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A Rouge Climate Assignment
INSTRUCTIONSRead the following article and answer the questions at the end. Submit a MS Word document or *.pdf file with y ...
A Rouge Climate Assignment
INSTRUCTIONSRead the following article and answer the questions at the end. Submit a MS Word document or *.pdf file with your responses to the assignment dropbox. All answers should be in your own words (do not copy and paste definitions). Answer each question in more than two complete sentence; some answers may require more explanation than others. You will be deducted points for short and incomplete answers.A ROGUE CLIMATE EXPERIMENT OUTRAGES SCIENTISTSA California businessman chartered a fishing boat in July, loaded it with 100 tons of iron dust and cruised through Pacific waters off western Canada, spewing his cargo into the sea in an ecological experiment that has outraged scientists and government officials. The entrepreneur, whose foray came to light only this week, even duped the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in the United States into lending him ocean-monitoring buoys for the project. Canada's environment ministry says it is investigating the experiment, which was carried out with no government or scientific oversight. A spokesman said the ministry had warned the venture in advance that its plan would violate international agreements.Marine scientists and other experts have assailed the experiment as unscientific, irresponsible and probably in violation of those agreements, which are intended to prevent tampering with ocean ecosystems under the guise of trying to fight the effects of climate change. Though the environmental impact of the foray could well prove minimal, scientists said, it raises the specter of what they have long feared: rogue field experiments that might unintentionally put the environment at risk.The entrepreneur, Russ George, calling it a "state-of-the-art study," said his team scattered iron dust several hundred miles west of the islands of Haida Gwaii, in northern British Columbia, in exchange for $2.5 million from a native Canadian group. The iron spawned the growth of enormous amounts of plankton, which Mr. George, a former fisheries and forestry worker, said might allow the project to meet one of its goals: aiding the recovery of the local salmon fishery for the native Haida.Plankton absorbs carbon dioxide, the predominant greenhouse gas, and settles deep in the ocean when it dies, sequestering carbon. The Haida had hoped that by burying carbon, they could also sell so-called carbon offset credits to companies and make money. Iron fertilization is contentious because it is associated with geoengineering, a set of proposed strategies for counteracting global warming through the deliberate manipulation of the environment. Many experts have argued that scientists should be researching such geoengineering techniques — like spewing compounds into the atmosphere to reflect more sunlight or using sophisticated machines to remove carbon dioxide from the air. But tampering with the environment is risky, they say, so any experiments must be carried out responsibly and transparently, with the involvement of the scientific community and proper governance."Geoengineering is extremely controversial," said Andrew Parker, a fellow at the Belfer Center at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard. "There is a need to protect the environment while making sure safe and legitimate research can go ahead."Mark L. Wells, a marine scientist at the University of Maine, said that what Mr. George did "could be described as ocean dumping." Dr. Wells said it would be difficult for Mr. George to demonstrate what impact the iron had on the plankton and called it "extraordinarily unlikely" that Mr. George could prove that the experiment met the goal of permanently removing some carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.NOAA acknowledged that it had provided the project with 20 instrument-laden buoys that drift in the ocean for a year or more and measure water temperature, salinity and other characteristics. Such buoys are often sent out on what the agency calls "vessels of opportunity," and the data they provide, uploaded to satellites, is publicly available. But a spokesman said the agency had been "misled" by the group, which "did not disclose that it was going to discharge material into the ocean." The nature of Mr. George's project was first reported this week in an article in The Guardian, a British newspaper, after it was revealed by the ETC Group, a watchdog group in Montreal that opposes geoengineering.Mr. Parker, of Harvard's Kennedy School, said it appeared that the project had contravened two international agreements on geoengineering, the London Convention on the dumping of wastes at sea and a moratorium declared by the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity — as well as a set of principles developed at Oxford University on transparency, regulation and the need for public participation.Mr. George, said that his experiment was not related to geoengineering, and that 100 tons was a negligible amount of iron compared to what naturally enters the oceans. "This is a community trying to maintain its livelihood," he said of the Haida. He said his team had collected a "golden mountain" of data on the plankton bloom. Mr. George, who described himself as chief scientist on the project and said he has training as a plant ecologist, refused to name