racism in healthcare

Instructions in doc

Pathology

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Find and review ten (10) scholarly, peer-reviewed research articles, meta-analyses, or CPGs in support of the practice change intervention. Complete the appropriate section in the worksheet for each article.

1. State the PICOT question.

2. For each article, supply the information for each of the seven headings for the appropriate article type.

3. Find and review ten (10) scholarly, peer-reviewed research articles, meta-analyses, or CPGs in support of the practice change intervention. Complete the appropriate section in the worksheet for each article.

4. State the PICOT question.

5. For each article, supply the information for each of the seven headings for the appropriate article type.

Use complete sentences to document findings.

Select the correct table for each of the ten articles and complete the information that aligns with the type of research article selected. You may do any combination of articles.

Copy and paste the tables as needed to classify your ten articles correctly.

PICOT Statement

QUANTITATIVE STUDIES

Full reference for article (APA 7th Ed.Format)

DOI of article/

article link

Problem-related to PICOT

Methods

Sample and Participants

Major Findings/Conclusions

Relevance to Practice Issue or Proposed Intervention

QUALITATIVE STUDIES

Full reference for article (APA 7th Ed.Format)

DOI of article/

article link

Purpose and Type of Research

Sample

Data Collection Method

Study Findings

Key Findings/Themes

Relevance to Practice Issue or Proposed Intervention

Clinical Practice Guideline

Full reference for article (APA 7th Ed.Format)

DOI of article/

article link

Purpose and Type of Research

Systematic Review of Literature

Stakeholders and Peer Review

Study Findings related to PICOT

Strength of Recommendations

Relevance to Practice Issue or Proposed Intervention

META-ANALYSIS STUDIES

Full reference for article (APA 7th Ed.Format)

DOI of article/

article link

Purpose of Research Article

Search Selection Method

Meta-Analysis Model

Consistency/Variation of Studies

Summary of Findings

nursing

10/13/23, 4:23 PM IMG-1781.jpg

https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/?tab=rm&ogbl#inbox/FMfcgzGtxdZHwPFPvtDdMWfptLSpKXWV?projector=1 1/1

EVIDENCE-BASED PROJECT, PART 1: IDENTIFYING RESEARCH METHODOLOGIES

After reading each of the four peer-reviewed articles you selected, use the Matrix Worksheet template to analyze the methodologies applied in each of the four peer-reviewed articles. Your analysis should include the following:

  • The full citation of each peer-reviewed article in APA format.
  • A brief (1-paragraph) statement explaining why you chose this peer-reviewed article and/or how it relates to your clinical issue of interest, including a brief explanation of the ethics of research related to your clinical issue of interest.
  • A brief (1-2 paragraph) description of the aims of the research of each peer-reviewed article.
  • A brief (1-2 paragraph) description of the research methodology used. Be sure to identify if the methodology used was qualitative, quantitative, or a mixed-methods approach. Be specific.
  • A brief (1- to 2-paragraph) description of the strengths of each of the research methodologies used, including reliability and validity of how the methodology was applied in each of the peer-reviewed articles you selected.

EVIDENCE BASE

EVIDENCE BASE IN DESIGN

When politics and medical science intersect, there can be much debate. Sometimes anecdotes or hearsay are misused as evidence to support a particular point. Despite these and other challenges, however, evidence-based approaches are increasingly used to inform health policy decision-making regarding causes of disease, intervention strategies, and issues impacting society. One example is the introduction of childhood vaccinations and the use of evidence-based arguments surrounding their safety.

In this Discussion, you will identify a recently proposed health policy and share your analysis of the evidence in support of this policy.

RESOURCES

Be sure to review the Learning Resources before completing this activity.
Click the weekly resources link to access the resources. 



WEEKLY RESOURCES

· Milstead, J. A., & Short, N. M. (2019). 
Health policy and politics: A nurse's guide (6th ed.). Jones & Bartlett Learning.

· Chapter 5, “Public Policy Design” (pp. 87–95 only)

· Chapter 8, “The Impact of EHRs, Big Data, and Evidence-Informed Practice” (pp. 137–146)

· Chapter 9, “Interprofessional Practice” (pp. 152–160 only)

· Chapter 10, “Overview: The Economics and Finance of Health Care” (pp. 183–191 only)

· American Nurses Association (ANA). (n.d.). 


