Factors Affecting Health and Illness
Factors Affecting Health and Illness
Factors Affecting Health and Illness
Physical Dimension
Genetic make-up, age, developmental level, race and sex are all part of an individual’s
physical dimension and strongly influence health status and health practices.
Examples:
a. The toddler just learning to walk is prone to fail and injure himself.
b. The young woman who has a family history of breast cancer and diabetes and
therefore is at a higher risk to develop these conditions.
Emotional Dimension
How the mind and body interact to affect body function and to respond to body
conditions also influences health. Long term stress affects the body systems and
anxiety affects health habits; conversely, calm acceptance and relaxation can actually
change body responses to illness.
Examples:
b. Extremely nervous about a surgery, a man experiences severe pain following his
operation.
c. Using relaxation techniques, a young woman reduces her pain during the delivery
of her baby.
Intellectual Dimension
Examples:
a. An elderly woman who has only a third-grade education who needs teaching about
a complicated diagnostic test.
b. A young college student with diabetes who follows a diabetic diet but continues to
drink beer and eat pizza with friends several times a week.
Environmental Dimension
The environment has many influences on health and illness. Housing, sanitation,
climate and pollution of air, food and water are aspects of environmental dimension.
Examples:
a. Increased incidence of asthma and respiratory problems in large cities with smog.
Socio-cultural Dimension
Health practices and beliefs are strongly influenced by a person’s economic level,
lifestyle, family and culture. Low-income groups are less likely to seek health care to
prevent or treat illness; high-income groups are more prone to stress-related habits
and illness. The family and the culture to which the person belongs determine patterns
of livings and values, about health and illness that are often unalterable.
Examples:
a. The adolescent who sees nothing wrong with smoking or drinking because his
parents smoke and drink.
b. The person of Asian descent who uses herbal remedies and acupuncture to treat an
illness.
Spiritual Dimension
Spiritual and religious beliefs are important components of the way the person
behaves in health and illness.
Examples:
a. Roman Catholics require baptism for both live births and stillborn babies.
1. Orientation Stage
• During this phase, the problems are not yet been resolved but the client’s
feelings especially anxiety is reduced, by using palliative measures, to enable
the client to relax enough to talk about his distressing feelings and thoughts.
• This stage progresses well when the nurses show empathy provide support to
client and temporary structure until the client can control his own feelings and
behavior.
o Reality testing – is accepting the patient’s perceptions, feelings and
thoughts as neither right nor wrong, but at the same time offering other
options or points of view to the client in a non-argumentative manner
for the purpose of helping the client arrive at more realistic
conclusions.
o To provide structure is to intervene when the client loses control of his
own feelings and behaviors by medications, offering self, restrain,
seclusion and by assisting client to observe a consistent daily schedule.
• The focus of the assessment and of the relationship is the client’s behavior and
the focus of the interaction is the client’s feelings.
• The nurse should realize that the client’s feelings of security are developed by
being consistent at all times.
• Perception of reality, coping mechanisms and support systems are identified.
• The nurse assists the patient to develop coping skills, positive self concept and
independence in order to change the behavior of the client to one that is
adaptive and appropriate.
o The nurse uses the techniques of communication and assumes
different roles to help the client.
• the nurse terminates the relationship when the mutually agreed goals are met,
the patient is discharged or transferred or the rotation is finished. The focus of
this stage is the growth that has occurred in the client and the nurse helps the
patient to become independent and responsible in making his own decisions.
The relationship and the growth or change that has occurred in both the nurse
and the patient is summarized.
• Client may become anxious and react with increased dependence, hostility and
withdrawal, these are normal reactions and are signs of separation anxiety,
these feelings and behavior should be discussed with the client.
• The nurse should be firm in maintaining professionalism until the end of the
relationship. She should not promise the client that the relationship will be
continued.
• The time parameters should be made early in the relationship and meetings are
set further and further apart near the end to foster independence of the patient
and prepare the latter gradually for the separation.
• The nurse should not give her address or telephone numbers to the patient.
• Referral for continuing health care and support after discharge provides
additional resources for the client and the family.
• The goal of the therapeutic relationship have been met when the patient has
developed emotional stability, cope positively, recognized sources or causes of
anxiety, demonstrates ability to handle anxiety and independence, and is able
to perform self-care.
o Preparation of the termination phase begins at the orientation phase,
when the duration and length of the nurse-client relationship was
established.
o • It is normal for the client to experience
separation anxiety such as sleeplessness,
anorexia, physical symptoms, withdrawal and
hostility.
