Is there a stigma connected to being disabled and or methadone?

Healthy People Initiative (graded)
As the school nurse working in a college health clinic, you see many opportunities to promote health. Maria is a 40-year-old Hispanic woman who is in her second year of nursing school. She complains of a 14-pound weight gain since starting school and is afraid of what this will do to both her appearance and health if the trend continues. After doing her history, you learn that she is an excellent cook and she and her family love to eat foods that reflect their Hispanic heritage. She is married with two school-age children. She is in class a total of 15 hours per week, plus 12 hours of labs and clinical. She maintains the household essentially by herself and does all the shopping, cooking, cleaning, and chauffeuring of the children.She states that she is lucky to get 6 hours of sleep per night, but that is okay with her. She lives 1hour from campus and commutes each day.Using .healthypeople.gov/”>Healthy People 2020as a guide:
1. What additional information would you like to gather from Maria?
2. What are Maria’s real and potential health risks?
3. Pick one of Maria’s health risks. What would be one reasonable short-term goal for this risk?

Cultural Bias (graded)
Understanding cultural phenomena is essential to the completion of an accurate health assessment. Please choose a cultural group from Table 4.1 from your text and describe the cultural differences pertinent to that group. Remember, the table may not include all cultural groups. Let’s try to include all the groups listed in the discussion, so please do not choose a group that has already been done. To expedite this, please use the group name in the title of your post.

week 2

Pain Assessment (graded)
John, a 46-year-old African-American male presents for admission to your hospital for hemi-colectomy for colon polyps. He is complaining of chronic back pain. Patient is on disability from work related injury. History of two (2) previous back surgeries with relief of numbness in RLE but pain has not been relieved. His current medications include Methadone, Neurontin and Norco. John states he takes Benadryl PM every night in addition to his prescribed medications. John is a smoker and smokes 1 PPD. John confides in you that he is considering a spinal cord stimulator for the chronic pain.
• What risk factors does John have for risk of opioid withdrawal during this hospitalization?
• Is there a stigma connected to being disabled and or methadone?
• Does the nurse need to be concerned about acetaminophen use?
• What are the differences in acute and chronic pain?

Nutritional Assessment (graded)
Yulang Lei, an 82-year-old Vietnamese man, was admitted to your floor with dehydration and a urinary tract infection following a fall at home. He is alert and oriented, but weak. He appears frail. His admission history includes the following.
• He lives alone; his wife died 6 months ago.
• He states he ran a traditional Vietnamese family, unlike his children, who are married and have now moved away.
• His wife did all the cooking and he hasn’t had much of an appetite since she died. He eats rice and some vegetables, but rarely “bothers to cook meat for just one person.”
• Usual daily activity is reading the Vietnamese community newspaper with his morning tea for breakfast. He says he usually eats lunch, but can’t remember what he usually eats. He has rice and a few vegetables for dinner.
• You notice that his clothes fit very loosely. He states he weighed 140 pounds at his doctor’s office 5 months ago. When you weigh him, he weighs 123 pounds and is 5’8″ tall.
Look at the list of nursing diagnoses in Appendix A of your text. What nursing diagnoses would you choose for Mr. Lei?
• What additional questions would you ask to confirm your diagnosis?
• What physical examination and laboratory findings would you expect Mr. Lei to have?
• What psychosocial and cultural factors should you consider when assessing Mr. Lei?