Advocacy

Links to an external site.
. Retrieved September 20, 2018, from https://www.nursingworld.org/practice-policy/advocacy/

· Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). (n.d.). 


Step by step: Evaluating violence and injury prevention policies: Brief 4: Evaluating policy implementation

Links to an external site.
. Retrieved from https://www.cdc.gov/injury/pdfs/policy/Brief%204-a.pdf

·

Congress.govLinks to an external site.
. (n.d.). Retrieved September 20, 2018, from https://www.congress.gov/

· Klein, K. J., & Sorra, J. S. (1996). 

The challenge of innovation implementationLinks to an external site.

Academy of Management Review, 21(4), 1055–1080.

· Sacristán, J., & Dilla, T. D. (2015). 

No big data without small data: Learning health care systems begin and end with the individual patientLinks to an external site.

Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 21(6), 1014–1017.

· Tummers, L., & Bekkers, V. (2014). 

Policy implementation, street level bureaucracy, and the importance of discretionLinks to an external site.

Public Management Review, 16(4), 527–547.

To Prepare:

· Review the Congress website provided in the Resources and identify one recent (within the past 5 years) proposed health policy.

· Review the health policy you identified and reflect on the background and development of this health policy.

BY DAY 3 OF WEEK 7

Post a description of the health policy you selected and a brief background for the problem or issue being addressed. Which social determinant most affects this policy? Explain whether you believe there is an evidence base to support the proposed policy and explain why. Be specific and provide examples.

BY DAY 6 OF WEEK 7

Respond to at least 
two of your colleagues
* on two different days by either supporting or respectfully challenging their explanation on whether there is an evidence base to support the proposed health policy they described.

PEER REVIEW

#1 Briana – WEEK 7 DISCUSSION MAIN POST

H.R. 1712 – Rural Health Innovation Act of 2023

     Emergency medical services in the rural community setting can be challenging. Along with the area being large and sparsely populated in some places, there may also be difficult terrain, and the providers may need to travel further to transport the patient to the hospital (Rural Health Information Hub, 2022). This bill would provide two grant programs to help increase access to emergency care in these rural areas (CRH, 2023). The first grant funds federally qualified healthcare centers in these areas, including urgent care, triage, and other services (CRH, 2023). The second grant would also increase funding for rural emergency services, but this grant provides funding to health departments (CRH, 2023). There has been a long-standing history of the need to increase emergency services to rural areas, and slowly, we are working to provide these services. Telehealth has also impacted this in that it allows easier access to services in these rural areas; however, emergency care still needs to be improved.

     Social determinants of healthcare should always be considered whenever a new law or policy is being developed. The social determinant of healthcare that is the most addressed by this bill would be access to affordable, quality healthcare (World Health Organization, 2023). Some rural areas are undereducated, and residents may live in poverty, causing them not to seek out regular healthcare services. It is commonly seen that those with lower socioeconomic statuses are more at risk for poor health (World Health Organization, 2023). Expanding emergency services would allow these residents to at least be cared for in urgent need. Increased funding would improve the accessibility of healthcare and its support services. Increasing services in these areas would improve the population health of these areas now and in the future.

References

CRS. (2023). H.R.1712 – Rural Health Innovation Act of 2023. Congress.gov; Library of Congress. 
https://www.congress.gov/bill/118th-congress/house-bill/1712?q=%7B%22search%22%3A%22health+policy%22%7D&s=1&r=31
Links to an external site.

Rural Health Information Hub. (2022). Rural Emergency Medical Services (EMS) and Trauma Introduction – Rural Health Information Hub. Ruralhealthinfo.org; U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. 
https://www.ruralhealthinfo.org/topics/emergency-medical-services
Links to an external site.

World Health Organization. (2023). Social determinants of health. World Health Organization. https://www.who.int/health-topics/social-determinants-of-health#tab=tab_1

#2 ANDERSON /Discussion- Week 7

H.Res.434

The H. Res.434-Declaring a mental health crisis among youth in the United States, and expressing the pressing need for historic investments in mental health care for students was authored by Democrat Seth Moulton, District 6 114th-118th, Massachusetts. It was introduced on the house on 5/22/23; the bill focus on the mental health crisis affecting youth in the United States; it acknowledges that the Covid-19 pandemic has exacerbated depression with an increase of 30% in emergency room admissions from adolescents, the World Health Association cites suicide as the fourth leading cause of death between ages 15-19, The National Institutes of Health states that low-income population, and those living in rural areas are by far the most affected, state mental health resources are scarce or its funds are mismanaged (Congress.gov, 2023).

