Works Cited Exercise
June 30, 2020
Imagine you are a recently-hired Chief Operating Officer (COO) in a midsize company preparing for an Initial Public Offering (IPO). You quickly discov
June 30, 2020

COMMUNITY HEALTH NURSING

Directions

SUBDOMAIN 725.8 – COMMUNITY HEALTH NURSING

 Competency 725.8.5: Quality of Life and Functioning – The graduate selects nursing actions during illness and end-of-life stages to maximize quality of life and functioning for individuals, families, and communities; promotes wellness principles and programs for individuals, families, and communities; and reflects on how personal beliefs or perceptions about quality of life and health promotion impact approaches or decisions in nursing care.

Introduction:

Many patients with a chronic, terminal illness are cared for in the home. The community nurse is a key resource to these patients both in providing a link to healthcare and in promoting quality of life.

 Scenario:

 Mrs. Thomas is a 56-year-old female with a history of breast cancer. Three of Mrs. Thomas’s five female relatives died before the age of 50 from the same illness. After identification of a malignant mass in her right breast one year ago, Mrs. Thomas underwent a right mastectomy with the removal of five axillary lymph nodes, followed by chemotherapy and radiation therapy. She subsequently suffered moderate lymphedema and pain in her dominant right arm. At that time, the BRAC (Be Ready Against Cancer) analysis was positive, revealing a higher than average chance of the disease recurring.

 Six months ago, Mrs. Thomas felt a pea-sized, hardened lump in her left breast. A biopsy was positive for malignancy. She underwent a second mastectomy with chemotherapy and radiation. After treatment, the cancer was found to have metastasized to her lungs, and further surgery was not determined to be a viable option. She has been given a poor prognosis for recovery, and palliative care is now recommended.

 After the last chemotherapy, Mrs. Thomas experienced a moderate degree of pain on most days. Even though she had been prescribed Vicodin (hydrocodone/paracetamol), Mrs. Thomas endured the discomfort without pills most of the time because she says she did not want to become addicted to drugs. Lately, however, her pain level has been increasing and she spends much of the day crying in bed. She can no longer hold the clerical job that helped to supplement her husband’s income, and they find it difficult to make ends meet, even though she is receiving a small disability check each month. Mrs. Thomas has medical insurance but no long-term healthcare insurance. Since all of her close female relatives have died, she has few people to help her. She does not want to call on friends or coworkers for support.

 Mrs. Thomas lives with her husband of 31 years in a private home in the suburbs of a large city. Mr. Thomas has suffered from chronic depression that has been managed with medication. He is a police officer who is extremely supportive of his wife and is attempting to provide for her care at home. However, Mr. Thomas is now showing increased signs of depression because of difficulties at work and because of the stress of his wife’s condition. He often forgets to take his medication due to the stress. Mrs. Thomas has become concerned because she fears he is suicidal. This, in turn, is causing Mrs. Thomas even more distress, as she feels her husband is suffering because of her illness. Because of Mrs. Thomas’s condition, the couple does not go out and does not have friends over to visit.

 Mrs. Thomas has two sons, aged 28 and 30. Both live out of state with their wives and children and are very upset about their mother’s condition. Even though they phone regularly, they find it too painful to visit her in person. The lack of personal contact with her immediate family makes Mrs. Thomas even sadder, yet she says she does not want to bother them with her problems.

As the community health nurse, you have been asked to visit the Thomas family to assess their support needs. After reviewing Mrs. Thomas’s case history, you recognize that the family is under a great deal of physical and emotional stress due to the chronic and terminal nature of Mrs. Thomas’s cancer.

 Task:

 Create an appropriate nursing plan (suggested length of 5–7 pages) in which you do the following based on the scenario above:

 A.  Explain how your own perceptions about quality of life and health promotion might affect your care for a dying patient with a lingering illness such as cancer.

B.  Discuss three strategies that you could use in the Thomas’s situation to improve the quality of life for Mrs. Thomas and her husband during this illness.

 C.  Create a holistic nursing action plan appropriate for managing Mrs. Thomas’s care at home.

1.  Discuss ways to optimize Mrs. Thomas’s functional ability at this stage of her illness.

2.  Discuss ways to provide care for Mrs. Thomas once self-care is no longer possible.

 D.  Explain how you, as the community health nurse, can intervene in this situation in the management of Mr. Thomas’s chronic depression.

 E.  When you use sources, include all in-text citations and references in APA format.

 Note: When bulleted points are present in the task prompt, the level of detail or support called for in the rubric refers to those bulleted points.

 Note: For definitions of terms commonly used in the rubric, see the Rubric Terms web link included in the Evaluation Procedures section.

 Note: When using sources to support ideas and elements in a paper or project, the submission MUST include APA formatted in-text citations with a corresponding reference list for any direct quotes or paraphrasing. It is not necessary to list sources that were consulted if they have not been quoted or paraphrased in the text of the paper or project.

Note: No more than a combined total of 30% of a submission can be directly quoted or closely paraphrased from sources, even if cited correctly. For tips on using APA style, please refer to the APA Handout web link included in the APA Guidelines section.