Description
APA Format 3 pages.
please what needs to be done is in the tile . Developing an Advocacy Campaign PART 1
Application: Part 1 - Developing an Advocacy Campaign
The following application (Part 1) will be due in week 4.
To prepare:
- Select a population health issue of interest to you and identify the population affected by the issue.
- Locate two scholarly articles, each of which provides a description of an effective health advocacy campaign that addresses your issue. The articles need to focus on two different advocacy campaigns.
- Analyze the attributes of the two campaigns to determine what made them effective.
- Reflect on a policy you could propose or suggest a change to a current policy to improve the health of the population you selected.
- Consider how you could develop an advocacy campaign, applying the attributes identified in similar, effective campaigns.
To complete:
For the Part 1 application (approximately 3–4 pages of content with a title page and references in APA format) address the following:
- Describe your selected population health issue and the population affected by this issue.
- Summarize the two advocacy campaigns you researched in this area.
- Explain the attributes that made those campaigns effective.
- Begin to develop a plan for a health advocacy campaign that seeks to create a new policy or change an existing policy with regard to the issue and population you selected. Be sure to include in your plan:
A description of the public health issue and proposed policy solution
below is the reading/Learning Resources.
An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.
—Benjamin Franklin
The purpose of health policy is to improve the health of individuals and populations. As discussed in Week 2, health care reform efforts seek to improve access to quality health care for all individuals. Yet, as noted in Week 3, continued rising health care costs are not resulting in improved health outcomes. How can the United States improve its health status in a cost-efficient manner, and what is the role of the nurse in moving this agenda forward? Many believe the answer lies in focusing on preventive care and population health.
While nursing care has traditionally been centered on individuals, the emerging focus of population health allows nurses to take a broader view for improving health outcomes. This wider perspective means that nurses may now examine a range of factors that influence populations as a whole, rather than focus solely on individual patients.
This week, you will evaluate factors that impact population health, and thus, the health care system. These factors include access to health care, individual behavior, the social and physical environment, and genetics. You will also consider the role of epidemiologic data in the process of evaluating the health of a population.
Reference:
U.S. History.org. (2010). The electric Ben Franklin. Retrieved from http://www.ushistory.org/franklin/info/
Learning Objectives
Students will:
- Analyze factors that influence a population health issue
- Apply the use of epidemiologic data to the design of population health measures and policy initiatives
Photo Credit: [Plume Creative]/[DigitalVision]/Getty Images
Learning Resources
Note: To access this week’s required library resources, please click on the link to the Course Readings List, found in the Course Materials section of your Syllabus.
Required Readings
Knickman, J. R., & Kovner, A. R. (Eds.). (2015). Health care delivery in the united states (11th ed.). New York, NY: Springer Publishing.
- Chapter 5, “Population Health” (pp. 79–97)
This chapter introduces the concept of population health, which views health issues at the population level rather than at an individual level.
Kindig, D. (2007). Understanding population health terminology. The Milbank Quarterly, 85(1), 139–161.
Retrieved from the Walden Library databases.
This article provides a valuable foundation in understanding the terminology of population health. Although written in 2007, the information in this article is very pertinent to the topics discussed this week.
Kindig, D., Asada, Y., & Booske, B. (2008). A population health framework for setting national and state health goals. JAMA, 299(17), 2081–2083.
Retrieved from the Walden Library databases.
Using a framework to craft policy and programs can help ensure that outcomes are measurable. The authors of this article note how some of the overarching goals of Healthy People 2010 were not measurable. They suggest a framework for developing more measurable goals for Healthy People 2020.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2010). Morbidity and mortality weekly report (MMWR). State health statistics. Retrieved from http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/StateHealth/index.html
The CDC website provides health statistics gathered using epidemiologic methods. Explore the health statistics for your state or for a health problem of interest to you.
HealthyPeople.gov. (2010). Foundation health measures. Retrieved from http://healthypeople.gov/2020/about/tracking.aspx
Healthy People 2020 uses the four foundational measures presented at this website to monitor the health of the American population.
State of New South Wales, Department of Education and Communities and Charles Sturt University. (2012). Core 1: Health priorities in Australia: How are priority issues for Australia’s health identified? Retrieved from http://www.slideshare.net/MsRatusau/hsc-pdhpe-core-1-health-priorities-in-australia
Australia uses epidemiologic data to establish its health priorities. Review the information presented at this website, and consider how the United States sets its health priorities.