To alleviate the ongoing crisis, the bill proposes to: increase mental health training of school educators, invest robust funding toward on-campus mental health resources, preserve the continuity of mental health treatment to lower-income students despite of their legal status in the country, recognize that physical health and mental health are intertwined, educate the public on mental health disorders to reduce its stigma, develop a highly efficient method to contact high-risk and isolated population to support children/adolescent suffering from mental health disorders, curb prejudice and discrimination in schools towards students diagnosed with mental health disorders, and to regularly screen incarcerated juveniles whose mental health issues are often times overlooked (Congress.gov, 2023).

Social Determinants  

There are two main social determinants linked to the mental health crisis among children; the covid-19 pandemic and the “digital depression”.  The pandemic altered the lives of children all over the world. In the United States, it has forced school shut-downs as classroom attendance became remotely driven leading children to feel more isolated due to loss of physical/emotional contact with their schoolmates. Lower-income children/adolescents were the most affected by the pandemic because some of their parents have lost their jobs and struggled to make ends meet. The isolation caused decrease in physical activity and an overwhelming increase in social media screen time. When in-person classes resumed, school districts were made aware that the pandemic had increased depression among their students; however schools firmly believed that discussing mental health issues with students equated to putting “ideas” into their heads (Ayer & Colpe, 2022) also, school districts were already overwhelmed with other issues such as food insecurities, student housing instability, and teachers burnout. Studies show that 72% of children/adolescents did not receive mental health treatment and that schools did not initiate depression screenings as a way to curb teen suicide. School teachers spend long hours with their students, they are likely to best recognize signs of depression and other mental health disorders affecting their students with the assist of a school nurse. The federal government added $122 billion in school programs which part of that fund had been allocated to suicide prevention (Ayer & Colpe, 2022) therefore 72% of children not having had received mental health screening/care raise alarming questions whether or not schools are well-equipped and safe to mentally afflicted  students; another obstacle is that 77% of parents did not report suicide ideation or other ongoing mental health ailments to the school possibly fearing that their children would be treated poorly, “downgraded ” to special ED, or be bullied by their classmates. In addition to parental overlook, there is limited mental health training in the school system particularly to provide support to gay and nonbinary/trans students who are more victimized and harassed by their classmates.

The second social determinant it is digitalization. The average time adolescents spend on social media averages nine hours daily. The pandemic inevitably led children to spend more time using smart phone and computers in lieu of physical activity and healthier socialization with other children. It is likely that during the pandemic, their parents began to dedicate more time to social media by simply working from home; parenting style has also “softened” as younger parents are less restrictive to their children screen time. Although social media was not created to harm children (Ghaemi, 2020) it does impact their mental health negatively because children/adolescents often go to sleep with their phones on causing day-time anxiety/mood disorders secondary to sleep deprivation; adolescents have partially developed brain maturation, particularly on the frontal lobe; therefore they are at higher risk to engage in dangerous sexual behavior/encounters, participate in peer-pressured bullying towards their schoolmates, pick up unsafe habits such as e-smoking, and take part in substance abuse. Cyber bullying has grown with its hate speech nuances causing targeted teenagers to become depressed, anxious and/or die of suicide.

Evidence-based support

Prevention is the key to manage depression and suicide among children and adolescents. Depression is still underreported  and under diagnosed in children (Patra & Kumar, 2022), suicide deaths have surpassed automobile accident deaths, and one in ten adolescents in high school have verbalized suicide ideation. Pediatricians are still reluctant to screen/treat children who present symptoms of mental health disorders fearing that they might over diagnose their clients based on false-positive screening scores; however there is more benefit in identifying and initiating treatment rather than ignoring the issue. There are multiple assessment tools available nowadays that use questionaries, parent interviews or child-self-report tools; providers who may not feel confident about treating these children should make a referral to a qualified mental health provider because early identification is key to prevent teen suicide.