Therapeutic Relationship
Therapeutic relationship – is a relationship that is established
between a health care professional and a client for the purpose
of assisting the client to solve his problems.
1. Empathy
o the nurse should be able to perceive and experience the feelings of the
patient to be able to understand the patient.
2. Genuineness
o this pertains to the nurse’s ability to identify the client’s feelings and
make the client be aware of them. Only when the nurse listens actively
and is sensitive enough can she help the patient to gain awareness and
insight regarding the latter’s feelings, thought and behaviors in relation
to situations and person’s to the patients life in the past and in the
present.
4. Respect
o the nurse considers the patient, like any other human being with
dignity, to be deserving of high regard. This is manifested when the
nurse does not belittle or judge the patient’s feelings, verbalizations
and behaviors.
o Respect is shown when the nurse realizes that several patients may
have the same diagnosis but their individuality sets them apart and
different from each other. As such, the nurse approach must be
appropriate for each patient. Respect can be shown by being consistent
yet flexible when the circumstance warrants being so.
*Transference – occurs when the client transfers conflict/ feelings from
the past to the nurse. Ex. Client becomes overly dependent to the nurse
because client may transfer the maternal longings to the nurse.
5. Immediacy of relationship
o this refers to the nurse’s ability to recognize her own feelings as she
deals and communicate with the patient. It also refers to the ability to
realize when it is appropriate to share them with the patient.
6. Self-exploration
o it is necessary that the nurse makes the patient realize the necessity of
the patient exploring, identifying and understanding his own feelings
and thought to be able to understand himself better, and find
appropriate solutions to his problems.
7. Self – disclosure
8. Confrontation
Therapeutic Technique
1. Offering Self
2. Active listening
• paying close attention to what the patient is saying by observing both verbal
and non-verbal cues.
• Maintaining eye contact and making verbal remarks to clarify and encourage
further communication.
3. Exploring
5. Silence
• Planned absence of verbal remarks to allow patient and nurse to think over
what is being discussed and to say more.
• verbalizing what is observed in the patient to, for validation and to encourage
discussion
• “You sound angry”
7. Encouraging comparisons
8. Identifying themes
9. Summarizing
• reviewing the main points of discussions and making appropriate conclusions.
• “During this meeting, we discussed about what you will do when you feel the
urge to hurt your self again and this include…”
• stating what is real and what is not without arguing with the patient.
• “I know you hear these voices but I do not hear them”.
• “I am Lhynnelli, your nurse, and this is a hospital and not a beach resort.
16. Reflecting
• throwing back the patient’s statement in a form of question helps the patient
identify feelings.
• Patient: I think I should leave now.
• Nurse: Do you think you should leave now?
17. Restating
• repeating the exact words of patients to remind them of what they said and to
let them know they are heard.
• Patient: I can’t sleep. I stay awake all night.
• Nurse: You can’t sleep at night?
20. Empathy
21. Focusing
22. Interpreting
• practicing behaviors for specific situations, both the nurse and patient play
particular role.
• “I’ll play your mother, tell me exactly what would you say when we meet on
Sunday”.
33. Rehearsing
• asking the patient for a verbal description of what will be said or done in a
particular situation.
• “Supposing you meet these people again, how would you respond to them
when they ask you to join them for a drink?”.
34. Feedback
36. Reinforcement
Avoid pitfalls:
1. Giving advise
2. Talking about your self
3. Telling client is wrong
4. Entering into hallucinations and delusions of client
5. False reassurance
6. Cliché
7. Giving approval
8. Asking WHY?
9. Changing subject
10. Defending doctors and other health team members.
Non-therapeutic Technique
1. Overloading
• talking rapidly, changing subjects too often, and asking for more information
than can be absorbed at one time.
• “What’s your name? I see you like sports. Where do you live?”
2. Value Judgments
3. Incongruence
4. Underloading
• remaining silent and unresponsive, not picking up cues, and failing to give
feedback.
• The patient ask the nurse, simply walks away.
6. Invalidation
7. Focusing on self
• responding in a way that focuses attention to the nurse instead of the client.
• “This sunshine is good for my roses. I have beautiful rose garden”.
9. Giving advice
• telling the client what to do, giving opinions or making decisions for the
client, implies client cannot handle his or her own life decisions and that the
nurse is accepting responsibility.
• “If I were you… Or it would be better if you do it this way…”