Secondary Data Table Template
The data obtained on this table is to be used to assess
community health needs and to identify health disparities within
a community.
City/Town/Village Name: ________________________State:
_______________Zip Code: _______ Population: __________
Vital Statistics
County Statistics
State Statistics
Age Distribution
Race/Ethnicity
Births
Deaths
Gender/Sex
Add lines as needed
Health Behaviors
County Statistics
State Statistics
Example: Adult smoking
12%
14%
Adult Smoking
Physical inactivity
Excessive drinking
Alcohol-impaired driving deaths
Sexually transmitted infections
Teen births
Clinical Care (5)
County
State
Example: Uninsured
10%
12%
Uninsured
Example: Primary Care Physicians
680:1
1,200:1
Primary care physicians
Dentists
Mental health providers
Preventable hospital stays
Diabetic monitoring
Mammography screening
Social & Economic Factors
County
State
High school graduation
Some college
Unemployment
Children in poverty
Income inequality
Children in single-parent households
Social associations
Violent crime
Injury deaths
Physical Environment
County
State
Air pollution - particulate matter
Drinking water violations
Severe housing problems
Driving alone to work
Long commute - driving alone
Hello everyone,
I've created an eight minute overview video addressing M3.5,
Part Two of the Comprehensive Community Assessment
assignment. Hopefully you have to time view it, please send me
any questions!
Below is the video link of the professor explaining step by step
of how the assignment should be like. Also there was a
secondary table there that should also be included with the
analysis paper. It was already there but we missed it somehow.
This announcement is closed for comments
CCA.Part2.6-2020.mp4
username: men0505
psw: rs0505 (username and password to watch the video).
Windshield Survey Data Table
Parameter
Brief Description of Parameter
Source of Information
Effect on Population Health
Geography
Environment
Industry
Education
Recreation
Religion
Communication
Transportation
Public Services
Political organizations
Community Development or Planning
Disaster Programs
Health Statistics
Social Problems
Health Professionals
Health Professional Organizations
Community Services
Part 3
Assignment Instructions
SWOT Analysis (1-2 pages in length): Each student will
perform a "Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats"
(SWOT) analysis that is relevant to their Comprehensive
Community Assessment (CCA). Your SWOT analysis should be
based on the data collected and analysis of your Comprehensive
Community Assessment project.
More information can be found by clicking this link (Links to
an external site.) about a SWOT Analysis. Length: 1-2 pages;
the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats can be
listed as bullet points, or in a table as depicted in the example
in the link to the Community Tool Box.
As you perform your SWOT, consider the following relevant to
your health indicator and county or country:
Strengths:
· Examine what is already in place, what is being done
· Existing resources / programs / public policies
· Supportive factors such as access, affordability, etc.
· Protective services
Weaknesses:
· Gaps both in care options and access to care options
· Barriers
· Risk Factors
Opportunities:
· Outreach
· Access
· Public Policy
· Education and training
Threats:
· Obstacles
· Sensitivity of topic
· Political considerations/factors
· Economic considerations/factors
Recommendations and Health Promotion Plan (2-3 pages in
length):
1. Develop two recommendations that are within the scope of a
public health nurse that may improve the health of the
population in the community.
2. Develop a health promotion plan based on one of your
recommendations. Give the plan a title. In your plan include:
· The goal of the plan.
· Two specific, measurable objectives.
·
· Two interventions (one for each objective) for the population
that integrate cultural considerations. Identify resources needed
for each of your identified interventions. (These interventions
may use existing resources or may require the development of
new resources.)
· Members of the interprofessional team and community
services that will assist in implementation.
· A method for evaluating each intervention.
Support the health promotion plan/project with evidence based
research and practices.
Part II – Data and Analysis Paper
In Part II of the Comprehensive Community Assessment, you
will summarize and analyze the information that you gathered in
Part I.
Your Data and Analysis Paper should include the following
parts: the Data Table, Analysis, Summary, and Conclusion. The
length of this paper should be 4-6 pages.
Assignment Instructions
Your paper should include the following:
Data
The data is presented in the Secondary Data Table within your
paper. Be sure to include multiple sites to provide data to
understand the health of communities and neighborhoods.
Below are links and/or sites for community health data.
· Health Data (Links to an external site.)
· City Data (Links to an external site.)
· Census Data (Links to an external site.)
· County Health Rankings & Roadmaps (Links to an external
site.): (Remember to select a state or county)
· State and County Quick Facts (Links to an external site.):
(Select a state, county, city, town, or zip code)
· US Census Bureau: Community Facts (Links to an external
site.): Your own state, county, and community may also have
data
Review the Community (Analysis)
· Use the Community Tool Box (Links to an external site.)and
your analysis data obtained in the Windshield Assessment and
Secondary Data Table to determine the following:
· Identification of 2 social determinants (Links to an external
site.) of Health in Community.
· Identification of 2 health care disparities (Links to an external
site.) and the vulnerable populations affected.
