He Handouts2
He Handouts2
He Handouts2
Institute of Nursing
EDUCATION
▪ Deliberate and systematic influence exerted by the mature person upon the immature through instruction, discipline
and harmonious development of all powers of human being (physical, social, intellectual, aesthetic, and
spiritual) directed toward the final end.
▪ “Acquisition of the art of the utilization of knowledge” (Whitehead)
HEALTH EDUCATION
▪ Helping individuals and groups to better health through equipping every individual with desirable knowledge, attitude
and skills so that he can make the necessary adaptations in the face of the challenges of the ever changing
environment.
▪ Is a learning process which is concerned with changes in knowledge, feelings and behavior of people.
▪ It is an approach for teaching patients and their families to deal with past, present & future health problems.
▪ Is a process that informs, motivates, and helps people to adopt and maintain healthy practices and lifestyles,
advocates environmental changes as needed to facilitate this goal and conducts professional training.
A PROCESS
▪ Brings about changes in the knowledge and attitude of people and thereby affecting change in health practices.
▪ The sum of experiences which favorably influence habits, attitudes, knowledge relating to individuals, community and
racial health.
▪ Progressive course, series of measures or changes.
HEALTH EDUCATOR
♦ The facilitator or implementer of health education.
♦ Initiator of the process whereby people learn to improve their health attitude and habits to work together for
the improvement of health conditions of the family, community and the nation.
EDUCATION PROCESS
Process
♦ progressive course, series of measures or changes.
♦ Is a systematic, sequential, logical, scientifically based, planned course of action.
♦ Consisting of two major interdependent operations:
1. Teaching
2. Learning
♦ Forms a continuous cycle
♦ involves 2 interdependent players:
1. Teacher
2. Learner
♦ mutually desired behavior changes
♦ Foster growth in the learner
♦ Growth in the teacher
Education Process Parallel Nursing Process
▪ Steps run parallel to nursing process but with different goals and objectives.
Nursing Process
▪ Planning and implementation of care based on assessment and diagnosis of the physical and psychosocial needs of
the patient.
Education process:
▪ Planning and implementation of teaching based on assessment and prioritization of the client’s learning needs,
readiness to learn and learning style
▪ A useful paradigm to assist nurses to organize and carry out the education process using the ASSURE model:
o Analyze the learner
o State the objectives
o Select the instructional methods and materials
o Use instructional methods and materials
o Require learner performance
o Evaluate the teaching plan and revise as necessary
1950s
♦ The NLE identified the course content in nursing school curricula to prepare nurses to assume the role as teachers
of others.
♦ Developed the first certified nurse educator (CNE) exam
♦ American Nurses Association (ANA) set forth statements on the functions, standards, and qualifications for nursing
practice, of which patient teaching is a key element.
♦ International Council of Nurses (ICN) has long endorsed the nurse’s role as educator to be essential component of
nursing care delivery.
♦ TODAY, all state nurse practice acts (NPA) include teaching within the scope of nursing practice responsibilities.
Nurses, by legal mandate are expected to provide instruction to consumers to assist them to maintain optimal
levels of wellness and manage illness.
1970s
American Hospital Association
♦ Developed the Patient’s Bill of Rights and has been adopted by hospitals nationwide.
♦ Established the guidelines to ensure that patients receive complete and current information concerning their
diagnosis, treatment and prognosis in terms they can reasonably be expected to understand.
Mid – 1800
♦ Responsibility for teaching has been recognized as an important role of nurses as caregivers.
Focus of teaching:
1. Care of the sick and on promoting the health of the well public.
2. Educating other nurses for professional practice.
Florence Nightingale
♦ Founder of modern nursing, ultimate educator
♦ Developed the first school of nursing
♦ Devoted a large portion of her life to teaching nurses, physicians and health officials about the importance of
proper conditions in the hospitals and homes to improve the health of the people. She emphasized the
importance of teaching patients of the need for adequate nutrition, fresh air, exercise, and personal hygiene to
improve their well-being.
