Community Diagnosis:: Community Health Nursing Process
Community Diagnosis:: Community Health Nursing Process
Community Diagnosis:: Community Health Nursing Process
• The community health nursing process, like the nursing process in general, is
composed of Assessment, Diagnosis, Planning, Implementation, and Evaluation.
However, for purposes of tradition, community assessment is already integrated into
the process of community diagnosis.
• COMMUNITY DIAGNOSIS:
TRADITIONAL PARTICIPATORY ACTION RESEARCH
Research for purpose of identifying and meeting Research seeks social transformation.
individual needs with existing social systems.
Community problems or needs are defined by 2.The research problems are defined bybthecommunity members themselves
experts or external researchers who are considered/viewed as “experts of their own reality.”
The research problem is studies by the researchers 3.The community group undertake the investigation or research from data
who control the research process. collection to analysis. External researchers work alongside the community
group.
Recommendations for the community are based on 4.The community formulates recommendations and an action plan based on
the researcher’s findings and analysis. research outcome.
▪ Decide on the depth and scope of the data to be gathered; regardless of the type of
community diagnosis to be conducted.
▪ The nurse must determine the occurrence and distribution of selected environmental,
socio-economic, and behavioral conditions important to disease prevention and
wellness promotion.
▪ Identify the population group, based on the objectives of the study; the study
population maybe the entire community population or be focused on a population
group, such as women in the reproductive age group or the infants.
c. Prepare the Community
▪ Meet with community leaders to enable the nurse to formulate the community
diagnosis objectives .
▪ Initial data are gathered through the key leaders are as follows:
• Spot map of the entire community
• Initial secondary data ( total number of households per area, total population per area,
list of traditional healers, list of CHWs)
d. Choose the Methodology and Instrument of Community Diagnosis
2. Implementation
a. Actual data Gathering
▪ During the actual data gathering, the nurse supervises the data collectors by checking
the filled-out instruments for completeness, accuracy, and reliability of the
information collected.
▪ Demographic data
▪ Economic characteristics
▪ Social indicators
▪ Political characteristics
▪ Cultural characteristics
▪ Environmental indicators
o Community dimensions directly related to health
▪ Maternal and child health care – family planning, midwifery services, child care
▪ Food and nutrition – daily food budget, daily food intake, knowledge on basic food
groups
▪ Illness and injury- type of sickness, medical personnel attending to the sick, where the
sick go for consultation and treatment, types and sources of medicines, dental care,
mental health, accidents, causes of death.
▪ Water and environment – water supply and storage, food storage, sanitation (excreta,
garbage, waste water disposal, pets and vermin control)
▪ Endemic diseases
▪ Health education
c. Presentation/Organization of Data:
• Data collected may be presented as:
o Statistical tables
o Graphs
o Descriptive data
Line Graph:
Pie Chart:
Bar Graph:
d. Analysis of Data:
• Aims to establish trends and patterns in terms of health needs and problems of the
community.
• It allows comparison of obtained data with standard values.
e. Identification of Community Health Nursing Problems
• Make a list of the health problems and categorize them as:
o Health Status Problems
▪ The problems are classified by the nurse as health status, health resources, or health
related problems.
o Magnitude of the Problem
▪ Refers to the severity of the problem, which can be measured in terms of the
proportion of the population affected by the problem.
o Modifiability of the Problem
▪ Refers to the probability of controlling or reducing the effects posed by the problem
o Social Concern
▪ Refers to the perception of the population or the community as they are affected by
the problem.
• Steps in Prioritizing Problems
1. Score each problem according to each criteria.
2. Divide the score by the highest possible score.
3. Multiply the answer by the weight of the criteria
4. Add the final score for each criterion to get the total score for the problem. The
highest possible score is 10, while the lowest possible score is 1 /
5
12.