· Analysis of relevant health statistics related to both identified
health care disparities
· A Community Diagnosis that identifies one (1) community
health problem.
Summary
· Summarize the key points of your analysis and note important
or unexpected findings.
· Discuss the relationship between the identified health
behaviors and the health status in the community.
· Describe the leading health issues in the community. Identify
what the community is doing to address these issues.
Concluding Statement
· Describe the impact of your findings. Provide a concluding
sentence that explains the significance of your findings.
Page 98 of our text book for part1 of the assignment.
Healthy Communities
Complex community systems receive many varied stimuli. The
community’s ability to respond effectively to changing
dynamics and meet the needs of its members indicates
productive functioning. Examining the community’s functions
and subsystems provides clues to existing and potential health
problems. Examples of a community’s functions include the
provision of accessible and acceptable health services;
educational opportunities; and safe, crime-free environments.
The model in Fig. 6.2 suggests assessment parameters that can
help a nurse develop a more complete list of critical community
functions. The community health nurse can then prioritize these
functions from a particular community’s perspective.
Americans’ views on health and healthy communities frequently
reflect concern for quality-of-life issues over the absence of
disease, and in particular safety and low levels of crime are of
high priority. These findings are echoed in city-sponsored
health surveys across the nation: ensuring safe and healthy
environments that allow for healthy lifestyles, which include
activity and nutritious food, is as important to residents as
accessing quality health care.
Movements such as Healthy Cities and Healthy Places urge
community members and leaders to bring about positive health
changes in their local environments (CDC, 2014; World Health
Organization, 2017). Involving many cities around the nation
and world, these models stress the interconnectedness among
people and the public and private sectors essential for local
communities to address the causes of poor health. In particular,
examining the role the “built environment” has on community
health (e.g., its physical and environmental design) is an
increasing priority (Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 2017).
Urban communities are encouraged to consider the health
consequences of new policies and programs they introduce by
conducting health impact assessments (Pew Charitable Trusts,
2017). These assessments of projects, such as the potential
impact of zoning decisions, transit systems, and sick leave
policies, serve the important function of bringing a public
health perspective to urban and civic initiatives.
FIG. 6.2 Diagram of assessment parameters.
Modified from Anderson ET, McFarlane J: Community as
partner: theory and practice in nursing ed 7, Philadelphia, PA,
2015, Wolters Kluwer.
Each community and aggregate presumably will have a unique
perspective on critical health qualities. Indeed, a community or
aggregate may have divergent definitions of health, differing
even from that of the community health nurse. Nevertheless,
nurses and health professionals work with communities in
developing effective solutions that are acceptable to residents.
Building a community’s capacity to address future problems is
often referred to as developing community competence. The
nurse assesses the community’s commitment to a healthy future,
the ability to foster open communication and to elicit broad
participation in problem identification and resolution, the active
involvement of structures such as a health department that can
assist a community with health issues, and the extent to which
members have successfully worked together on past problems.
This information provides the nurse with an indication of the
community’s strengths and potential for developing long-term
solutions to identified problems.
Assessing the Community: Sources Of Data
The community health nurse becomes familiar with the
community and begins to understand its nature by traveling
through the area. The nurse begins to establish certain hunches
or hypotheses about the community’s health, strengths, and
potential health problems through this down-to-earth approach,
called shoe leather epidemiology. The community health nurse
must substantiate these initial assessments and impressions with
more concrete or defined data before he or she can formulate a
community diagnosis and plan.
Windshield Survey
Brookshire is a town of about 3500 in Southeast Texas.
Sugar mills and farms are the source of most jobs.
Accessible and affordable health care is a challenge. This van
provides services to unskilled workers and area elders.
The economy of the town is predominantly agriculture and
processing.
The car’s thermometer shows 99°, evidence of a pervasive
health threat in the summertime.
Much of the housing is substandard and suggests low-income
families.
Many people live in small homes on multiple-acre lots.
The important determinants of a health community include a
low crime rate, a good place to bring up children, good schools,
a strong family life, good environmental quality, and a healthy
economy. (iStock 540095516, 683792276, 504534788,
470237304, 638480042)
Photos courtesy of University of Texas Health Science Center at
Houston, School of Nursing, Community Health Division.
Community health nurses often perform a
community windshield survey by driving or walking through an
area and making organized observations. See illustrations
depicting an actual “windshield survey” in this chapter’s photo
novella. The nurse can gain an understanding of the
environmental layout, including geographic features and the
location of agencies, services, businesses, and industries, and
can locate possible areas of environmental concern through
“sight, sense, and sound.” The windshield survey offers the
nurse an opportunity to observe people and their role in the
community. Box 6.2 provides examples of questions to guide a
windshield survey assessment.
In addition to direct observational methods, certain public
health tools become essential to an aggregate-focused nursing
practice. The analysis of demographic information and
statistical data provides descriptive information about the
population. Epidemiology involves the analysis of health data to
discover the patterns of health and illness distribution in a
population. Epidemiology also involves conducting research to
explain the nature of health problems and identify the
aggregates at increased risk. The rest of this section provides
data sources and describes how the community health nurse can
use demographic and epidemiological data to assess the
aggregate.
