Discussion: Population Health Interventions
Using your selected population, continue your search and appraisal of evidence by analyzing one
research study that offers a potential intervention to address your selected population health issue.
This intervention must be at the population level. This research study must be new, one that was
not used in a previous course.
Appraise a quantitative research study that utilizes an intervention to address the selected health
issue identified in Week 2 using the Johns Hopkins Research Appraisal Tool.
Link (Word doc): Johns Hopkins Research Appraisal Tool
Links to an external site.
Transfer your findings to the Johns Hopkins Individual Evidence Summary Tool.
Link (Word doc): Johns Hopkins Individual Evidence Summary Tool
Links to an external site.
Analyze the evidence summary tool of the research study to address the following in the
discussion:
1. Determine whether the intervention has the potential to impact the issue. Explain your
rationale.
2. Attach the completed Johns Hopkins Individual Evidence Summary Tool.
3. Present the translation science model that would best aid the success of this intervention and
discuss how the stakeholders are integrated into the design of the theory or model.
4. Identify where your selected intervention is located on the Minnesota Public Health Wheel.
Please click on the following link to review the DNP Discussion Guidelines on the Student
Resource Center program page:
Link (webpage): DNP Discussion Guidelines
Links to an external site.
Answer:
Ensuring that the human population is healthy and faces few or no health disparities is the
ultimate goal of healthcare programs and interventions. The high prevalence of diabetes among
the Hopi Indians in Kykotsmovi Village, Arizona, is exacerbated by inequalities in healthcare
access. Nonetheless, primary, secondary, and tertiary preventive measures can all be very
helpful in making sure that the group being studied is safe from diabetes. There are studies on
prevention, screening, and therapy aimed at lowering the incidence, consequences, or
Using your selected population, continue your search and appraisal of evidence by analyzing one
research study that offers a potential intervention to address your selected population health issue.
This intervention must be at the population level. This research study must be new, one that was
not used in a previous course.
Appraise a quantitative research study that utilizes an intervention to address the selected health
issue identified in Week 2 using the Johns Hopkins Research Appraisal Tool.
Link (Word doc): Johns Hopkins Research Appraisal Tool
Links to an external site.
Transfer your findings to the Johns Hopkins Individual Evidence Summary Tool.
Link (Word doc): Johns Hopkins Individual Evidence Summary Tool
Links to an external site.
Analyze the evidence summary tool of the research study to address the following in the
discussion:
1. Determine whether the intervention has the potential to impact the issue. Explain your
rationale.
2. Attach the completed Johns Hopkins Individual Evidence Summary Tool.
3. Present the translation science model that would best aid the success of this intervention and
discuss how the stakeholders are integrated into the design of the theory or model.
4. Identify where your selected intervention is located on the Minnesota Public Health Wheel.
Please click on the following link to review the DNP Discussion Guidelines on the Student
Resource Center program page:
Link (webpage): DNP Discussion Guidelines
Links to an external site.
Answer:
Ensuring that the human population is healthy and faces few or no health disparities is the
ultimate goal of healthcare programs and interventions. The high prevalence of diabetes among
the Hopi Indians in Kykotsmovi Village, Arizona, is exacerbated by inequalities in healthcare
access. Nonetheless, primary, secondary, and tertiary preventive measures can all be very
helpful in making sure that the group being studied is safe from diabetes. There are studies on
prevention, screening, and therapy aimed at lowering the incidence, consequences, or