5. The problem with the highest total score is given high priority by the nurse.
• SCORING SYSTEM IN PRIORITIZING HEALTH PROBLEMS
CRITERIA Highest Possible Score WEIGH
T
NATURE OF THE PROBLEM
Health Status 3
Health Resources 2 1
Health-Related 1
MAGNITUDE OF THE PROBLEM
75% - 100% Affected 4
50% - 74% Affected 3 3
25% - 49% Affected 2
< 25% Affected 1
MODIFIABILITY OF THE PROBLEM
High 3
Moderate 2 4
Low 1
Not Modifiable 0
PREVENTIVE POTENTIAL
High 3
Moderate 2 1
Low 1
SOCIAL CONCERN
Urgent community concern 2
Recognized as a problem but not needing urgent attention 1 1
Not a community concern 0
TOTAL SCORE:
PLANNING:
• Refersto the process of constructing a program, formula, or alternative model that will be used
as basis for a course of action or decision in order to achieve a desired end.
• Participatory
planning is a process by which a community undertakes to reach a given socio-
economic goal by continuously diagnosing its problems and charting a course of action to
resolve those problems. Experts are needed, but only as facilitators. Moreover, no one likes to
participate in something which is not of his/her own creation.
• TYPES OF PLAN:
1. Strategic plan - a long range of plan that extends from 3-5 years
2. Operational plan - short-range plan (less than 3 years) that deals with the routine activities of an
organization.
3. Program plan – courses of action for the solution or improvement of a particular health problem,
and deals with formulation of strategies.
b. Mission statement :
➢ Defines what an organization does and includes tangible goals which the organization strives to
accomplish.
➢ It is a short summary of an organization’s core purpose, focus, and aims. This usually includes
a brief description of what the organization does and its key objective
GOALS
➢ broad and not constrained by time and resources; states the ultimate desired end point of all
activities; it is directed towards solving health status problems
Example: To reduce the incidence of tuberculosis among children in Atok, Benguet.
OBJECTIVES
➢ stated in specific and measurable terms, client-centered, and outcome-focused; concerned with
the resolution of the health problem itself. It is stated SMART
Formulation of the objectives:
➢ An important step in participatory local planning is to define precisely what specific objectives
are to be achieved, which should be stated in concrete terms, e.g. increasing i) incomes of
identified households, ii) production of certain crops and iii) literacy among locally elected
women officials.
➢ The objective may not always be quantifiable, particularly when it involves attitudinal changes.
It’s still helps to be as specific as possible so that people can see how much change has taken
place.
Long-Term Objective: Example: By the year 2025, the incidence of
tuberculosis among children in Atok, Benguet will be reduced by 15%
Short-term objective: At the end of 2020, 80% of infants in Atok,
Benguet will be immunized with BCG.
80% of households will have access to safe and adequate water supply
within six months.
mobilizing needed resources and choosing the planning methods. It is important to specify: a)
resources that are locally available and those needed from outside. (people with skills, funds,
raw material inputs, etc.); b) if resources are available when needed; and c) who should be
approached, who will approach and with whose help to secure these.
▪ Consider alternative local planning methods and approaches such as (i) whether to contract a
job to private individuals or to do it on a cooperative basis; ii) whether to focus on several small
household-based units or one big unit; and iii) whether to train local people as trainers for the
jobs or to hire trained personnel from outside.
▪ Once a course of action is chosen, it should be explained and specified in clear terms to avoid
Ensuring feasibility
▪ The working groups at this point should consider whether the objectives are realistic. It is
important to ensure that: i) assumptions and stipulations regarding the availability of resources,
managerial competence and technical expertise are realistic; ii) proposed activities are
economically viable; and iii) local market can absorb the expected outputs.
▪ It is important to identify potential project beneficiaries and check how the benefits would flow to
them.
Program Planning:
o A type of plan concerned with courses of action for the solution or improvement of a particular
health problem;
o It deals with formulation of a strategy for the achievement of a given health policy objective;
o Also referred to as “very big projects or the composite of more than one big project.”
o Types of programs:
• Refer to programs to formulate policies, programs, and projects; to direct coordinate and control
activities; and to provide informational and administrative support (including personnel, finance
and logistics, and legal services)
▪ Programs for health system infrastructure
• Include programs for planning and development of a basic health facility network, health
manpower policies and training, health education and public information
▪ Technology program
Example:
Health Problem: 40% of school-age children have ascariasis
1. Community ownership
▪ Community ownership is the act or degree of ownership and responsibility taken by the
can only come with their full participation in the decisions regarding planning as well as their
assuming some responsibility for implementation.