Active Learning Exercise
Walk through a neighborhood, and describe the sensory
information (i.e., smells, sounds, and sights). How does each
relate to the community’s health?
BOX 6.2 Questions to Guide Community Observations During
a Windshield Survey
· 1. Community vitality:
·
1. • Are people visible in the community? What are they doing?
2. • Who are the people living in the neighborhood? What is
their age range? What is the predominant age (e.g., elderly,
preschoolers, young mothers, or school-aged children)?
3. • What ethnicity or race is most common?
4. • What is the general appearance of those you observed? Do
they appear healthy? Do you notice any people with obvious
disabilities, such as those using walkers or wheelchairs, or
those with mental or emotional disabilities? Where do they live?
5. • Do you notice residents who are well nourished or
malnourished, thin or obese, vigorous or frail, unkempt or
scantily dressed, or well dressed and clean?
6. • Do you notice tourists or visitors to the community?
7. • Do you observe any people who appear to be under the
influence of drugs or alcohol?
8. • Do you see any pregnant women? Do you see women with
strollers and young children?
· 2. Indicators of social and economic conditions:
·
1. • What is the general condition of the homes you observe?
Are these single-family homes or multifamily structures? Is
there any evidence of dilapidated housing or of areas
undergoing urban renewal? Is there public housing? What is its
condition?
2. • What forms of transportation do people seem to be using? Is
there public transit? Are there adequate bus stops with benches
and shade? Is transportation to health care resources available?
3. • Are there any indicators of the kinds of work available to
residents? Are there job opportunities nearby, such as factories,
small businesses, or military installations? Are there
unemployed people visible, such as homeless people?
4. • Do you see men congregating in groups on the street? What
do they look like, and what are they doing?
5. • Is this a rural area? Are there farms or agricultural
businesses?
6. • Do you note any seasonal workers, such as migrant or day
laborers?
7. • Do you see any women hanging out along the streets? What
are they doing?
8. • Do you observe any children or adolescents out of school
during the daytime?
9. • Do you observe any interest in political campaigns or
issues, such as campaign signs?
10. • Do you see any evidence of health education on billboards,
advertisements, signs, radio stations, or television stations? Do
these methods seem appropriate for the people you observed?
11. • What kinds of schools and day care centers are available?
· 3. Health resources:
·
1. • Do you notice any hospitals? What kind are they? Where
are they located?
2. • Are there any clinics? Whom do they serve? Are there any
family planning services?
3. • Are there doctors’ and dentists’ offices? Are they
specialists or generalists?
4. • Do you notice any nursing homes, rehabilitation centers,
mental health clinics, alcohol or drug treatment centers,
homeless or abused shelters, wellness clinics, health department
facilities, urgent care centers, mobile health vehicles, blood
donation centers, or pharmacies?
5. • Are these resources appropriate and sufficient to address
the kinds of problems that exist in this community?
· 4. Environmental conditions related to health:
·
1. • Do you see evidence of anything that might make you
suspicious of ground, water, or air pollutants?
2. • What is the sanitary condition of the housing? Is housing
overcrowded, dirty, or in need of repair? Are windows
screened?
3. • What is the condition of the roads? Are potholes present?
Are drainage systems in place? Are there low water crossings,
and do they have warning signals? Are there adequate traffic
lights, signs, sidewalks, and curbs? Are railroad crossings fitted
with warnings and barriers? Are streets and parking lots well
lit? Is this a heavily trafficked area, or are roads rural? Are
there curves or features that make the roads hazardous?
4. • Is there handicapped access to buildings, sidewalks, and
streets?
5. • Do you observe recreational facilities and playgrounds? Are
they being used? Is there a YMCA/YWCA or community
center? Are there any daycare facilities or preschools?
6. • Are children playing in the streets, alleys, yards, or parks?
7. • Do you see any restaurants?
8. • Is food sold on the streets? Are people eating in public
areas? Are there trash receptacles and places for people to sit?
Are public restrooms available?
9. • What evidence of any nuisances such as ants, flies,
mosquitoes, or rodents do you observe? Are there stray animals
wandering in the neighborhood?
· 5. Social functioning:
·
1. • Do you observe any families in the neighborhoods? Can you
observe their structure or functioning? Who is caring for the
children? What kind of supervision do they have? Is more than
one generation present?
2. • Are there any identifiable subgroups related to one another
either socially or geographically?
3. • What evidence of a sense of neighborliness can you
observe?
4. • What evidence of community cohesiveness can you
observe? Are there any group efforts in the neighborhood to
improve the living conditions or the neighborhood? Is there a
neighborhood watch? Do community groups post signs for
neighborhood meetings?
5. • How many and what type of churches, synagogues, and
other places of worship are there?
6. • Can you observe anything that would make you suspicious
of social problems, such as gang activity, juvenile delinquency,
drug or alcohol abuse, and adolescent pregnancy?
