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Community as the client

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Community as the client Two ways that nurses identify families (by Gilliss (1993)) family as contex: individuals are assessed, the emphasis is on the individual ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Community as the client


1
Community as the client
2
Two ways that nurses identify families(by
Gilliss (1993))
  • family as contex individuals are assessed, the
    emphasis is on the individual
  • family as a client family is treated as a set of
    interacting parts and assessment of the dynamics
    among these parts is emphasized

3
  • The legal definition emphasizes relationships
    through blood ties, adoption, guardianship, or
    marriage.
  • The biological definition focuses on perpetuating
    the species.
  • Sociologists define the family as a group of
    people living together.
  • Psychologists define it as a group with strong
    emotional ties.
  • Traditional definitions usually include a legally
    married woman and man with their children.

4
  • Family is a group of two or more persons related
    by birth, marriage, or adoption and residing
    together.
  • the U.S. Bureau of the Census (2000)

5
Definitions of family
  • The family, despite its changing and increasingly
    diverse nature, remains the basic social unit.
  • The word "family" refers to two or more persons
    who are related in any waybiologically, legally,
    or emotionally.
  • Patients and families define their families.

6
Nursing theories for understanding families
  • Neuman's System Theory (1983)
  • The family is described as an appropriate target
    for both assessment and nursing interventions.
    The way each member expresses self influences the
    whole and creates the basic structure of the
    family.
  • The major goal of the nurse is to help keep the
    structure stable within its environment.

7
Nursing theories for understanding families
  • Roy's Adaptation Theory (1983)
  • The client is an individual, family, group, or
    community in constant interaction with a changing
    environment. The family system is continually
    changing and attempting to adapt.
  • The goal of nursing is to promote adaptation and
    minimize ineffective responses.

8
Social Sciences Theories for understanding
families
  • Structural-Functional Theory
  • The family is viewed as part of the social
    system, with individuals being parts of the
    family system.
  • The family, as a social system, performs
    functions that serve both the individual and
    society.
  • Individuals act in accordance with a set of
    internalized norms and values that are learned
    primarily in the family through socialization.

9
Five functions of the familyimportant to
understand
  • Affective
  • Socialization and social placement
  • Reproductive
  • Economic
  • Health care

10
Social Sciences Theories for understanding
families
  • Duvalls developmental or life-cycle theory
    (1977)
  • Families experience growth and development in
    much the same way as individuals.
  • Critical role transitions of individual members,
    such as birth, retirement, and death of a spouse,
    are viewed as resulting in a distinct change in
    the family life patterns.
  • Families develop and change over time in
    predictable ways.
  • Families and their members perform certain
    timespecific tasks that are decided upon by
    themselves, within their cultural and societal
    context.
  • Family behavior is the sum of the previous
    experiences of its members as incorporated in the
    present and in their expectations for the future.

11
8 Duvall's Developmental Stages
  • Beginning family
  • Childbearing family
  • Families with preschool children
  • Families with school-aged children
  • Families with teenagers
  • Families launching young adults
  • Middle-aged parents
  • Families in later years

12
FAMILY ASSESSMENT
  • is the process of collecting data about the
    family structure, and the relationships and
    interactions among individual members.
  • It is a continuous process.
  • Its aim is to generate Nursing diagnoses with
    goals and interventions for care created in
    collaboration with the child and caregivers.

13
Assessment Instruments
  • A genogram is a format for drawing a family tree
    that records information about family members and
    their relationships over a period of time,
    usually three generations.
  • An ecomap is a visual representation of a family
    in relation to the community. It demonstrates the
    nature and quality of family relationships and
    what kinds of resources or energies are going in
    and out of the family.

14
Genogram
15
Ecomap
16
In-depth Family Assessment
  • Calgary Family Assessment Model (Wright Leahey,
    1994)
  • Gather information about family structure,
    development and functioning.
  • Friedman Family Assessment Model (Friedman,
    1998)
  • consists of six broad categories of interview
    questions.

17
FAMILY STRUCTURE
  • The nuclear family is defined as a husband, wife,
    and their childrenbiological, adopted, or both
    (Friedman, 1998)
  • The extended family consists of those members of
    the nuclear family and other blood-related
    persons such as grandparents, aunts, uncles, and
    cousins.
  • A blended or stepfamily occurs when a divorced,
    widowed, or never-married single parent forms a
    household with a new partner both partners or
    only one may have children.

18
FAMILY STRUCTURE
  • Single parent family occurs by means of divorce,
    separation, death of a spouse, or choice. 90 of
    them are comprised of single mothers and their
    children.
  • Gay and lesbian families are increasing in
    numbers. Because homosexuality is stigmatized in
    our society, many of these parents are not open
    about their sexual orientation.

19
Working with Gay and Lesbian Families
  • When working with families, do not assume that
    all parents are heterosexual.
  • In obtaining the family history, the following
    questions may be asked
  • (1) Who makes up your family?
  • (2) Do you have a partner?
  • (3) Do you share parenting responsibilities with
    anyone else?
  • (4) Who else is responsible for the child's care
    if you are not available?