any of the other scientists on the team. Scientists who have been involved with sanctioned iron fertilization experiments strongly disputed Mr. George's assertion about the quality of his experiment, saying that it was roughly 10 times bigger than any other but that the fishing boat used and the science team were clearly insufficient.Victor Smetacek, an oceanographer with the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research in Germany who recently published an analysis of sanctioned fertilization research conducted in 2004 in the Southern Ocean, said Mr. George's project would give a black eye to legitimate research. "This kind of behavior is disastrous," he said, describing Mr. George, with whom he had brief contact more than five years ago, as a "messing around, bumbling guy."Mr. George, 62, of Northern California, was previously in the public eye when, as chief executive of a company called Planktos, he proposed a similar iron-fertilization project, in the equatorial Pacific west of the Galápagos Islands, whose purpose was the sale of carbon offsets. Under cap-and-trade programs in various countries, polluters can offset their emissions of greenhouse gases by buying credits from projects that store carbon or otherwise mitigate global warming.The project was canceled in 2008 after what his company called a "disinformation campaign" by environmentalists and others made it impossible to attract investors. Mr. George said that during that period he was contacted by the Old Massett Village Council, one of two Haida groups on Haida Gwaii, about "wanting to do something about their fish," which had suffered population declines. But John Disney, the council's economic development director, said he had worked with Mr. George on other projects before, including one to generate carbon credits by replacing alder forests on the islands with conifers. That project never came to fruition.Mr. Disney defended the iron sprinkling project, saying that it had been approved by Old Massett's villagers and cleared by the council's lawyers. He said at least seven Canadian government agencies were aware of the project. But a spokesman for Canada's environment minister said Thursday that the salmon group was twice warned in advance that its plan violated international agreements Canada had signed that would prohibit an iron-seeding project with a commercial element, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation reported. Mr. Disney also said that the marine science community, including researchers at the Wegener Institute in Germany, had known about the project. But Mr. Smetacek disputed that as well. "I've had no contact with this guy on this," he said, referring to Mr. George.Correction: October 20, 2012An article on Friday about an unauthorized iron fertilization experiment in the Pacific Ocean misstated the year in which a sanctioned experiment that was analyzed in a recent journal article had been carried out. It was 2004, not 2009. Ian Austen contributed reporting from Ottawa.Fountain, Henry. "A Rogue Climate Experiment Outrages Scientists." New York Times [New York] 18 Oct. 2012: A1. New York Times, 18 Oct. 2012. Web. 25 Nov. 2016.QUESTIONSWithout doing any research, brainstorm for 5 minutes everything you know about the term "climate change" and write down your thoughts. Answer each of the following as best you can. Note: You will not be penalized for your thoughts - Question 1 is a completion score (5 points)a. What is climate change?b. What causes climate change? Do humans affect climate change?c. How is the climate changing? Warmer, colder, what?d. What does carbon dioxide have to do with climate change?e. What might the consequences if climate changes either significantly warmer or colder?After you have answered question 1, rearch climate change on the internet, using two or more reliable internet sources. Then, write your revisions to your knowledge about climate change. Cite your sources from which you get information. (10 points)a. What is climate change?b. What causes climate change? Do humans affect climate change?c. How is the climate changing? Warmer, colder, what?d. What does carbon dioxide have to do with climate change?e. What might the consequences if climate changes either significantly warmer or colder?When discussing geochemical cycles there's the concept of a limiting nutrient. Discuss the relevance of the limiting nutrient in the context of this article. (3 points)What is the limiting nutrient in the Pacific Ocean where the article describes the event? How do you know? (2 points)Using your own words, explain step-by-step how dumping iron into the ocean is expected to reduce global warming. (3 points)Who are the Haida? What do they have to do with the experiment? (2 points)After completing some internet research, in your own words describe "cap and trade" and "emissions trading". Cite your source(s). What do the two terms have to do with the article? (4 points)Make a list of at least four "pros" and four "cons" to geoengineering as discussed in the article. (4 points)What do you think? Should Mr. George have conducted his experiment? Why or why not? (2 points)As best you can, write a persuasive argument for the side contrary to your own opinion, as you stated in question 8. (3 points)This article was written on Oct 18, 2012. What recent developments have there been since then? (2 points)

WEB design
ASSIGNMENT 3: INITIAL DRAFTDue in Week 4 and worth 50 pointsFor this assignment, you’re going to begin to work on your s ...
