NURSING — COMPREHENSIVE STUDY GUIDE WITH
COMPLETE SOLUTION!!
1. What is the overall goal of health promotion?
Health promotion aims to optimize health and well-being for individuals and
communities. It relies on evidence-based strategies, respects cultural context
(enculturation), and centers on the needs of patients and populations. Common
interventions include health education, vaccination programs, screenings,
improving nutrition, promoting physical activity, and using medications for
prevention (e.g., smoking cessation aids, weight-loss agents).
2. How is community/public health nursing defined?
Community or public health nursing blends nursing practice with public health
principles. Its primary goal is to maintain and improve the health of populations—
not just individual patients. It emphasizes:
Health promotion
Disease prevention
Identifying groups at risk
Supporting community well-being rather than reacting only to illness episodes
3. What is the main purpose of public health?
,Public health exists to:
Prevent disease
Extend life expectancy
Promote overall health
This is accomplished through organized efforts such as policy development,
community programs, sanitation, and health education.
4. What are the Essential Public Health Services?
These services outline what communities need to protect and promote health:
Monitor community health trends.
Investigate health hazards and emerging problems.
Educate and empower populations about health issues.
Build partnerships to address health concerns.
, Create policies that support individual and community health.
Enforce health and safety regulations.
Connect people with necessary personal health services.
Ensure a qualified public health workforce.
Evaluate the quality and effectiveness of health services.
Support research to develop new solutions to health challenges.
5. What is primary prevention?
Primary prevention focuses on stopping health problems before they begin. It
includes health promotion activities (e.g., teaching good nutrition) and protective
measures (e.g., immunizations, safety initiatives).
6. What is secondary prevention?
Secondary prevention includes early detection and early treatment to halt or slow
disease progression. Examples include screenings, diagnostic tests, and prompt
medical interventions.