By Early 1900s
♦ Public health nurses in the Philippines, clearly understood the significance of the role of the nurse as teacher in
preventing disease and in maintaining the health of the society. or decades, patient teaching has been an
independent nursing function.
♦ As early as 1918, the National League of Nursing Education (NLNE) in the US (now the National League for Nursing
(NLN) observed the importance of health teaching as a function within the scope of nursing practice.
♦ Two decades later, this organization recognized nurses as agents for the promotion of health and the prevention of
illness in all settings in which they practiced.
As Early as 1993
Joint Commission formerly Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO):
♦ Recognized the importance of patient education by nurses
♦ Established nursing standards for patient education.
♦ Those standards known as mandates described the type and level of care, treatment and services that must be
provided by an agency or organization to receive accreditation. More recently, the JC has expanded its
expectation to include an interdisciplinary team approach in the provision of patient education as well as
evidence, that patient and their significant others participate in care and decision making and understand what
they have been taught. Hence, the following must be considered by the health care providers during the
education process:
Literacy level Language skills
Educational background Culture of every client
1995
♦ PEW HEALTH PROFESSION COMMISSION (PHPC) published a broad set of competencies it believed would mark
the success of the health profession in the 21st century. In 1998, it released a fourth report on the follow-up on
health professional practice in the new millennium.
2006
♦ Institute of Healthcare Management was organized.
♦ Objective: To reduce the 15 million incidents of medical harm in US hospitals each year.
♦ Major implications: Teaching patients and their families as well as nursing staff and students ways how they can
improve care to reduce injuries, save lives, and decrease cost of health care
Disadvantages:
a. Maintaining a professional distance necessary when time comes to evaluate the student
b. Leads to lack of discipline in the classroom, with students taking advantage of their relationship with the
teacher.
Ways how educators help learners maintain self-esteem and minimize anxieties:
a. Empathic listening
b. Acceptance
c. Honest communication
3. Personal Characteristics
a. Personal magnetism g. Sense of humor
b. Enthusiasm h. Good speaking voice
c. Cheerfulness i. Self-confidence
d. Self-control j. Willingness to admit errors
e. Patience k. Caring attitude
f. Flexibility
4. Teaching Practice
♦ mechanics, methods, and skills in classroom and clinical teaching.
♦ Teaching subject matter in a stimulating way and inspiring learner interest depend on several factors:
a. Teacher’s style
b. Personality
c. Personal interest in the subject
d. Use of a variety of teaching strategies.
Barriers to Teaching:
1. Lack of time to teach
2. Nurses do not feel competent or confident with their teaching skills.
3. Personal characteristics of the nurse educator
4. Low priority assigned to patient and staff education by administration and supervisory personnel
5. Environment
6. Absence of 3rd party reimbursement to support patient education
7. Some nurses and physicians question whether patient education is effective as means to improve health
outcomes.
8. The type of documentation system used by healthcare agencies.
Obstacles to Learning:
1. Lack of time to learn
2. The stress of acute and chronic illness, anxiety, and sensory deficits in patients
3. Low literacy and functional health illiteracy
4. Negative influence of the hospital environment resulting in:
a. Loss of control
b. Lack of privacy
c. Social isolation
5. Personal characteristics of the learner that influence the success of educational endeavors:
a. Readiness to learn
b. Motivation and compliance
c. Developmental-stage characteristics and compliance
d. Learning style
6. Extent of behavioral changes needed both in number and in complexity, can overwhelm the learners and
dissuade them from attending to and accomplishing learning objectives and goals.
7. Lack of support and lack of ongoing positive reinforcements from the nurse and significant others.
8. Denial of learning needs, resentment of authority, and lack of willingness to take responsibility.
9. Inconvenience, complexity, inaccessibility, fragmentation, and dehumanization of the health care system result in
frustration and abandonment of efforts to participate and comply with goals and objectives of learning.
G. APPLYING LEARNING THEORIES TO HEALTH CARE PRACTICE
1. Principles of Learning (Thorndike’s)
1. The Principle of readiness
implies the degree of preparedness and eagerness to learn.