WEB design
ASSIGNMENT 3: INITIAL DRAFTDue in Week 4 and worth 50 pointsFor this assignment, you’re going to begin to work on your site. Based on your storyboard and client feedback (professor’s comments), create three pages of your site that include the following:Navigation links that are consistent on all pagesAt least two folders in your file structureInformation about the site’s purpose on the home page (named index.html)Images on at least two pagesA link to a specific location on one page from a different pageTwo different listsNow that you have begun to write your pages in HTML, please add the following to a comment in the <head> of your work:Name, date, week #, class with section, and campus # (i.e. CIS273001VA016) Always zip your work into a single folder for uploading to Blackboard. You’ll want to keep each week separate so that you can review earlier iterations of your site, in case you want to revert something back based on feedback from your professor.

What policy options existed to mitigate the financial and economic distress
What policy options existed to mitigate the financial and economic distress of containment, and what factors did different ...
What policy options existed to mitigate the financial and economic distress
What policy options existed to mitigate the financial and economic distress of containment, and what factors did different countries weigh in deciding which paths to choose?

Concept in Theories in Nursing Case Study
Case Study: Mrs. Adams, a 68-year-old widow who was referred to case management upon discharge from the hospital based on ...
Concept in Theories in Nursing Case Study
Case Study: Mrs. Adams, a 68-year-old widow who was referred to case management upon discharge from the hospital based on her physician’s recommendation that she is not able to care for herself independently. Her diagnosis is diabetes, hypertension, and breast cancer. She is 5 days’ post-op from a right sided mastectomy. Mrs. Adams apartment is located in a low income area of the city where crime is prevalent. Upon assessment by the Community Health Nurse, Mrs. Adams apartment was in disorder with minimal airflow or light. Her cloths appeared unchanged and she had no food in the apartment. The small apartment also housed 3 cats and a small dog who Mrs. Adams considers family since the death of her husband 1 year ago. Mrs. Adams complains of pain and draining from her surgical site and a broken air conditioner.
Using Nightingales Environmental Theory, what actions would the nurse take upon the first assessment? What are the five essential components?
What would be an appropriate plan of care be for Mrs. Adams? How would you prioritize the care plan?
Apply Nightingale’s Environmental Theory to an area of your nursing practice? What patient population would benefit from this approach? Support this practice change with at least one evidenced-based article.
The assignment should be completed in APA format, as an essay of between 1000 and 1500 words. The paper should include at least 3 outside references and the textbook. The paper should be in APA format with a title page, level headings, and reference page.

UMUC Understanding Theories and Techniques of Abnormal Psychology
GuidelinesLona is a married 35-year-old mother of one child (age 5). She has been married for ten years. At the onset of t ...