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. (2010). Healthy People 2020. Retrieved from https://www.healthypeople.gov/sites/default/files/HP2020_brochure_with_LHI_508_FNL.pdf
This overview of Healthy People 2020 provides a description of goals of this program, along with indicators used to assess the health of the United States.
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. (2012). Healthy People 2020 – Improving the health of Americans. Retrieved from http://www.healthypeople.gov/2020/default.aspx
This site contains a wide variety of information and resources dealing with the Healthy People 2020 goals, as well as information on how to implement the objectives.
University of Wisconsin Department of Population Health Sciences. (n.d.). What is population health? Retrieved from http://www.improvingpopulationhealth.org/blog/what-is-population-health.html
This website provides a definition of population health and health determinants. It also examines how health policy can influence determinants of health.
Required Media
Laureate Education (Producer). (2012h). Population health. Baltimore, MD: Author.
Note: The approximate length of this media piece is 13 minutes.
Discussion: Key Health Determinants
Did you know that the United States has a higher rate of infant mortality than Japan (CIA, n.d.)? Or, as Dr. Beilenson states in this week’s media presentation, that “your zip code that you live in makes more difference in your health and well-being than the genetic code that you're born with?” What causes these differences in health outcomes?
To effectively develop policies and programs to improve population health, it is useful to use a framework to guide the process. Different organizations and governmental agencies (for example, Healthy People 2020) have created a variety of such frameworks, which establish measures for assessing population health. These measures frequently are derived from the examination of epidemiologic data, which include key measures of population health such as mortality, morbidity, life expectancy, etc. Within each measure are a variety of progress indicators that use epidemiologic data to assess improvement or change.
For this Discussion, you will apply a framework developed by Kindig, Asada, and Booske (2008) to a population health issue of interest to you. This framework includes five key health determinants that should be considered when developing policies and programs to improve population health: access to health care, individual behavior, social environment, physical environment, and genetics.
To prepare:
- Review the article “A Population Health Framework for Setting National and State Health Goals,” focusing on population health determinants.
- Review the information in the blog post “What Is Population Health?”
- With this information in mind, elect a population health issue that is of interest to you.
- Using this week’s Learning Resources, the Walden Library, and other relevant resources, conduct a search to locate current data on your population health issue.
- Consider how epidemiologic data has been used to design population health measures and policy initiatives in addressing this issue.
Explanation & Answer
Attached.
Running head: ADVOCACY CAMPAIGN
1
Advocacy Campaign
Name
Institution
ADVOCACY CAMPAIGN
2
Advocacy Campaign
Population Health Issue
Almost everywhere around the globe, there is a progressive illness that causes more body
complications to human. It is a disease that we have the capability of avoiding only if appropriate
precautions are taken. Due to the rise in the diabetes rise, there is an enormous emphasis on
positive, healthy living (Mayo, 2016). Diabetes brings other illnesses such as stroke, kidney
failure as well as hypertension. According to Santod Longhurst (2014), the types two diabetes in
adults is 90 percent of all the cases of the individuals that are diagnosed to have diabetes, and the
remaining 10 percent is on the type diabetes which is experienced on the onset of the adult stage
or even the adult.
Population
According to America Diabetes Association (2017), more than 20 million individuals
were found to have diabetes, and 13 percent were from the African descent. Approximately 85
million America w from 20 years of age that is 37 percent of them had prediabetes which results
to diabetes type 2 or even heart diseases. The rates of physical inactivity and obesity for the
African American are twice more than the rates of the entire population of the United States.
Advocacy program 1
An advocacy program that may be used to address this issue is the project power
programs. The American Diabetes Association offers this program and is based on faith. It has
a major focus on the African American population. The advocacy program brings messages of
awareness regarding diabetes. It also entails tactics of having a healthy living in the church as
well as family life.Also, the health ministries of the churches act an essential role in the
implementing as well as overseeing the projects of this program. They are responsible for
ADVOCACY CAMPAIGN
3
recruiting volunteers, promoting, as well as scheduling them. The plans entail six workshops that
may be used in a period that is more than one year. The programs provide a diabetes overview,
the significance of diet and exercise as well as the relationship that exists between heart disease
and diabetes. The plans are carried on by members that are known and are referred to as
ambassadors (Austin & Claiborne, 2012).
Attributes
The quality that makes this project to be used is two. To begin with, such programs that
are based on faith stipulates for partnership between the health professionals, the local church,
and the entire community. The churches of the Africans are known to be an information source
and with this, the members of the chu...