· 6. Attitude toward health and health care:
·
1. • Do you observe any evidence of folk medicine practice,
such as a botánica or herbal medicine shop? Are there any
alternative medicine practitioners, such as healers or
curanderos?
2. • Do you observe that health resources are well utilized or
underutilized?
3. • Is there evidence of preventive or wellness care?
4. • Do you observe any efforts to improve the neighborhood’s
health? Planned health fairs? Do you see advertisements for
health-related events, clinics, or lectures?

More Related Content

DOCX
Factors That Contribute to The Health Issue and Interventions.docx
DOCX
OverviewPrepare a 3–4 page report on a critical health issue in .docx
DOCX
Running head MEMO-PERSUASIVE MESSAGE 1MEMO-PERSUASIVE MESSAG.docx
DOCX
Your presentation on obesity did not address the requirements of t
PPTX
Teagen Johnson: CHNA Dane County, WI: Creighton MPH602
DOCX
Community Health AssessmentToggle DrawerOverviewWrite a 2 .docx
DOCX
PowerPoint Presentation #1TOPIC- Mental health illness in adults w.docx
DOCX
Write a 4-5 page population health improvement plan, based on yo.docx
Factors That Contribute to The Health Issue and Interventions.docx
OverviewPrepare a 3–4 page report on a critical health issue in .docx
Running head MEMO-PERSUASIVE MESSAGE 1MEMO-PERSUASIVE MESSAG.docx
Your presentation on obesity did not address the requirements of t
Teagen Johnson: CHNA Dane County, WI: Creighton MPH602
Community Health AssessmentToggle DrawerOverviewWrite a 2 .docx
PowerPoint Presentation #1TOPIC- Mental health illness in adults w.docx
Write a 4-5 page population health improvement plan, based on yo.docx

Similar to Secondary Data Table Template The data obtained on this table is.docx (14)

DOCX
1 IHP 501 Final Project One Guidelines and Rubric Coun.docx
DOCX
OverviewIn this module, you will finalize the completion of .docx
DOC
NRS 427V Enhance teaching - snaptutorial.com
DOCX
Poverty and Hunger.docx
DOC
NR 443 Enhance teaching - snaptutorial.com
DOCX
Provider Interview Acknowledgement FormStudent Name _.docx
DOCX
Access to HealthcareCommunity health centers provide primary hea.docx
DOCX
Social Determinants of HealthThis assignment is a 2–3 page s.docx
PDF
Civil Society Engagement Practical Country Platform Solutions to Reach Every ...
DOCX
NR 443 EXceptional Education/snaptutorial.COM
DOCX
(INSTRUCTIONS) Your submission should be a minimum of 2000 words (m.docx
DOCX
Community Assessment and Analysis PresentationThis assignment co.docx
DOCX
Community Assessment and Analysis PresentationThis assignment co.docx
DOCX
Research a selected local, national, or global nonprofit organizatio.docx
1 IHP 501 Final Project One Guidelines and Rubric Coun.docx
OverviewIn this module, you will finalize the completion of .docx
NRS 427V Enhance teaching - snaptutorial.com
Poverty and Hunger.docx
NR 443 Enhance teaching - snaptutorial.com
Provider Interview Acknowledgement FormStudent Name _.docx
Access to HealthcareCommunity health centers provide primary hea.docx
Social Determinants of HealthThis assignment is a 2–3 page s.docx
Civil Society Engagement Practical Country Platform Solutions to Reach Every ...