UMUC Understanding Theories and Techniques of Abnormal Psychology
GuidelinesLona is a married 35-year-old mother of one child (age 5). She has been married for ten years. At the onset of their marriage, Lona and her husband enjoyed their budding careers and great income. They drove the cars they liked, lived in the home they liked, and bought the material goods and services they liked. For most of the marriage, Lona has been the primary breadwinner (although both make six figures).Lona became pregnant with their first child after five years of marriage. She was a doting mother of a very healthy baby girl. Her focus shifted from her career, but she tried to the best of her ability to be a jack of all trades. She was a great mother, housewife, and professional.Soon, however, Lona became exhausted from her pace. She did not eat as well as before. She did not sleep as well as before (largely because she attempted to do all of her work while the baby was in bed). She found herself making a tremendous to-do list each day that never seemed to get done.Lona arranged her schedule so that she did not need a babysitter. She mothered during the day and worked long into the night to meet the needs of her household. She endured this schedule for four years almost flawlessly. However, she became irritable, sickly, and seemingly "wilted." She continued to dote on her child, but her marriage suffered. She was too tired for intimacy and resented her husband for daring to state that he was tired. He seldom helped around the house, and their daughter was so attached to Lona that she could not be soothed by her father for long periods of time.Lona became sullen and very tired. Her allergies returned after a ten-year hiatus. She stopped doing the things she enjoyed and began to do whatever she could to simply stay awake. She decided to quit her high-paying job to work for a lesser salary at home. She stated repeatedly that it was her husband's turn to pick up the slack.Lona only spoke to her sister and mother of her anger, resentment, and fatigue. She discontinued exercise due to her inability to get up in the morning early enough to go jogging. This has left her twenty pounds heavier than before.Lona states upon meeting you that she feels she is going downhill and needs some help to figure out a solution to her problems. She is very cooperative and willing to work hard to feel better for the sake of her child.Lona has not ever been in therapy before, but several of her friends have found it beneficial and enlightening.Lona's aim is to keep her family intact and work on her problems to feel better.The completed work should be 6–8 pages long.Grading criteria for this assignment:You are giving Lona a preliminary diagnosis. This is your first session/intake, so your information is limited to the above.Discuss Lona's key symptoms and why they are important. Use at least one additional relevant source to support your opinion. (20 points)What would you say is Lona's primary diagnosis? Be sure to cover areas such as; former level of functioning, current level of functioning, stress factors, medical issues/personality disorder (if relevant)Discuss your diagnosis and provide justification using the International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision (ICD-10) (https://www.icd10data.com/ICD10CM/Codes/F01-F99) codes and least one additional relevant source. (40 points)List treatment goals and discuss each separately and in detail. (10 points)List strengths and your ideas regarding how each could be used to support Lona in her treatment. (10 points)List areas of improvement and your ideas regarding how each could be changed to support Lona in her treatment. (10 points)List two homework assignments and how each will support Lona in her treatment. (5 points)What are some areas you will explore next (e.g., Lona's relationship with her husband; professional goals)? Discuss your reasons for exploring these areas and how this will assist Lona in her treatment. (5 points)
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A Rouge Climate Assignment
INSTRUCTIONSRead the following article and answer the questions at the end. Submit a MS Word document or *.pdf file with y ...
A Rouge Climate Assignment
INSTRUCTIONSRead the following article and answer the questions at the end. Submit a MS Word document or *.pdf file with your responses to the assignment dropbox. All answers should be in your own words (do not copy and paste definitions). Answer each question in more than two complete sentence; some answers may require more explanation than others. You will be deducted points for short and incomplete answers.A ROGUE CLIMATE EXPERIMENT OUTRAGES SCIENTISTSA California businessman chartered a fishing boat in July, loaded it with 100 tons of iron dust and cruised through Pacific waters off western Canada, spewing his cargo into the sea in an ecological experiment that has outraged scientists and government officials. The entrepreneur, whose foray came to light only this week, even duped the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in the United States into lending him ocean-monitoring buoys for the project. Canada's environment ministry says it is investigating the experiment, which was carried out with no government or scientific oversight. A spokesman said the ministry had warned the venture in advance that its plan would violate international agreements.Marine scientists and other experts have assailed the experiment as unscientific, irresponsible and probably in violation of those agreements, which are intended to prevent tampering with ocean ecosystems under the guise of trying to fight the effects of climate change. Though the environmental impact of the foray could well prove minimal, scientists said, it raises the specter of what they have long feared: rogue field