18. Planning a Community Health Program Flashcards
Planning in Partnership With the Community
- Review diagnoses
- Categorize according to population most affected
- Validate diagnoses with community members
- Acknowledge rights of community leaders and members to confidentiality and to choose not to participate
Considerations Implied by Partnership
- Community’s particular social structure
- Normative behaviours and value system
- Potential conflict between values of community health worker and community
- Need to validate diagnosis with community
- Commit to empowerment, participation, inclusion, and self-determination
The community health worker (CHW) forms a partnership in the community. In addition to the partnership, the CHW must consider the influences of the community’s issues. Which of these does not apply?
- Entertainment issues
- Economic issues
- Social issues
- Environmental issues
- Political issues
A. Entertainment issues
In addition to forming a partnership with the community, the community health worker must consider the influences of social, economic, environmental, and political issues.
Prioritizing Community Diagnoses
- Magnitude of concern expressed by members of the community
- Extent of existing resources to deal with the concern (e.g., knowledge, time, money, equipment, supplies, facilities, personnel)
- Potential for success in solving the problem with existing resources
- Need for special education or training
- Extent of additional resources and policies needed for equitable, cost-effective, and efficient response
Transtheoretical Model of Change
Stages of change
Precontemplation
Contemplation
Preparation
Action
Maintenance
Termination
Lewin’s Stages of Planned Change
Unfreezing
Identify a need for change
Moving Process
Presence of change agent
Identify of problems
Consider alternatives
Adapt plan to circumstances
Refreezing
Implementation and Stabilization
Reinkemeyer’s Stages of change
- Development of a felt need and desire for the change
- Development of a change relationship between the agent and the client system
- Clarification or diagnosis of the client system’s problem, need, or objective
- Examination of alternative routes and tentative goals and intentions of actions
- Transformation of intentions into actual change
- Stabilization
- Termination of the relationship between the change agent and the client system
According to Kurt Lewin, the change actually occurs in which of the following stages?
Freezing
Refreezing
Educating
Moving
Unfreezing
D. Moving
In the moving stage, the change actually occurs. The problem is clarified, and the program for solving the problem is planned in detail and begun.
Program Logic Model
A diagrammatic representation of a program
Program—an organized set of activities intended to meet specific goals and objectives (outcomes)
What you are trying to accomplish
What you want to do
Actions (Components)
Services or procedures
Change, improvements, or benefits
Evidence, proof, or information showing progress and attainment of outcomes
When the focus of an intervention is a group, people in the group fall into five categories
Innovators
Early adopters
Early majority adopters
Late majority adopters
Laggards
Program Activities
Have a program goal then change it into bite size pieces
Map out the actions necessary to deliver the program and thereby reach the goal(s)
Program Objectives
Derived from a goal
Are S.M.A.R.T.
May be process or outcome oriented
Constraints Constraints
can limit task achievement
Difference between needs and resources
Lack of staff, budget, space, equipment
Resistance to change
Must revise plans to take constraints into account
Is the following statement True or False?
This is an example of appropriate program objectives:
The community will:
Demonstrate engaged participation
Understand the Canadian community-as-partner model
Explain the purposes of community assessment
Write a summary statement about the population
False
These are not appropriate program objectives because none of these objectives are S.M.A.R.T. (specific, measurable, attainable, relevant, timebound).
Promoting Community Ownership
Community ownership moves beyond partnership and collaboration.
Meaningful participation in all the previous stages then responsibility during implementation is necessary