NR 443 EXceptional Education/snaptutorial.COM
(INSTRUCTIONS) Your submission should be a minimum of 2000 words (m.docx
Community Assessment and Analysis PresentationThis assignment co.docx
Community Assessment and Analysis PresentationThis assignment co.docx
Research a selected local, national, or global nonprofit organizatio.docx
Ad

More from rtodd280 (20)

DOCX
Sebika Darnal Devarani ArumugamENGL-1302-51008 Mar -03- 2020.docx
DOCX
SeaWorldBusch GardensPrimates4-8 Classroom Activities.docx
DOCX
Seattle Take Home Final Exam h There are Four Different Versio.docx
DOCX
Seba Alwayel517 Catawba circle Columbia, SC 29201 · 8032372950.docx
DOCX
Searching for the Wrong-Eyed Jesus, clip 1, Due Saturday, February .docx
DOCX
Searching Databases (APA 7 format and at least 3-4 references)Wh.docx
DOCX
Searching for help with this For this two-part assessment,.docx
DOCX
Search the Internet for an article where physical security failed.docx
DOCX
Search Yahoo Finance orand any other credible source(s) to find the.docx
DOCX
Search Yahoo Finance orand any other credible source(s) to find.docx
DOCX
Search WarrantAffidavit Project Paper 3-6 pages, double spa.docx
DOCX
Search the internet for best practices for developing technolo.docx
DOCX
Search the Internet for articles on Implementing a Biometrics Usage .docx
DOCX
Search the Human Rights Watch website for examples of human ri.docx
DOCX
Search the Internet and locate a victim impact statement (vide.docx
DOCX
Search the Internet and watch the first 6 minutes of PBS Idea Ch.docx
DOCX
Search the Internet for any short article related to our topics this.docx
DOCX
Search the internet and learn about the cases of nurses Julie Th.docx
DOCX
Search the Internet for articles on Implementing Biometrics To.docx
DOCX
Search the Web for reports of cloud system failures. Write a 3 to 4 .docx
Sebika Darnal Devarani ArumugamENGL-1302-51008 Mar -03- 2020.docx
SeaWorldBusch GardensPrimates4-8 Classroom Activities.docx
Seattle Take Home Final Exam h There are Four Different Versio.docx
Seba Alwayel517 Catawba circle Columbia, SC 29201 · 8032372950.docx
Searching for the Wrong-Eyed Jesus, clip 1, Due Saturday, February .docx
Searching Databases (APA 7 format and at least 3-4 references)Wh.docx
Searching for help with this For this two-part assessment,.docx
Search the Internet for an article where physical security failed.docx
Search Yahoo Finance orand any other credible source(s) to find the.docx
Search Yahoo Finance orand any other credible source(s) to find.docx
Search WarrantAffidavit Project Paper 3-6 pages, double spa.docx
Search the internet for best practices for developing technolo.docx
Search the Internet for articles on Implementing a Biometrics Usage .docx
Search the Human Rights Watch website for examples of human ri.docx
Search the Internet and locate a victim impact statement (vide.docx
Search the Internet and watch the first 6 minutes of PBS Idea Ch.docx
Search the Internet for any short article related to our topics this.docx
Search the internet and learn about the cases of nurses Julie Th.docx
Search the Internet for articles on Implementing Biometrics To.docx
Search the Web for reports of cloud system failures. Write a 3 to 4 .docx
Ad

Recently uploaded (20)

PPTX
ELIAS-SEZIURE AND EPilepsy semmioan session.pptx
PPTX
A powerpoint presentation on the Revised K-10 Science Shaping Paper
PDF
Chinmaya Tiranga quiz Grand Finale.pdf
PPTX
Onco Emergencies - Spinal cord compression Superior vena cava syndrome Febr...
PPTX
Virtual and Augmented Reality in Current Scenario
PDF
David L Page_DCI Research Study Journey_how Methodology can inform one's prac...
PDF
advance database management system book.pdf
PDF
CISA (Certified Information Systems Auditor) Domain-Wise Summary.pdf
PPTX
B.Sc. DS Unit 2 Software Engineering.pptx
PPTX
CHAPTER IV. MAN AND BIOSPHERE AND ITS TOTALITY.pptx
PDF
FOISHS ANNUAL IMPLEMENTATION PLAN 2025.pdf
PDF
احياء السادس العلمي - الفصل الثالث (التكاثر) منهج متميزين/كلية بغداد/موهوبين
PPTX
Unit 4 Computer Architecture Multicore Processor.pptx
DOC
Soft-furnishing-By-Architect-A.F.M.Mohiuddin-Akhand.doc
PDF
What if we spent less time fighting change, and more time building what’s rig...
PDF
Uderstanding digital marketing and marketing stratergie for engaging the digi...
PDF
BP 704 T. NOVEL DRUG DELIVERY SYSTEMS (UNIT 2).pdf
PDF
Vision Prelims GS PYQ Analysis 2011-2022 www.upscpdf.com.pdf
PPTX
Chinmaya Tiranga Azadi Quiz (Class 7-8 )
PDF
Trump Administration's workforce development strategy
ELIAS-SEZIURE AND EPilepsy semmioan session.pptx
A powerpoint presentation on the Revised K-10 Science Shaping Paper
Chinmaya Tiranga quiz Grand Finale.pdf
Onco Emergencies - Spinal cord compression Superior vena cava syndrome Febr...
Virtual and Augmented Reality in Current Scenario
David L Page_DCI Research Study Journey_how Methodology can inform one's prac...
advance database management system book.pdf
CISA (Certified Information Systems Auditor) Domain-Wise Summary.pdf
B.Sc. DS Unit 2 Software Engineering.pptx
CHAPTER IV. MAN AND BIOSPHERE AND ITS TOTALITY.pptx
FOISHS ANNUAL IMPLEMENTATION PLAN 2025.pdf
احياء السادس العلمي - الفصل الثالث (التكاثر) منهج متميزين/كلية بغداد/موهوبين
Unit 4 Computer Architecture Multicore Processor.pptx
Soft-furnishing-By-Architect-A.F.M.Mohiuddin-Akhand.doc
What if we spent less time fighting change, and more time building what’s rig...
Uderstanding digital marketing and marketing stratergie for engaging the digi...