experiments that might unintentionally put the environment at risk.The entrepreneur, Russ George, calling it a "state-of-the-art study," said his team scattered iron dust several hundred miles west of the islands of Haida Gwaii, in northern British Columbia, in exchange for $2.5 million from a native Canadian group. The iron spawned the growth of enormous amounts of plankton, which Mr. George, a former fisheries and forestry worker, said might allow the project to meet one of its goals: aiding the recovery of the local salmon fishery for the native Haida.Plankton absorbs carbon dioxide, the predominant greenhouse gas, and settles deep in the ocean when it dies, sequestering carbon. The Haida had hoped that by burying carbon, they could also sell so-called carbon offset credits to companies and make money. Iron fertilization is contentious because it is associated with geoengineering, a set of proposed strategies for counteracting global warming through the deliberate manipulation of the environment. Many experts have argued that scientists should be researching such geoengineering techniques — like spewing compounds into the atmosphere to reflect more sunlight or using sophisticated machines to remove carbon dioxide from the air. But tampering with the environment is risky, they say, so any experiments must be carried out responsibly and transparently, with the involvement of the scientific community and proper governance."Geoengineering is extremely controversial," said Andrew Parker, a fellow at the Belfer Center at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard. "There is a need to protect the environment while making sure safe and legitimate research can go ahead."Mark L. Wells, a marine scientist at the University of Maine, said that what Mr. George did "could be described as ocean dumping." Dr. Wells said it would be difficult for Mr. George to demonstrate what impact the iron had on the plankton and called it "extraordinarily unlikely" that Mr. George could prove that the experiment met the goal of permanently removing some carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.NOAA acknowledged that it had provided the project with 20 instrument-laden buoys that drift in the ocean for a year or more and measure water temperature, salinity and other characteristics. Such buoys are often sent out on what the agency calls "vessels of opportunity," and the data they provide, uploaded to satellites, is publicly available. But a spokesman said the agency had been "misled" by the group, which "did not disclose that it was going to discharge material into the ocean." The nature of Mr. George's project was first reported this week in an article in The Guardian, a British newspaper, after it was revealed by the ETC Group, a watchdog group in Montreal that opposes geoengineering.Mr. Parker, of Harvard's Kennedy School, said it appeared that the project had contravened two international agreements on geoengineering, the London Convention on the dumping of wastes at sea and a moratorium declared by the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity — as well as a set of principles developed at Oxford University on transparency, regulation and the need for public participation.Mr. George, said that his experiment was not related to geoengineering, and that 100 tons was a negligible amount of iron compared to what naturally enters the oceans. "This is a community trying to maintain its livelihood," he said of the Haida. He said his team had collected a "golden mountain" of data on the plankton bloom. Mr. George, who described himself as chief scientist on the project and said he has training as a plant ecologist, refused to name any of the other scientists on the team. Scientists who have been involved with sanctioned iron fertilization experiments strongly disputed Mr. George's assertion about the quality of his experiment, saying that it was roughly 10 times bigger than any other but that the fishing boat used and the science team were clearly insufficient.Victor Smetacek, an oceanographer with the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research in Germany who recently published an analysis of sanctioned fertilization research conducted in 2004 in the Southern Ocean, said Mr. George's project would give a black eye to legitimate research. "This kind of behavior is disastrous," he said, describing Mr. George, with whom he had brief contact more than five years ago, as a "messing around, bumbling guy."Mr. George, 62, of Northern California, was previously in the public eye when, as chief executive of a company called Planktos, he proposed a similar iron-fertilization project, in the equatorial Pacific west of the Galápagos Islands, whose purpose was the sale of carbon offsets. Under cap-and-trade programs in various countries, polluters can offset their emissions of greenhouse gases by buying credits from projects that store carbon or otherwise mitigate global warming.The project was canceled in 2008 after what his company called a "disinformation campaign" by environmentalists and others made it impossible to attract investors. Mr. George said that during that period he was contacted by the Old Massett Village Council, one of two Haida groups on Haida Gwaii, about "wanting to do something about their fish," which had suffered population declines. But John Disney, the council's economic development director, said he had worked with Mr. George on other projects before, including one to generate carbon credits by replacing alder forests on the islands with conifers. That project never came to fruition.Mr. Disney defended the iron sprinkling project, saying that it had been approved by Old Massett's villagers and cleared by the council's lawyers. He said at least seven Canadian government agencies were aware of the project. But a