Identification of ethico-legal positions and concepts within the case study

Patty was admitted to an aged care service. She was 65yrs old and Australian born. Patty had recently had a stroke and also had significant end-stage cardiac disease. She was the mother of seven children, with four different fathers. She had been living in the community with a daughter prior to her stroke in a situation of both emotional and financial abuse. She had schooling until the age of 12yrs, and her relationships with partners had also been abusive. She was compliant, docile and accepting of all care without question.
Patty shared a room in the service with the same person for five years and they established a close friendship. Patty became increasingly more assertive and self-determining in the way she led her life over this 5 year period. She had several episodes of severe illness that led to hospitalization which she did not cope with very well, producing significant anxiety and psychological distress. Since her admission to the service she had re-established a relationship with her two sisters who would visit regularly and provide significant support to her. Patty granted her sisters her Enduring Power of Attorney. Patty did not have an Advanced Care Directive.
Patty’s roommate became very ill and died after a short illness. Approximately 2 months after the death of her long-term room-mate and friend, Patty began refusing nutrition, hydration and medication. She clearly articulated that she did not want to continue her life. She was increasingly in discomfort and her activity levels were severely compromised by her previous stroke and advanced heart disease. Patty was physically demonstrative of her decision, by closing her mouth tightly when food or fluids and medication were offered and turning her head away. She would respond appropriately to questions, but would not initiate conversation .She would smile spontaneously and converse when visited.
The initial concerns expressed by the medical practitioner were based on the potential for depression, related to the death of her friend. He was of the view this may have been part of the decision Patty was making and for her decision to be part of suicidal ideation. Increasingly Patty was becoming more distressed physically due to her untreated cardiac disease: very short of breath, marked fluid retention and severe limitations on her mobility. Her refusal of food and fluid was also causing adverse physical effects. Patty’s sisters were of the view that Patty had made her decision and did not want her wishes to be overruled. The nursing staff had formed a close relationship with Patty and found the situation distressing. However the staff realized the challenges with providing ongoing support for Patty would require invasive procedures, insertion of feeding tubes and medication by alternative routes. The nursing staff also knew that Patty’s prior experience of an acute care environment had caused significant anxiety and on one occasion she had refused transfer to hospital to manage her health needs. The nursing staff were also had the advantage of establishing a therapeutic relationship with Patty over a long period of time. The nursing staff were of the view that Patty had arrived 5 years earlier as a self-effacing quiet compliant resident and had increasingly asserted herself over the years to live her life by choices and her individual life-plan, albeit within the community of the service. Her moral personhood emerged as the determinant of how she led her life and the decision she was now making was an intentional and conscious choice.
A case conference of all stakeholders was convened to seek a way forward for resolving the divergent positions. It was decided to also seek additional assessment from an Old Age Psychiatrist.
Due Date
1st June 2012 at 3 p.m.
Weighting
40%
Length
1500 words
Learning Outcomes
1,2,3,4,5,6
Assessment Task
In everyday health care, ethico-legal conflict can emerge. Drawing on the content of this unit, the literature, professional codes and standards provide a critical analysis of the case study.
Your discussion should include:
 Identification of ethico-legal positions and concepts within the case study
 Identification of consequences of decisions
 Evaluation of the particular approaches to ethico-legal decision making
 Application of ethico-legal principles to clinical decision making
 Exploration of negotiated outcomes and alternative pathways to resolution

Identify the populations served and any issues of population vulnerability.

The setting would be any general tertiary hospital. Your help is greatly appreciated. I need help getting started. Emerging Standards of Care Review emerging standards of culturally competent care. Here are possible resources to use: a. DHHS Office of Minority Health http://www.omhrc.gov/clas/; b. National Center for Cultural Competence http://data.georgetown.edu/research/gucchd/nccc/; c. AHRQ http://www.ahrq.gov/about/cods/cultcomp.htm; d. Annie E Casey Foundation http://www.aecf.org/initiatives/hswi/. Prepare a response that explores the following topics in your own workplace or a setting that you select for this discussion: a. Define culturally competent care appropriate for your own workplace, based on your perusal of the assigned readings. b. Identify the populations served and any issues of population vulnerability. c. Comment on standards of cultural competence that appear to be met and any that are not met d. Identify potential impacts of delivery of nursing care where standards are being met, and where standards are not being met. e. Comment on solutions that could be implemented where standards are not being met.

How might you guarantee that genetic tests will be used to benefit people, not to harm them?

With scientific breakthroughs come new, unanticipated dilemmas that force us to rethink how we view the world, our culture and each other. One good example comes from the genetic discoveries science has made in the past fifty years; we now live in an era when we can test tissue samples or blood and determine whether or not a person is at-risk for a variety of debilitating or deadly diseases. While this ability has clear benefits, it also has some potentially thorny side-effects. Do some background reading on genetic discrimination and the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2008 (GINA), starting here: http://www.genome.gov/10002328 and here: http://www.genome.gov/10002077, and then continuing with any other resources you find helpful. Genetic tests Reflect on your reading as you discuss the following questions during the week: Genetic tests are incredibly valuable tools. If you were in charge of the Department of Health and Human Services, how might you guarantee that genetic tests will be used to benefit people, not to harm them? Even though there have not yet been any genetic discrimination cases tried in U.S. courts, why is it important to establish a set of ethical standards now? What changes could be made to GINA in order to make it better?