BP 704 T. NOVEL DRUG DELIVERY SYSTEMS (UNIT 2).pdf
Vision Prelims GS PYQ Analysis 2011-2022 www.upscpdf.com.pdf
Chinmaya Tiranga Azadi Quiz (Class 7-8 )
Trump Administration's workforce development strategy

Secondary Data Table Template The data obtained on this table is.docx

  • 1. Secondary Data Table Template The data obtained on this table is to be used to assess community health needs and to identify health disparities within a community. City/Town/Village Name: ________________________State: _______________Zip Code: _______ Population: __________ Vital Statistics County Statistics State Statistics Age Distribution Race/Ethnicity Births Deaths
  • 2. Gender/Sex Add lines as needed Health Behaviors County Statistics State Statistics Example: Adult smoking 12% 14% Adult Smoking Physical inactivity Excessive drinking
  • 3. Alcohol-impaired driving deaths Sexually transmitted infections Teen births Clinical Care (5) County State Example: Uninsured 10% 12% Uninsured Example: Primary Care Physicians 680:1 1,200:1 Primary care physicians Dentists Mental health providers Preventable hospital stays Diabetic monitoring
  • 4. Mammography screening Social & Economic Factors County State High school graduation Some college Unemployment Children in poverty Income inequality Children in single-parent households Social associations Violent crime Injury deaths Physical Environment County State
  • 5. Air pollution - particulate matter Drinking water violations Severe housing problems Driving alone to work Long commute - driving alone Hello everyone, I've created an eight minute overview video addressing M3.5, Part Two of the Comprehensive Community Assessment assignment. Hopefully you have to time view it, please send me any questions! Below is the video link of the professor explaining step by step of how the assignment should be like. Also there was a secondary table there that should also be included with the analysis paper. It was already there but we missed it somehow. This announcement is closed for comments CCA.Part2.6-2020.mp4 username: men0505 psw: rs0505 (username and password to watch the video).
  • 6. Windshield Survey Data Table Parameter Brief Description of Parameter Source of Information Effect on Population Health Geography Environment Industry Education Recreation Religion Communication
  • 7. Transportation Public Services Political organizations Community Development or Planning Disaster Programs Health Statistics Social Problems
  • 8. Health Professionals Health Professional Organizations Community Services Part 3 Assignment Instructions SWOT Analysis (1-2 pages in length): Each student will perform a "Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats" (SWOT) analysis that is relevant to their Comprehensive Community Assessment (CCA). Your SWOT analysis should be based on the data collected and analysis of your Comprehensive Community Assessment project. More information can be found by clicking this link (Links to an external site.) about a SWOT Analysis. Length: 1-2 pages; the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats can be listed as bullet points, or in a table as depicted in the example in the link to the Community Tool Box. As you perform your SWOT, consider the following relevant to your health indicator and county or country: Strengths: · Examine what is already in place, what is being done · Existing resources / programs / public policies · Supportive factors such as access, affordability, etc. · Protective services Weaknesses:
  • 9. · Gaps both in care options and access to care options · Barriers · Risk Factors Opportunities: · Outreach · Access · Public Policy · Education and training Threats: · Obstacles · Sensitivity of topic · Political considerations/factors · Economic considerations/factors Recommendations and Health Promotion Plan (2-3 pages in length): 1. Develop two recommendations that are within the scope of a public health nurse that may improve the health of the population in the community. 2. Develop a health promotion plan based on one of your recommendations. Give the plan a title. In your plan include: · The goal of the plan. · Two specific, measurable objectives. · · Two interventions (one for each objective) for the population that integrate cultural considerations. Identify resources needed for each of your identified interventions. (These interventions may use existing resources or may require the development of new resources.) · Members of the interprofessional team and community services that will assist in implementation. · A method for evaluating each intervention. Support the health promotion plan/project with evidence based research and practices. Part II – Data and Analysis Paper
  • 10. In Part II of the Comprehensive Community Assessment, you will summarize and analyze the information that you gathered in Part I. Your Data and Analysis Paper should include the following parts: the Data Table, Analysis, Summary, and Conclusion. The length of this paper should be 4-6 pages. Assignment Instructions Your paper should include the following: Data The data is presented in the Secondary Data Table within your paper. Be sure to include multiple sites to provide data to understand the health of communities and neighborhoods. Below are links and/or sites for community health data. · Health Data (Links to an external site.) · City Data (Links to an external site.) · Census Data (Links to an external site.) · County Health Rankings & Roadmaps (Links to an external site.): (Remember to select a state or county) · State and County Quick Facts (Links to an external site.): (Select a state, county, city, town, or zip code) · US Census Bureau: Community Facts (Links to an external site.): Your own state, county, and community may also have data Review the Community (Analysis) · Use the Community Tool Box (Links to an external site.)and your analysis data obtained in the Windshield Assessment and Secondary Data Table to determine the following: · Identification of 2 social determinants (Links to an external site.) of Health in Community. · Identification of 2 health care disparities (Links to an external site.) and the vulnerable populations affected. · Analysis of relevant health statistics related to both identified health care disparities · A Community Diagnosis that identifies one (1) community health problem. Summary