Also, healthcare providers should not focus on making the ” right” diagnosis because in depression the mood is always ” negative” followed by visible signs and symptoms such as feelings of sadness, isolation, decrease in physical activity, poor eyes contact, lack of energy, and poor academic performance. Some providers also believe that discussing mental health issues with children could lead them to embrace these ideas which is a misconception because there are more benefits than risks to obtaining early detection and treatment. The main downfall is parental denial of children's poor mental health due to strict religious views on pharmacological treatments ( scientologists for example do not believe in prescription drugs) or the fear that their children will be perceived differently and be mistreated. The National Suicide Prevention warns that depression and suicide ideation should be taken seriously (Patra & Kumar, 2022) as there are multiple resources available today to prevent this ill fate among youth; healthcare providers who feel uncomfortable treating these disorders should make swift referrals, and school bodies should immediately utilize the money allocated to them to kick off school-based screening programs. 

When digitalization issues are concerned, it is vital that parents become more vigilant and monitor their children online activities closer. Given the availability of smart phones facilitated through texting and chatting, teenagers have gained easier access to sex, drugs, and pornography (Ghaemi, 2020). The goal is not to ban social media from children and adolescents; the recommendations are straightforward to follow: delay screen time to younger children, remove smart phones from the bedroom to promote sleep hygiene, limit screen time to one hour daily to mildly depressive children, and restrict social media altogether to severely depressive children presenting suicide thoughts (Ghaemi, 2020).

Current treatment options to depression are SSRI antidepressants, counseling and psychotherapy accompanied by diet and exercise. The most important content of H.Res.434 is educating parents, school bodies, and healthcare providers about recognizing  mental health disorders among children particularly to those living in rural areas where resources are oftentimes scarce. Also, it is important to work with low-income families who may not see mental health as a priority over housing and food. 

    

References

Ayer, L., & Colpe, L. J. (2022). The Key Role of Schools in Youth Suicide Prevention. 
Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
62(1). 
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaac.2022.06.022
Links to an external site.

Congress.gov. (2023). 
Congress.gov | Library of Congress. Congress.gov. 
https://www.congress.gov/
Links to an external site.

Ghaemi, S. N. (2020). Digital depression: a new disease of the millennium? 
Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica
141(4), 356–361. 
https://doi.org/10.1111/acps.13151
Links to an external site.

Patra, K. P., & Kumar, R. (2022). 
Screening For Depression and Suicide in Children. PubMed; StatPearls Publishing. 
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK576416/
Links to an external site.

Measures to Prevent Cancere

due 10-6-23 @10am

Nursing Assignment

Bioethical
 Decision
 Making
 Model
 

 

1. Define
 the
 dilemma:
 Use
 your
 own
 words
 to
 describe
 the
 problem.
 State
 it
 in
 a
 way
 
that
 others
 can
 quickly
 understand
 your
 dilemma.
 Review
 
 
 
 

 

2. Identify
 the
 medical
 facts:
 Describe
 the
 facts
 that
 are
 relevant
 to
 the
 dilemma.
 
 

 

3. Remember
 that
 the
 diagnosis
 and
 prognosis
 are
 medical
 facts.
 
 

 

4. Identify
 the
 non-­‐medical
 facts
 (patient
 and
 family,
 external
 influences):
 
 
a. Patient
 and
 family
 facts
 such
 as
 culture,
 religion,
 social,
 economic,
 the
 

existence
 of
 an
 Advance
 Healthcare
 Directive,
 verbal
 preferences
 made
 by
 
the
 patient,
 how
 the
 patient
 lived
 his/her
 life.
 
 

b. Those
 that
 you
 discuss
 should
 be
 relevant
 to
 the
 situation.
 
 

 

5. External
 influences
 include:
 organizational
 policies,
 federal
 and
 state
 laws,
 practice
 
acts,
 code
 of
 ethics.
 These
 should
 be
 relevant
 to
 the
 situation.
 
 
 

 

6. For
 both
 step
 2
 or
 3,
 separate
 the
 facts
 from
 the
 assumptions:
 Sometimes
 all
 
healthcare
 professionals
 allow
 assumptions
 to
 guide
 their
 decision-­‐making.
 These
 
must
 be
 identified
 so
 that
 these
 assumptions
 do
 not
 interfere
 with
 the
 process.
 
