. The reasons for choosing one course of action over another are often explained in terms of one of the duties of physicians to patients, respect for autonomy, nonmaleficence, beneficence, or justice. You should not “jargonize” your write up unduly. However, you should be able to identify the topic under which your case falls and to identify the duties to the patient that are involved in the case. (20 points).
3. Perspectives and Key Points of View: This is probably the single most important part of any case analysis. You should go person by person and explain how each saw the situation. Very often, you will find that one or more of the points of view are not well understood by you or others involved in the case. Attempting to understand the reasons and preferences of the parties involved can help to identify important conflicts and their sources. On the other hand, seemingly unresolvable conflicts can be resolved when a sincere effort is made to understand the underlying reasons and values. (30 points).
4. Facilitating Resolution: What approaches might have been taken to bring about case resolution? e.g., family and caregiver conference? Ethics case consultation? A discussion among certain members of the health-care team? Is there any way you could have contributed to the solution? (10 points).
5. What actually happened? Please be sure to include the outcome of the case. (10 points).
6. Commentary: Your commentary should highlight the professional duties that physicians have to patients and how these duties were respected or compromised in the case resolution. (20 points).
It is common for the question of “third person writing” when trying to stay in APA format – to answer the question before it arises. Third person should go without saying for all aspects of the paper, however, when one gets to the commentary it might be more difficult, try. A great deal of weight will not be place on this aspect. But it is expected.