  • 11. · Summarize the key points of your analysis and note important or unexpected findings. · Discuss the relationship between the identified health behaviors and the health status in the community. · Describe the leading health issues in the community. Identify what the community is doing to address these issues. Concluding Statement · Describe the impact of your findings. Provide a concluding sentence that explains the significance of your findings. Page 98 of our text book for part1 of the assignment. Healthy Communities Complex community systems receive many varied stimuli. The community’s ability to respond effectively to changing dynamics and meet the needs of its members indicates productive functioning. Examining the community’s functions and subsystems provides clues to existing and potential health problems. Examples of a community’s functions include the provision of accessible and acceptable health services; educational opportunities; and safe, crime-free environments. The model in Fig. 6.2 suggests assessment parameters that can help a nurse develop a more complete list of critical community functions. The community health nurse can then prioritize these functions from a particular community’s perspective. Americans’ views on health and healthy communities frequently reflect concern for quality-of-life issues over the absence of disease, and in particular safety and low levels of crime are of high priority. These findings are echoed in city-sponsored health surveys across the nation: ensuring safe and healthy environments that allow for healthy lifestyles, which include activity and nutritious food, is as important to residents as accessing quality health care. Movements such as Healthy Cities and Healthy Places urge community members and leaders to bring about positive health changes in their local environments (CDC, 2014; World Health
  • 12. Organization, 2017). Involving many cities around the nation and world, these models stress the interconnectedness among people and the public and private sectors essential for local communities to address the causes of poor health. In particular, examining the role the “built environment” has on community health (e.g., its physical and environmental design) is an increasing priority (Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 2017). Urban communities are encouraged to consider the health consequences of new policies and programs they introduce by conducting health impact assessments (Pew Charitable Trusts, 2017). These assessments of projects, such as the potential impact of zoning decisions, transit systems, and sick leave policies, serve the important function of bringing a public health perspective to urban and civic initiatives. FIG. 6.2 Diagram of assessment parameters. Modified from Anderson ET, McFarlane J: Community as partner: theory and practice in nursing ed 7, Philadelphia, PA, 2015, Wolters Kluwer. Each community and aggregate presumably will have a unique perspective on critical health qualities. Indeed, a community or aggregate may have divergent definitions of health, differing even from that of the community health nurse. Nevertheless, nurses and health professionals work with communities in developing effective solutions that are acceptable to residents. Building a community’s capacity to address future problems is often referred to as developing community competence. The nurse assesses the community’s commitment to a healthy future, the ability to foster open communication and to elicit broad participation in problem identification and resolution, the active involvement of structures such as a health department that can assist a community with health issues, and the extent to which members have successfully worked together on past problems. This information provides the nurse with an indication of the community’s strengths and potential for developing long-term solutions to identified problems. Assessing the Community: Sources Of Data
  • 13. The community health nurse becomes familiar with the community and begins to understand its nature by traveling through the area. The nurse begins to establish certain hunches or hypotheses about the community’s health, strengths, and potential health problems through this down-to-earth approach, called shoe leather epidemiology. The community health nurse must substantiate these initial assessments and impressions with more concrete or defined data before he or she can formulate a community diagnosis and plan. Windshield Survey Brookshire is a town of about 3500 in Southeast Texas. Sugar mills and farms are the source of most jobs. Accessible and affordable health care is a challenge. This van provides services to unskilled workers and area elders. The economy of the town is predominantly agriculture and processing. The car’s thermometer shows 99°, evidence of a pervasive health threat in the summertime. Much of the housing is substandard and suggests low-income families. Many people live in small homes on multiple-acre lots. The important determinants of a health community include a low crime rate, a good place to bring up children, good schools, a strong family life, good environmental quality, and a healthy economy. (iStock 540095516, 683792276, 504534788, 470237304, 638480042) Photos courtesy of University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, School of Nursing, Community Health Division. Community health nurses often perform a community windshield survey by driving or walking through an area and making organized observations. See illustrations
  • 14. depicting an actual “windshield survey” in this chapter’s photo novella. The nurse can gain an understanding of the environmental layout, including geographic features and the location of agencies, services, businesses, and industries, and can locate possible areas of environmental concern through “sight, sense, and sound.” The windshield survey offers the nurse an opportunity to observe people and their role in the community. Box 6.2 provides examples of questions to guide a windshield survey assessment. In addition to direct observational methods, certain public health tools become essential to an aggregate-focused nursing practice. The analysis of demographic information and statistical data provides descriptive information about the population. Epidemiology involves the analysis of health data to discover the patterns of health and illness distribution in a population. Epidemiology also involves conducting research to explain the nature of health problems and identify the aggregates at increased risk. The rest of this section provides data sources and describes how the community health nurse can use demographic and epidemiological data to assess the aggregate. Active Learning Exercise Walk through a neighborhood, and describe the sensory information (i.e., smells, sounds, and sights). How does each relate to the community’s health? BOX 6.2 Questions to Guide Community Observations During a Windshield Survey · 1. Community vitality: · 1. • Are people visible in the community? What are they doing? 2. • Who are the people living in the neighborhood? What is their age range? What is the predominant age (e.g., elderly, preschoolers, young mothers, or school-aged children)? 3. • What ethnicity or race is most common? 4. • What is the general appearance of those you observed? Do they appear healthy? Do you notice any people with obvious
