Health Promotion Plan Presentation

 

 

 


Health education is any combination of learning experiences designed to help people in a community improve their health by increasing their knowledge or influencing their attitudes (WHO, n.d.). Education is key to health promotion, disease prevention, and disaster preparedness. The health indicator framework identified in Healthy People 2030 prompts action in health services accessibility, clinical preventive services, environmental quality, injury or violence prevention, maternal, infant, and child health, mental health, nutrition, substance abuse prevention, and tobacco use cessation or prevention.
Nurses provide accurate evidence-based information and education in formal and informal settings. They draw upon evidence-based practice to provide health promotion and disease prevention activities to create social and physical environments that are conducive to improving and maintaining community health. When provided with the tools to be successful, people demonstrate lifestyle changes (self-care) that promote health and help reduce readmissions. They are better able to tolerate stressors, including environmental changes, and enjoy a better quality of life. Also, in times of crisis, a resilient community is a safer community (Flanders, 2018; Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, n.d.).

 

Scenario
In this assessment, you will develop your presentation of the health promotion plan based on the research you conducted for Assessment 1. You will plan the presentation for the community you focused on for Assessment 1.
You will resume the role of a community nurse tasked with addressing the specific health concern in your community. This time, you will present, via educational outreach, your health promotion plan you completed research for in Assessment 1 to your chosen community. In this presentation, you will simulate the presentation as though it would be live and face-to-face. You must determine an effective teaching strategy, communicate the plan with professionalism and cultural sensitivity, and evaluate the objectives of the plan. Please remember the nursing process. You must evaluate and revise the plan, as applicable, and propose improvement for future educational sessions. To engage your audience, you need to include any handouts with your presentation and a voice-over recording and speaker notes to communicate your plan.
Instructions
Complete the following:
• Prepare a 12–14 slide PowerPoint presentation with a voice-over and detailed speaker notes that reflects your presentation. This presentation is the implementation of the plan you created in Assessment 1. The speaker notes should be well-organized and submitted as a separate Word document. Be sure to include a transcript of the voice-over (please refer to the PowerPoint resources in the Academic Resources). The transcript must be submitted on a separate Word document.
• Simulate the face-to-face educational session, addressing the health concern and health goals of your selected community individual or group.
• Imagine collaborating with the participants in setting goals for the session, evaluating session outcomes, and suggesting possible revisions to improve future sessions.
The requirements outlined below correspond to the grading criteria in the scoring guide, so be sure to address each point. Read the performance-level descriptions for each criterion in the scoring guide to see how your work will be assessed.
• Present a health promotion plan tailored for an individual or group within a community.
o Tailor the presentation to the needs of your chosen community audience.
o Adhere to scholarly and disciplinary writing standards and APA formatting requirements.
• Evaluate educational session outcomes and attainment of agreed-upon health goals, anticipating potential input from participants.
o How do you think participants would react to the session?
o Which aspects of the session would you change?
o How might those changes improve future outcomes?
• Evaluate educational session outcomes in terms of progress made toward Healthy People 2030 objectives and leading health indicators (LHIs).
o What changes would you recommend to better align the session with Healthy People 2030 objectives and LHIs?

 

 

 

Why Fall Prevention MattersStatistics on falls in older adults, Impact on quality of life (independence, fear), Healthy People 2030 LHI Connection (Injury/Violence Prevention)Factual/Motivational4The A-B-C's of Fall RiskAge-related changes (vision, balance), Bone/Joint/Muscle Issues (weakness), Chronic conditions & Caution with medications (side effects)Clear Categorization, Handout reference5Risk Factor Check-In (Interactive)List common home hazards (rugs, poor lighting, cords), Personal risk factors (meds, dizziness). Activity: "Home Safety Checklist" (Handout)Interactive/Self-Assessment6Pillar 1: Get Moving!Importance of exercise (strength, balance, flexibility), Low-impact options (Tai Chi, walking, seated exercises).Demonstration/Visual7Pillar 2: Check Your Meds!Reviewing medication side effects with a doctor/pharmacist, Importance of speaking up about dizziness or drowsiness.Advisory/Clinical8Pillar 3: Home Safety ChecklistReviewing the Handout (Checklist for rugs, lighting, grab bars, footwear). Call to action: Complete the checklist this week.Practical Application9Pillar 4: Vision & Foot CareImportance of regular vision checks, wearing proper, supportive shoes (not just slippers).Clinical Prevention10Your Personal Action PlanCollaborative Goal Setting Review: Have we met your hopes? What is ONE change you will make this week?Goal Setting/Commitment11Resources for SuccessContact info for local physical therapy, Center for Disease Control (CDC) resources, Senior Center program details.Supportive/Referral12Q&A and FeedbackOpen forum for questions. Evaluation: Quick anonymous polling/written feedback.Q&A/Evaluation13Session Outcomes & Next StepsSummary of key takeaways, Announcement of next session (e.g., Tai Chi demo).Review/Future Planning14Thank YouContact Information (Nurse/Center).ConclusionWhy Fall Prevention MattersStatistics on falls in older adults, Impact on quality of life (independence, fear), Healthy People 2030 LHI Connection (Injury/Violence Prevention)Factual/Motivational4The A-B-C's of Fall RiskAge-related changes (vision, balance), Bone/Joint/Muscle Issues (weakness), Chronic conditions & Caution with medications (side effects)Clear Categorization, Handout reference5Risk Factor Check-In (Interactive)List common home hazards (rugs, poor lighting, cords), Personal risk factors (meds, dizziness). Activity: "Home Safety Checklist" (Handout)Interactive/Self-Assessment6Pillar 1: Get Moving!Importance of exercise (strength, balance, flexibility), Low-impact options (Tai Chi, walking, seated exercises).Demonstration/Visual7Pillar 2: Check Your Meds!Reviewing medication side effects with a doctor/pharmacist, Importance of speaking up about dizziness or drowsiness.Advisory/Clinical8Pillar 3: Home Safety ChecklistReviewing the Handout (Checklist for rugs, lighting, grab bars, footwear). Call to action: Complete the checklist this week.Practical Application9Pillar 4: Vision & Foot CareImportance of regular vision checks, wearing proper, supportive shoes (not just slippers).Clinical Prevention10Your Personal Action PlanCollaborative Goal Setting Review: Have we met your hopes? What is ONE change you will make this week?Goal Setting/Commitment11Resources for SuccessContact info for local physical therapy, Center for Disease Control (CDC) resources, Senior Center program details.Supportive/Referral12Q&A and FeedbackOpen forum for questions. Evaluation: Quick anonymous polling/written feedback.Q&A/Evaluation13Session Outcomes & Next StepsSummary of key takeaways, Announcement of next session (e.g., Tai Chi demo).Review/Future Planning14Thank YouContact Information (Nurse/Center).Conclusion

Sample Answer

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Scenario for Simulation:

Community: Older Adults (65+) attending a senior center in an urban area.

Health Concern: Fall Prevention (related to injury/violence prevention and clinical preventive services LHIs in Healthy People 2030).

Health Promotion Goal: Reduce the incidence of falls by increasing knowledge of risk factors and implementing preventative behaviors.

 

Health Promotion Presentation: "Stay Active, Stay Safe: A Fall Prevention Workshop"

 

 

Part 1: Presentation Structure (14 Slides)

 

SlideTitleKey ContentTeaching Strategy
1Title SlideTitle, Your Name (as Community Nurse), Date, Location (e.g., Senior Center)Professional Introduction
2Welcome & AgendaWorkshop Goals, Agenda (What we'll cover), Collaborative Goal Setting (Ask: What do you hope to learn today?)

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