 

 

 

7. Identify
 items
 that
 need
 clarification.
 Your
 paper
 should
 identify
 facts
 that
 you
 need
 
to
 clarify.
 When
 initially
 discussing
 an
 ethical
 situation,
 it
 is
 not
 unusual
 to
 not
 have
 
all
 of
 the
 answers.
 
 

 

8. Identify
 the
 decision
 makers:
 Is
 the
 patient
 an
 adult
 competent
 to
 make
 their
 own
 
choices?
 Is
 the
 patient
 a
 child
 who
 is
 old
 enough
 to
 have
 a
 say
 in
 the
 decision.
 If
 the
 
patient
 cannot
 make
 their
 own
 decision,
 who
 is
 the
 decision
 maker?
 How
 was
 this
 
person
 selected?
 
 
 

 

 

9. Review
 the
 underlying
 ethical
 principles:
 Review
 which
 ones
 and
 why
 they
 apply
 t
 
this
 particular
 case:
 beneficence,
 nonmaleficience,
 veracity,
 fidelity,
 autonomy
 and
 
justice.
 

 

10. Define
 alternatives:
 One-­‐Way
 to
 proceed
 may
 be
 apparent
 at
 this
 point.
 However,
 
sometimes
 there
 are
 different
 choices.
 
 They
 should
 be
 addressed
 identifying
 the
 
benefits
 and
 burdens
 for
 doing
 one
 thing
 versus
 the
 other.
 

 
11. Follow-­‐up:
 
 Define
 the
 process
 to
 be
 used
 with
 the
 chosen
 alternative.
 
 

 

 

 
Reference
 Source:
 Levine-­‐Ariff,
 J.
 &
 Groh,
 D.H.
 (1990).
 Creating
 an
 Ethical
 Environment.
 
Nurse
 managers'
 bookshelf
 a
 quarterly
 series:
 2:1.
 Baltimore,
 Maryland:
 Williams
 &
 Wilkins.
 
41-­‐61.
 

nursing

Assessment Description

Prepare this assignment as a 1,500-1,750-word paper using the instructor feedback from the previous course assignments and the guidelines below.


PICOT Question 

Revise the PICOT question you wrote in the Topic 1 assignment using the feedback you received from your instructor.
The final PICOT question will provide a framework for your capstone project (the project students must complete during their final course in the RN-BSN program of study).


Research Critiques

In the Topic 2 and Topic 3 assignments, you completed qualitative, quantitative, and mixed methods research critiques on two articles for each type of study (four articles total). Use the feedback you received from your instructor on these assignments to finalize the critical analysis of each study by making appropriate revisions.

The completed analysis should connect to your identified practice problem of interest that is the basis for your PICOT question.

Use the “Research Critiques and PICOT Question Guidelines – Final Draft” document to organize your essay. Questions under each heading should be addressed as a narrative in the structure of a formal paper.

 Please note that there are two new additional sections: Outcomes Comparison and Proposed Evidence-Based Practice Change
.


General Requirements

You are required to cite a minimum of three peer-reviewed sources to complete this assignment. Sources must be published within the last 5 years, appropriate for the assignment criteria, and relevant to nursing practice.  

Prepare this assignment according to the guidelines found in the APA Style Guide, located in the Student Success Center.

This assignment uses a rubric. Please review the rubric prior to beginning the assignment to become familiar with the expectations for successful completion.

You are required to submit this assignment to LopesWrite. A link to the LopesWrite technical support articles is located in Class Resources if you need assistance.

INSTRUCTORS REQUIREMENTS

As you start the final paper for this course, I wanted to point out a couple of items.

1. Review the rubric found in the syllabus and be sure to follow the requirements.

2. Review my comments in previous submission and make the revisions. I attached your paper in the gradebook feedback with extensive feedback. One of the grading criteria for the final paper is evidence of revisions based upon previous feedback.

3. The paper is to be 
1,500-1,750 words. Points will be deducted for exceeding the word count.

4. All references to articles in the be done by using the author's name. The title of the article is not to be in the text of the paper.

5. All references are to be in APA format. 
Retrieved from is not to be included.

6. Please message me with questions

7.
No late submissions will be accepted after the end of the class which Sunday, October 1, 1159PM.

Dr. Cook

nursing: ethical dilemma

attached