▪ Community ownership in health means community participation in health through legal or
authorized right to focus on:
▪ Local health issues
people
▪ Promotes co-operation, coordination and collaboration between the stakeholders and the
community people
▪ Raise community leadership and empowerment
implementation
▪ Community awareness on various diseases prevention and control
▪ Lack of coordination and collaboration among community members causing huge gap between
3. Partnership and collaboration – the aim of partnership and collaboration is to get people to
work together to address problems or concerns that affect them. It gives the people the
opportunity to learn skills in group relationship, interpersonal relations, critical analysis, and
most important of all, decision-making process in the context of democratic leadership. At this
point, people become partners, NOT competitors.
Types of Evaluation:
• Impact Evaluation – estimates the impact of care or of a program on a client by comparing the
conditions of the affected groups after it has taken place with what they would have been.
• Cost effectiveness analysis – done to compare alternative care interventions in terms of the cost
of producing a given output.
• Both monitoring and evaluation are vital elements of care.
• Both are interrelated processes and require baseline information and documentation during
implementation.
Reminder: Participatory monitoring and evaluation is an integral part of the participatory project
design and implementation process. It works best when the entire project process, from
planning to the final evaluation, is conducted in a participatory manner.
Participatory monitoring enables project participants to generate, analyse, and use information
for their day-to-day decision making as well as for long-term planning.
Participatory M&E encourages dialogue at the grassroots level and moves the community from
the position of passive beneficiaries to active participants with the opportunity to influence the
project activities based on their needs and their analysis. In addition, information is shared both
horizontally and vertically within the implementing organization. It is generated by the
community group and shared first with the larger community, and then with the donor. In
contrast to conventional monitoring where information moves vertically – from the CBO to the
donor – in participatory monitoring, information is much more widely shared, particularly at its
source, which is the community.
The examples below illustrate the two approaches to monitoring and evaluation.
Organization A Organization B
Every month, field staff collect the number of condoms distributed in Every month, field staff collect the number of condoms distributed in
health centers and report those figures to their project manager. health centers. Community representatives, health center staff, and
Every month, the project manager adds up the distribution numbers project field staff discuss this information during their monthly review
and sends the report to the donor. The donor enters the figures into a meetings. These data are then sent to project headquarters for
computer, and generates a report for the Ministry of Foreign forwarding to the donor. When the number of condoms distributed
Assistance. Very few people actually look at the data to see what it is decreased, the local stakeholders tried to figure out why by asking
saying. Is condom distribution increasing or decreasing? Will the clients. With a simple change in strategy, they were able to once again
project reach its objective of reducing sexually transmitted infections? increase the number of condoms distributed. Monitoring information was
How can field staff, health center staff, and community members used within the organization to improve the program and to report to the
work together to make the project a success? donor
Indicators are signals: they indicate the status of, or change in, something. They work as
markers like milestones on the roadside which indicate the distance travelled, or the location at
a given point.
When implementing projects, indicators are used to check project progress and results.
Indicators are ‘measures’ that demonstrate progress and results to project staff and volunteers,
to the beneficiary community, and to the donors.
Types of Indicators:
1. Process indicator – this indicates the project’s stage of implementation – the progress in
completing planned activities
2. Change indicator - describes the level of change achieved through the activities. They are also
referred to as results indicators since they indicate the results that are achieved through the
project’s intervention
Good indicators should be useful in the establishment of “trigger points” for action. Good
indicators are sometimes referred to as CREAM indicators:
➢ Clear - precise and unambiguous
➢ Relevant - appropriate to the subject at hand
➢ Economical - available at reasonable cost
➢ Adequate - provides a sufficient basis to assess performance
➢ Monitorable - amenable to independent validation
Qualitative indicators describe the state of something using words rather than numbers.
Examples include:
➢ BHWs are able to get vital signs correctly
➢ Mothers were able to discuss the causes and prevention of ascariasis
Objectives Indicators
Conduct a 3-day training for 10 community leaders from each of the 3 villages on discrimination against • No. of training workshops
people living with HIV/AIDS and affected families by the 3rd month. conducted ____
• Number of community leaders
trained ___
Male___ Female___
Conduct a 5-day basic health skills training for BHWs • Number of training sessions
conducted ___
• Total number of BHW
trained__
Male____ Female____
Easter College | Dept. of Nursing | Community Health Nursing | Prepared
by Bertha PadallaAlibcagPage 12
I. INTRODUCTION:
B. COMMUNITY AS CLIENT
a. COLONIAL PERIOD (15 Century- WWII): Development was defined as relief and
th
rehabilitation work just to patch up the damages brought about by the war.