spokesman for Canada's environment minister said Thursday that the salmon group was twice warned in advance that its plan violated international agreements Canada had signed that would prohibit an iron-seeding project with a commercial element, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation reported. Mr. Disney also said that the marine science community, including researchers at the Wegener Institute in Germany, had known about the project. But Mr. Smetacek disputed that as well. "I've had no contact with this guy on this," he said, referring to Mr. George.Correction: October 20, 2012An article on Friday about an unauthorized iron fertilization experiment in the Pacific Ocean misstated the year in which a sanctioned experiment that was analyzed in a recent journal article had been carried out. It was 2004, not 2009. Ian Austen contributed reporting from Ottawa.Fountain, Henry. "A Rogue Climate Experiment Outrages Scientists." New York Times [New York] 18 Oct. 2012: A1. New York Times, 18 Oct. 2012. Web. 25 Nov. 2016.QUESTIONSWithout doing any research, brainstorm for 5 minutes everything you know about the term "climate change" and write down your thoughts. Answer each of the following as best you can. Note: You will not be penalized for your thoughts - Question 1 is a completion score (5 points)a. What is climate change?b. What causes climate change? Do humans affect climate change?c. How is the climate changing? Warmer, colder, what?d. What does carbon dioxide have to do with climate change?e. What might the consequences if climate changes either significantly warmer or colder?After you have answered question 1, rearch climate change on the internet, using two or more reliable internet sources. Then, write your revisions to your knowledge about climate change. Cite your sources from which you get information. (10 points)a. What is climate change?b. What causes climate change? Do humans affect climate change?c. How is the climate changing? Warmer, colder, what?d. What does carbon dioxide have to do with climate change?e. What might the consequences if climate changes either significantly warmer or colder?When discussing geochemical cycles there's the concept of a limiting nutrient. Discuss the relevance of the limiting nutrient in the context of this article. (3 points)What is the limiting nutrient in the Pacific Ocean where the article describes the event? How do you know? (2 points)Using your own words, explain step-by-step how dumping iron into the ocean is expected to reduce global warming. (3 points)Who are the Haida? What do they have to do with the experiment? (2 points)After completing some internet research, in your own words describe "cap and trade" and "emissions trading". Cite your source(s). What do the two terms have to do with the article? (4 points)Make a list of at least four "pros" and four "cons" to geoengineering as discussed in the article. (4 points)What do you think? Should Mr. George have conducted his experiment? Why or why not? (2 points)As best you can, write a persuasive argument for the side contrary to your own opinion, as you stated in question 8. (3 points)This article was written on Oct 18, 2012. What recent developments have there been since then? (2 points)

WEB design
ASSIGNMENT 3: INITIAL DRAFTDue in Week 4 and worth 50 pointsFor this assignment, you’re going to begin to work on your s ...
WEB design
ASSIGNMENT 3: INITIAL DRAFTDue in Week 4 and worth 50 pointsFor this assignment, you’re going to begin to work on your site. Based on your storyboard and client feedback (professor’s comments), create three pages of your site that include the following:Navigation links that are consistent on all pagesAt least two folders in your file structureInformation about the site’s purpose on the home page (named index.html)Images on at least two pagesA link to a specific location on one page from a different pageTwo different listsNow that you have begun to write your pages in HTML, please add the following to a comment in the <head> of your work:Name, date, week #, class with section, and campus # (i.e. CIS273001VA016) Always zip your work into a single folder for uploading to Blackboard. You’ll want to keep each week separate so that you can review earlier iterations of your site, in case you want to revert something back based on feedback from your professor.

What policy options existed to mitigate the financial and economic distress
What policy options existed to mitigate the financial and economic distress of containment, and what factors did different ...
What policy options existed to mitigate the financial and economic distress
What policy options existed to mitigate the financial and economic distress of containment, and what factors did different countries weigh in deciding which paths to choose?

Concept in Theories in Nursing Case Study
Case Study: Mrs. Adams, a 68-year-old widow who was referred to case management upon discharge from the hospital based on ...
Concept in Theories in Nursing Case Study
Case Study: Mrs. Adams, a 68-year-old widow who was referred to case management upon discharge from the hospital based on her physician’s recommendation that she is not able to care for herself independently. Her diagnosis is diabetes, hypertension, and breast cancer. She is 5 days’ post-op from a right sided mastectomy. Mrs. Adams apartment is located in a low income area of the city where crime is prevalent. Upon assessment by the Community Health Nurse, Mrs. Adams apartment was in disorder with minimal airflow or light. Her cloths appeared unchanged and she had no food in the apartment. The small apartment also housed 3 cats and a small dog who Mrs. Adams considers family since the death of her husband 1 year ago. Mrs. Adams complains of pain and draining from her surgical site and a broken air conditioner.