Individuals learn best when they are physically, mentally, and emotionally ready to learn, and do not learn
well if they see no reason for learning, are exhausted or in ill health , if they are distracted by outside
responsibilities, interests, or worries, have overcrowded schedules or other unresolved issues
Instructor’s responsibility: Getting students ready to learn, creating interest by showing the value of the
subject matter, and providing continuous mental or physical challenge
2. The Principle of exercise
things that are most often repeated are best remembered.
It is the basis of drill and practice; students learn best and retain information longer when they have
meaningful practice and repetition.
Instructor’s responsibility: Repeat important items of subject matter at reasonable intervals, and provide
opportunities for students to practice while making sure that this process is directed toward a goal
3. The Principle of effect
based on the emotional reaction and motivation of the student.
Learning is strengthened with pleasant or satisfying feeling
It has a direct relationship to motivation
Instructor’s responsibility:
2. Learning Theories
a. Contiguity Theory
▪ Watson and Guthrie emphasized the contiguity of the S and R
John Watson
▪ postulated that behavior is a series of conditioned reflexes, and all emotions and thought is a result of behavior
learned after conditioning.
▪ Ex: Child’s curiosity -----touch stove----- hot----pain----won’t touch the stove anymore even if it is cold.
b. Reinforcement Theory
▪ Thorndike and Skinner proposed that S-R bonds are strengthened by reinforcements such as Rewards and
Punishment
▪ Ex. The child learns to avoid the stove because the pain was a negative reinforcer.
c. Behaviorist Theory
▪ Environmental stimulus, conditions and reinforcement promote changes in response. To change behavior, change
the environment
Transfer of Learning: Practice similarity in stimulus conditions and responses between learning and new
situation
d. Cognitive Theory
▪ Internal perception and thought processing within the context of human development promote learning and change.
▪ To change behavior change cognition
e. Social Learning Theory
▪ External role models and their perceived reinforcement along with learner’s internal influences.
▪ To change behavior, change role models, perceived reinforcement, and the learner’s self-regulating mechanism
f. Psychodynamic Theory
▪ Internal forces such as development stage, childhood experiences, emotional conflicts, and ego strength influence
learning and change.
▪ To change behavior, change interpretations and make unconscious motivations conscious.
g. Humanistic Theory
▪ Internal feelings about self, ability to make wise choices, and needs affect learning and change.
▪ To change behavior, change feelings, self –concept, and needs
3. Types of Learning
3.1. Signal Learning
▪ Conditioned response
▪ Simplest level of learning
▪ The words are enough to evoke fear because she has felt fear whenever taking an actual skill test
3.2. Stimulus-Response Learning
▪ Involves developing a voluntary response to a specific stimulus or a combination of stimulus.
3.3. Chaining
▪ Acquisition of a series of related conditioned responses or stimulus-response connections
3.4. Verbal Association
▪ Type of chaining and is easily recognized in the process of learning medical terminology.
Thermal - hyperthermia
3.5. Discrimination Learning
▪ To learn and retain large number of chains, the person has to be able to discriminate among them.
3.6. Concept Learning
▪ People learn many concepts as they go through life
▪ Learning new concepts when a person has a wound- learn the meaning of wound, inflammation, asepsis, the signs
and symptoms
3.7. Rule Learning
▪ Can be considered a chain of concepts or a relationship between concepts.
▪ If… then relationship: IF you leave your patient in one position for a long period, then, the pressure on a body part
will cause ulceration.
3.8. Problem Solving
▪ To solve problem, learner must have a clear idea of the problem or goal being sought and must be able to recall and
apply previously learned rules that relate to the situation.
▪ A break in aspetic technique can lead to Infection. The rule… “IF ….THEN”
A break in aseptic technique can lead to infection; a break in closed sterile system can lead to entry of pathogens;
and raising the urine bag above the bladder can cause backflow of urine and therefore infection”
▪ Combination of these rules will lead to a higher order learning