• It was indeed a social work but it was a temporary nature of development.
E. COMPONENTS OF DEVELOPMENT:
1. Social development
2. Political development
3. Economic development.
4. Cultural development
5. Ecological, Environmental/ Physical development
1. CD is concerned with all the people of the community, rather than any particular or
segment of the population.
2. CD is concerned with the whole of community life instead of any one specialized
aspect.
3. CD is concerned with bringing about social change in the community
4. CD is concerned with the problem solving of social issues and conflicts.
5. CD is based upon the philosophy of self-help and participation by as many member of
the community as possible
6. CD usually involves technical assistance, personnel, equipment, supplies, money or
consultation from the government or voluntary private organizations, both domestic
and foreign
7. CD is essentially interdisciplinary
8. CD is both a concern task goals and process goals
9. CD involves educational process. It is always concernedwith “teaching and learning”
from the people.
10. CD continues over a substantial period of time. It is not a CRASH program, but rather
it is a process.
11. CD program should be based on felt needs, and desires, as well as aspirations of the
people in the community.
12. CD directs participation is open to any resident who wishes to participate.
G. GOALS OF DEVELOPMENT:
H. OBSTACLES OF DEVELOPMENT:
1. Man himself (ex. Greediness, selfishness, dishonesty,etc)
2. Conditions that are less humane brought about by a number of causes like poverty,
ignorance, ill health
3. Unjust oppressive structures and situations which serves to dehumanize man.
Examples: social injustice and human exploitation
Non-participatory approaches utilized in trying to bring about
change.
ASSUMPTIONS PRINCIPLE
1. Issue that threaten people’s lives move them to action, therefore; 1. Do not ignore a highly pressing issue that is identified
by the majority.
2. Any person is afraid to go against many, strong and organized 2. Mass-based leadership is imperative
people, therefore;
3. People are open to change, have the capacity to change and are able 3. Provide opportunity to change and capability to
to bring about change, if given the chance to do so, therefore; change
4. Provide them the chance to make development happen
that should lead to a just and self-reliant community
4. Learning happens fast when one experiences something successful, 5. Provide practical true-to-life activities where people
concrete and practical, therefore; will likely succeed. (experiential learning)
5. Any person is an image of God, full of worth and dignity so he/she is 6. Let the people decide or allow for consensus building,
responsible for his own life, therefore; instead of making decisions for them
6. Development is not offered in a silver platter, therefore; 7. People who want development to happen should
strive for it.
7. People who develop the attitude or practice of self-evaluation every 8. Always conduct ARAS with the people
after an activity is able to identify areas for improvement, therefore;
1. It
is an investigation of problems and issues concerning the life and environment of the
underprivileged by way of collaboration with them as equal partners.
2. It
is a strategy of development where in community needs, conditions and problem are
identified, solutions are planned and priorities are implemented through a partnership
with the community and with the otherconcerned agencies.
1. Conscientization / Arousal
2. Participation / Organize
3. Action / Mobilization
A. IMPORTANCE OF COPAR:
1. COPARrecognizes that individuals and small group with varying interests compose a
community.
C. GOALS OF COPAR:
1. People empowerment.
2. Social restructuring which means:
a. Equitable distribution of wealth, power in health and resources.
b. Organize the silent PDOES to speak up
c. Decision making that is now coming from the majority instead of the elite.
3. Alliance building
4. Genuine democracy
5. Improved quality of life.
1. AS FACILITATOR:
a. Helps enhance individual and group strengths and helps maximize weakness and
conflicts.
b. Heightens group unity.
c. Assists individuals and group respond to common interests.
2. AS TRAINOR:
a. Assesses training needs of local leaders.
b. Helps plan and conduct educational programs to strengthen individual and group
capabilities.
c. Assists key leaders in training others.
d. Engages in continuous dialogues with people.
e. Helps in remolding the leaders and members in terms of skill and attitudes towards
self-determination.