20
Approaches to analyzing data about families
  • Systems theory
  • Includes structural and functional components of
    the family as a system
  • Structural Family Assessment considers familys
    composition roles and relationships
  • Functional Family Assessment nurse collects
    info re how well family is fulfilling basic
    functions in the context of continual change in
    the system as information and energy are
    exchanged between the family and the environment

21
Approaches to data analysis continued
  • Developmental theory
  • Approaches family from tasks and stages of
    progression through its life cycle and tasks that
    need to be accomplished
  • The stages of family development are used as a
    guide to categorize and analyze the baseline data
  • Risk factor assessment
  • Identify familys risk factors based on Healthy
    People 2010 criteria

22
The Family from a Risk Factor Perspective
  • In the risk factor theory, the family is the most
    important social support system involved in
    lowering risks for its members
  • Risk factors can be estimated for death or
    diseases by comparing a group that has been
    exposed to a risk factor with a group that hasnt
    been exposed to the risk factor, and comparing
    rates of death or disease in the two groups

23
Risk families continued
  • Probabilities of risk change throughout the life
    cycle
  • The stages of family development are used to
    classify risk factors
  • Many chronic health problems are related to
    behavioral excesses that are learned through the
    family

24
Developmental Assessment
  • Four steps
  • Determine familys developmental stage
  • Consider family members health problems in
    context of tasks of their developmental stage
  • Determine if family members are meeting the tasks
    at their individual levels of development
  • Identify nursing interventions that would
    facilitate family meeting their developmental
    tasks

25
Limitations of the Developmental Assessment
Approach
  • Changing demographics, variations in family
    structures (not all families fit neatly into
    stages)
  • Nurses viewpoint has to take structure into
    account, thus, assessment becomes more
    complicated
  • Family conflicts cause difficulty, compounded by
    individuals role disruption from illness

26
Structural Family Assessment
  • Considers composition of family
  • Can be very helpful to nurse in many situations
  • May be a good assessment to start with

27
Functional Family Assessment
  • Six family functions
  • Affective
  • Healthcare and physical necessities
  • Economics
  • Reproduction
  • Socialization and placement
  • Family coping

28
Characteristics of Healthy Families
  • There is a facilitative process of interaction
    among family members
  • The family enhances the development of its
    individual members
  • Role relationships are structured effectively
  • The family actively attempts to cope with
    problems
  • The family has a healthy home environment and
    lifestyle
  • The family establishes regular links with the
    broader community

29
Characteristics of Healthy Family Interactions
  • Communication among members is open, direct, and
    honest, with shared feelings
  • Family members express self-worth with integrity,
    responsibility, compassion, and love to, and for,
    one another
  • All members know the family rules. Rules are
    clear and flexible and allow individual members
    their freedom
  • The family has regular links with society, which
    demonstrate trust and friendship
  • Family members belong to various groups and clubs

30
Nursing Process
  • The purpose of writing a family nursing diagnosis
    is to help the family promote health through the
    life cycle and prevent disease through
    low-risk-taking behaviors
  • In planning phase, delineate expected outcomes
    for family health Use mutual goal-setting with
    family
  • Process of collaborative goal-setting should have
    positive influence on nurses interactions with
    families
  • Also facilitates adherence to agreed-upon plan of
    care
  • Remember Assessment is a two-way enterprise
    the family is assessing you, as well

31
Examples of Family Nursing Diagnosis
Theoretical Model Stage Health Status Pattern Problem
Developmental Family with Preschoolers Potential for physical injury Health- Perception- Health Management Medications poisonous cleaning substances within reach of children
Family with adolescents Potential alteration in parenting Roles- relationships pattern Value systems of Parents adolescent members in conflict
Risk Factors Young couple Compromised ineffective Coping- stress- tolerance pattern Teenage marriage Pregnancy before age 16
From C. Edelman C. Mandle (2002) Health
promotion throughout the lifespan. St. Louis
Mosby.
32
Steps in the Planning Process
  1. Prioritize problems potential problems
  2. Determine which items can be handled by the nurse
    and the family, and items that must be referred
    to others
  3. Decide on actions and expected outcomes

33
Goals
  • Goals describe a desired outcome
  • Goal statements include
  • The expected behaviors of the family
  • The circumstances under which the behaviors will
    be demonstrated
  • Criteria by which to determine when and how the
    behaviors will be performed
  • Health promotion goals reflect a desire to
    function at a higher level of health and to grow
    beyond maintaining health or preventing disease

34
Implementation With The Family
  • Family nursing interventions aim to assist family
    members in carrying out functions that the
    members cannot perform for themselves
  • Health promotion the nurse assists the family
    in improving their capacity to act on its own
    behalf
  • Three Broad Categories of Interventions with
    Families
  • Cognitive interventions
  • Affective interventions
  • Behavioral interventions

35
Four Types of Interventions are Found in Health
Promotion/Disease Prevention
  • Increasing knowledge and skills
  • Increasing strengths
  • Decreasing Exposure
  • Decreasing susceptibility

36
Evaluation With The Family
  • Purpose of evaluation is to determine how the
    family has responded to the planned
    interventions. Concrete objectives are easier to
    measure
  • Familys baseline data needs to be used as
    comparative criteria in evaluation
  • Five measures of family functioning that can be
    used to determine effectiveness of interventions
  • Changes in interaction patterns
  • Effective communication
  • Ability to express emotion
  • Responsiveness to needs of members as individuals
  • Problem-solving ability
  • If goals are not met, review process

37
Health Promotion/Prevention Strategies as Applied
to the Family
  • Primary Prevention
  • Completing a family genogram and assessing
    health risks with the family to contract for
    family health activities to prevent diseases from
    developing
  • Secondary Prevention
  • Using a behavioral health risk survey and
    identifying the factors leading to obesity in the
    family
  • Tertiary Prevention
  • Developing a contract with the family to
    change nutritional patterns to reduce further
    complications from obesity
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