Using Nightingales Environmental Theory, what actions would the nurse take upon the first assessment? What are the five essential components?
What would be an appropriate plan of care be for Mrs. Adams? How would you prioritize the care plan?
Apply Nightingale’s Environmental Theory to an area of your nursing practice? What patient population would benefit from this approach? Support this practice change with at least one evidenced-based article.
The assignment should be completed in APA format, as an essay of between 1000 and 1500 words. The paper should include at least 3 outside references and the textbook. The paper should be in APA format with a title page, level headings, and reference page.

UMUC Understanding Theories and Techniques of Abnormal Psychology
GuidelinesLona is a married 35-year-old mother of one child (age 5). She has been married for ten years. At the onset of t ...
UMUC Understanding Theories and Techniques of Abnormal Psychology
GuidelinesLona is a married 35-year-old mother of one child (age 5). She has been married for ten years. At the onset of their marriage, Lona and her husband enjoyed their budding careers and great income. They drove the cars they liked, lived in the home they liked, and bought the material goods and services they liked. For most of the marriage, Lona has been the primary breadwinner (although both make six figures).Lona became pregnant with their first child after five years of marriage. She was a doting mother of a very healthy baby girl. Her focus shifted from her career, but she tried to the best of her ability to be a jack of all trades. She was a great mother, housewife, and professional.Soon, however, Lona became exhausted from her pace. She did not eat as well as before. She did not sleep as well as before (largely because she attempted to do all of her work while the baby was in bed). She found herself making a tremendous to-do list each day that never seemed to get done.Lona arranged her schedule so that she did not need a babysitter. She mothered during the day and worked long into the night to meet the needs of her household. She endured this schedule for four years almost flawlessly. However, she became irritable, sickly, and seemingly "wilted." She continued to dote on her child, but her marriage suffered. She was too tired for intimacy and resented her husband for daring to state that he was tired. He seldom helped around the house, and their daughter was so attached to Lona that she could not be soothed by her father for long periods of time.Lona became sullen and very tired. Her allergies returned after a ten-year hiatus. She stopped doing the things she enjoyed and began to do whatever she could to simply stay awake. She decided to quit her high-paying job to work for a lesser salary at home. She stated repeatedly that it was her husband's turn to pick up the slack.Lona only spoke to her sister and mother of her anger, resentment, and fatigue. She discontinued exercise due to her inability to get up in the morning early enough to go jogging. This has left her twenty pounds heavier than before.Lona states upon meeting you that she feels she is going downhill and needs some help to figure out a solution to her problems. She is very cooperative and willing to work hard to feel better for the sake of her child.Lona has not ever been in therapy before, but several of her friends have found it beneficial and enlightening.Lona's aim is to keep her family intact and work on her problems to feel better.The completed work should be 6–8 pages long.Grading criteria for this assignment:You are giving Lona a preliminary diagnosis. This is your first session/intake, so your information is limited to the above.Discuss Lona's key symptoms and why they are important. Use at least one additional relevant source to support your opinion. (20 points)What would you say is Lona's primary diagnosis? Be sure to cover areas such as; former level of functioning, current level of functioning, stress factors, medical issues/personality disorder (if relevant)Discuss your diagnosis and provide justification using the International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision (ICD-10) (https://www.icd10data.com/ICD10CM/Codes/F01-F99) codes and least one additional relevant source. (40 points)List treatment goals and discuss each separately and in detail. (10 points)List strengths and your ideas regarding how each could be used to support Lona in her treatment. (10 points)List areas of improvement and your ideas regarding how each could be changed to support Lona in her treatment. (10 points)List two homework assignments and how each will support Lona in her treatment. (5 points)What are some areas you will explore next (e.g., Lona's relationship with her husband; professional goals)? Discuss your reasons for exploring these areas and how this will assist Lona in her treatment. (5 points)
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