3. AS ADVOCATES:
a. Helps analyze and articulate critical issues.
b. Assists others to understand and reflect upon these issues.
c. Evokes and provokes meaningful discussions and actions.
4. AS RESEARCHER:
a. Conducts social analysis
b. Engages in participatory research wherein people become co-investigator.
c. Simplifies/enriches appropriate research concepts and skills in order to make these
functional for the people interests.
d. Engages in social integration to understand social phenomena from the people’s point
of view.
5. AS PLANNER:
a. Conducts initial analysis of area resources and potentials
b. Assists local groups in planning for their common good, including appropriate
strategies and alternative actions.
c. Helps systematize groups’ actions to attain desired goals.
6. AS A CATALYST:
a. Initiates debates and actions regarding critical problems.
b. Monitors and nurtures growth of individuals and groups to facilitate long term
structural transformation for people’s welfare.
E. QUALITIES OF AN ORGANIZER:
1. Irreverence
2. Sense of Humor
3. Visionary
4. Tenacity
5. Flexibility
6. Genuine Love for People
7. Critical Thinker
F. THE DO’S AND DON’TS OF COMMUNITYORGANIZING
DO’s:
1. Be one and be familiar with the people you are working with.
2. Have an orientation or faith in the power of people to transform. Have trust in the
people’s capability to change.
3. Be conscious of balancing local and national issues. The entire CO revolves around
concrete local issues as the best starting point for training consciousness and
motivation for action. CO ought not to be limited to local issues because the roots of
the local problems are to found in larger national structures.
4. Assess action on the basis whether they are consensus oriented. CO is democratic and
participatory in all aspects.
5. Anticipate the responses of outside forces and be prepared for this. This is to prepare
both the people and the organizer on what actions to be undertaken. Always prepare
with the people to the incoming problems.
6. If there is conflict between authority and the people, go with the people. This is the
general rule that governs CO.
7. Should there be economic projects as entry point, it must be undertaken within the
context of supporting and sustaining the struggle towards people’s goals, elevating
their awareness and consciousness by inculcating values and a concrete expressions of
the alternative system we are working for.
DON’T’S:
1. Don’t romanticize
2. Don’t be an empiricist.
3. Don’t protect people from hardships.
4. Don’t be dogmatic
1.2. Initial consultation with the LGU’s, existing PO’s and other relevant
agencies.
Thus facilitates the CO in:
a. identifying the communities that fit the criteria
b. Initially introducing the importance and goals of community health development work.
PURPOSES OF PSI
For the CO to get to know the community he or she is going to immerse and work
with and identify potential issues which might motivate people to action. It must be an
issue that:
A. Affect a large number of community folks
B. People affected strongly feel that it is an urgent and important concern
C. Preferably winnable or the people should be able to get what they want.
HOW TO DO PSI:
A. Study the existing documents or reports (secondary data) at the municipal, barangay
health offices and related agencies. Data would include the following:
B. Observe and engage in actual dialogues and informal interviews with key informants
of the community.
• Current needs/problems or issues that highly affect them at the moment and may
galvanize action from them
• Important data needed in a health program but which are not found in the existing
secondary data
• Stage of health development of the community and its health programs and activities
being implemented and the approach being utilized.
• Constraints and problems encountered by other agencies while working in the area.
D. Write-upanalysis and formulation of an initial plan which will later serve as a guide
for the CO when he/she facilitates the community in formulating their own
development action plan.
a. Pay respect to the leaders of the community as a form of initially establishing rapport.
e. To know the other municipal and barangay officials, especially the heads of
Offices and other health/non health related agencies based inthe same
community.
f. To level off expectations with the municipal officials in terms of support, roles etc.
g. Initial
discussions planning of some immediate activities upon entry of the program
with the key persons.
c. Conduct initial dialogues with the community residents available and obtain ideas,
feelings and reactions about possible entry of a health agency and about their
experiences with previous agencies.
B ENTRY PHASE
• This signals the actual entry and immersion of the CO in the selected community
• Also termed as the social preparation and critical awareness building phase and it is
considered as the most crucial phase because it includes major activities on
sensitizations of the people on the critical events on their lives.
