Community Assessment and Analysis Presentation

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Community Assessment and Intervention

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Community Assessment and Intervention

A geopolitical community is a geographical area defined by artificial or physical borders. On the other hand, a phenomenological community can be termed as a collection of individuals who share common beliefs, practices, hobbies, spirituality, or intellectual pursuits. The geopolitical and phenomenological location influences the backdrop of a demographic or societal evaluation and action because geopolitical communities have physical limits that might be artificial or natural. Due to structures or constructions, artificial borders exist.

The attention of the nursing process is focused on location, shelter, mobility, and democratic landscape components in a geopolitical perspective of the community. These factors include the actual volume and dispersal, medical facilities, and support and training. Demographics, environment, and social structures are the three elements that make up a community. When nurses examine a community, they evaluate the residents who live there, the area's borders, and the community's surroundings. According to Green et al. (2018), processes such as data collection and community inspection, including a position for geographic, cognitive, social, socioeconomic, religious, vocations, and obstacles to needs, are all used to evaluate a community.

The nursing process contains numerous parts, including assessment, in which nursing practitioners examine the customer's medical conditions as well as their various customs and religions. There is also a diagnostic stage, in which the target population's health condition is assessed in connection to the causal cause. Planning is also an element of the process in which nurses gather all remedies that are required in relation to beliefs, lifestyle, and challenges. The stage of evaluating the success of the strategy presented and making any required changes is called evaluation. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (n.d) has compiled a list of critical public health services that correspond with the fundamental tasks of public health to preserve and enhance the wellness of individuals within all communities.

References

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (n.d). Public Health Professionals Gateway: 10 Essential Public Health Services. CDC. https://www.cdc.gov/publichealthgateway/publichealthservices/essentialhealthservices.html

Green, B. N., Johnson, C. D., Haldeman, S., Kane, E. J., Clay, M. B., Griffith, E. A., ... & Yu, H. (2018). The Global Spine Care Initiative: public health and prevention interventions for common spine disorders in low-and middle-income communities. European Spine Journal27(6), 838-850. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00586-018-5635-8