  • 15. disabilities, such as those using walkers or wheelchairs, or those with mental or emotional disabilities? Where do they live? 5. • Do you notice residents who are well nourished or malnourished, thin or obese, vigorous or frail, unkempt or scantily dressed, or well dressed and clean? 6. • Do you notice tourists or visitors to the community? 7. • Do you observe any people who appear to be under the influence of drugs or alcohol? 8. • Do you see any pregnant women? Do you see women with strollers and young children? · 2. Indicators of social and economic conditions: · 1. • What is the general condition of the homes you observe? Are these single-family homes or multifamily structures? Is there any evidence of dilapidated housing or of areas undergoing urban renewal? Is there public housing? What is its condition? 2. • What forms of transportation do people seem to be using? Is there public transit? Are there adequate bus stops with benches and shade? Is transportation to health care resources available? 3. • Are there any indicators of the kinds of work available to residents? Are there job opportunities nearby, such as factories, small businesses, or military installations? Are there unemployed people visible, such as homeless people? 4. • Do you see men congregating in groups on the street? What do they look like, and what are they doing? 5. • Is this a rural area? Are there farms or agricultural businesses? 6. • Do you note any seasonal workers, such as migrant or day laborers? 7. • Do you see any women hanging out along the streets? What are they doing? 8. • Do you observe any children or adolescents out of school during the daytime? 9. • Do you observe any interest in political campaigns or issues, such as campaign signs?
  • 16. 10. • Do you see any evidence of health education on billboards, advertisements, signs, radio stations, or television stations? Do these methods seem appropriate for the people you observed? 11. • What kinds of schools and day care centers are available? · 3. Health resources: · 1. • Do you notice any hospitals? What kind are they? Where are they located? 2. • Are there any clinics? Whom do they serve? Are there any family planning services? 3. • Are there doctors’ and dentists’ offices? Are they specialists or generalists? 4. • Do you notice any nursing homes, rehabilitation centers, mental health clinics, alcohol or drug treatment centers, homeless or abused shelters, wellness clinics, health department facilities, urgent care centers, mobile health vehicles, blood donation centers, or pharmacies? 5. • Are these resources appropriate and sufficient to address the kinds of problems that exist in this community? · 4. Environmental conditions related to health: · 1. • Do you see evidence of anything that might make you suspicious of ground, water, or air pollutants? 2. • What is the sanitary condition of the housing? Is housing overcrowded, dirty, or in need of repair? Are windows screened? 3. • What is the condition of the roads? Are potholes present? Are drainage systems in place? Are there low water crossings, and do they have warning signals? Are there adequate traffic lights, signs, sidewalks, and curbs? Are railroad crossings fitted with warnings and barriers? Are streets and parking lots well lit? Is this a heavily trafficked area, or are roads rural? Are there curves or features that make the roads hazardous? 4. • Is there handicapped access to buildings, sidewalks, and streets? 5. • Do you observe recreational facilities and playgrounds? Are
  • 17. they being used? Is there a YMCA/YWCA or community center? Are there any daycare facilities or preschools? 6. • Are children playing in the streets, alleys, yards, or parks? 7. • Do you see any restaurants? 8. • Is food sold on the streets? Are people eating in public areas? Are there trash receptacles and places for people to sit? Are public restrooms available? 9. • What evidence of any nuisances such as ants, flies, mosquitoes, or rodents do you observe? Are there stray animals wandering in the neighborhood? · 5. Social functioning: · 1. • Do you observe any families in the neighborhoods? Can you observe their structure or functioning? Who is caring for the children? What kind of supervision do they have? Is more than one generation present? 2. • Are there any identifiable subgroups related to one another either socially or geographically? 3. • What evidence of a sense of neighborliness can you observe? 4. • What evidence of community cohesiveness can you observe? Are there any group efforts in the neighborhood to improve the living conditions or the neighborhood? Is there a neighborhood watch? Do community groups post signs for neighborhood meetings? 5. • How many and what type of churches, synagogues, and other places of worship are there? 6. • Can you observe anything that would make you suspicious of social problems, such as gang activity, juvenile delinquency, drug or alcohol abuse, and adolescent pregnancy? · 6. Attitude toward health and health care: · 1. • Do you observe any evidence of folk medicine practice, such as a botánica or herbal medicine shop? Are there any alternative medicine practitioners, such as healers or curanderos?
  • 18. 2. • Do you observe that health resources are well utilized or underutilized? 3. • Is there evidence of preventive or wellness care? 4. • Do you observe any efforts to improve the neighborhood’s health? Planned health fairs? Do you see advertisements for health-related events, clinics, or lectures?