CRITICAL ACTIVITIES
C. Respected the people and recognize the positive aspects of their culture
that give them the strength to struggle.
E. Modify their own values and lifestyle in keeping with that of the community
1. The health worker’s appearance, speech, behavior and lifestyle should be keeping with
those of the community residents, without disregard of his/her being a model
2. Avoid raising the expectation of the community residents by adopting a low key
profile and approach
3. Live with the poor sectors of the community for at least three months
4. Visit
as many people as possible in the community through house to house visits
answering house calls to avoid creating jealousies and factions
5. Participate in direct production and social activities of the people as well as household
chores
6. Seek
out and converse with people where they usually congregate such as in the stores,
wells, washing streams, church or house yards
a. Share high level of interest and needs and are open/willing to share
needs and interests with others on a collective basis.
f. Share similar vision, goals and values with that of the people
5. Helps in laying out plans and tasks for the formation and maintenance
community wide organization
• KEY PERSON – star in the sociogram. The person who is most approach by many
people. An obvious leader, a person/ people from whom the CO has to win support
and train the local CO or the alter ego.
b. Getthe identified indigenous leaders to express their support to the COPAR approach,
its phases and activities.
*In areas where there are no volunteers, home visit will be done by the CO
himself/herself.
*In areas where there are trained community health volunteers, the CO
plans with them regarding shared home visit, where the community
volunteer health worker act as the frontline and the CO helps to enhance
skills of the volunteer worker.
E. GROUNDWORKING
•A basic tactic used in community organizing work where the CO goes around and
motivate peoples and identified leaders on a one to one basis to do something about an
issue at hand or to raise a particular issue during a barangay meeting.
• To mind set community leaders and residents about a particular issue.
F. COMMUNITY MEETING/CONSULTATION
The first of a series of community meetings that will be held during this
phase with the following objectives:
A. To get the people’s collective ideas and feelings about the entry of the agency to their
community in terms of acceptability or unacceptability.
D. To evoke from the community residents about their vision of a happy family and
developed community in the light of their analyzed situation.
• As a process, the CDx is a continuous learning experience for both the agency and the
community.
- For the agency- it learns to alter its initially drafted plans and programs in order to
adapt to the results of the community analysis.
- For the community- it allows them the opportunity to gradually understand their own
situation and the potential advantages that change can bring about.
- As a continuous activity in all the phases of COPAR, social investigation goes on even
if there is already an existing CDx
1. This activity can be well facilitated if the CO has well integrated with and has acquired
the trust of the people.
o Dishonesty of data that will be given especially if the worker has not yet fully
integrated with the people.
o Difficulty of the community folks and leaders inreading and answering usually very
long questionnaires.
o Previous experience of community folks with traditional researchers that leave them a
feeling of being subjects of study instead of being active participants of the study
o Data can be more effectively gathered through information methods like casual
conversation and the use of participatory appraisal tools
4. Validation of community data should be done regularly.
CRITICAL ACTIVITIES:
ACTIVITIES
1. Organization and training of the different committees
2. Project implementation, monitoring and evaluation based on CDAP
3. Action-Reflection-Action-Session
• A regular cycle of evaluation which largely focuses on self reflection about one’s
contribution to the success and failure of an activity and what one can do to enhance
or improve future similar activity/actions.
Objectives:
a. For an individual or group to identify and celebrate their own strengths related to an
activity just completed
b. For them to critically analyze the cause of mistakes and failures in that particular
activity, so that consequent suggestion can be done, thus, they will be more capable of
effectively transforming the next activity and their daily errors in life.
c. To relieve the pains experienced due to errors or mistakes due to behaviors of others in
the community.
d. To reconcile hurt feelings among the members of the group.
1. Networking/Linkage Building
a. It involves establishing of working relationship with different agencies other
organization/sectors
b. Community based organization can form network or federation to enhance their
organization capabilities and widen their support base.
c. It is in phase that when the organization has attained unity and ability for collective
decision-making, consolidation and expansion activities can be pursued.
2. Consolidation/Expansion
Consolidation means more advanced skills training, higher form of mobilization,
integrated and long term program/projects, additional committees and tasks.
**The relationship between the CO and the people is temporary. If the goal of
empowering the community is achieved, then roles of the outside organizer end and
shift to a supportive role.