Windshield Survey: Improve The Health Of A Community Nursing

Superior Essays
Windshield Survey
Tonya Bates
Allyson Carter
NSG 3068
November 5, 2016
Annette Mathieson, RN MSN

Windshield Survey
The purpose of the windshield survey is to establish an informal methodology conducted by a community health nurse to obtain basic knowledge about a distinct community. Community assessment is key to planning, implementing, and evaluating strategies to improve the health of a specific community. Through driving and walking a windshield survey provides a subjective of the many physical characteristics of a community .

Community
Essential to the role of community nursing is community assessment. In order to clarify the process it is crucial to understand the various types of community. There are two types of
…show more content…
Fortunately, nursing has a unique role in generating evidence based change for this measure. Nurse can provide education toward implementing change in postpartum care of the baby and mother. Nurses also have the ability to involve themselves in providing primary care by forming collective connections with diverse community agencies to educate the new mother and the community at large about the benefits of breastfeeding for at least the first 6 months. A nurses voice is essential as well in political expression and membership of professional organizations, paving the way through primary prevention leading to better health for all.
Interviews
To better understand the community and identify its needs; interviewing community members can be a vital part of collecting information. Information collected in the interview provides insights to the cultural ideologies that contribute to specific health issues and obstacles that are presented. Each person conducted an interview in order to get a diverse response. Interview A was with a 23 year old male that has lived in an apartment across from the clinic for two years. Interview B was done at a Mexican restaurant with 19 year old girl who lived with her family and was going to ACC.
1. To what extent do you think that teenage pregnancy is a problem that needs to be
…show more content…
Do you believe that sex education encourages underage sexual activity?
a. “Yes, sex education encourages kids by making them more curious and giving them information that they should be given at home.”
b. “No because there is a lot of false information shared between high schoolers and on media that already encourages kids to have sex.”

5. Do you think teenage mothers less likely to finish their education, find a good job, and end up as single parents?
a. “Teenagers that have baby’s are still kids themselves and few are ready for the responsibility of taking care of someone else. Without a strong support system it is most likely that a teenage mom will not be able to finish school then get a job that will support her and a baby. I believe that all teenage mom’s will end up as single mom’s because the man usually does not want to stick around and take care of the baby and nobody wants to marry a women who already has a baby.”
b. “Yes, my own mother didn’t finish high school and had to get her GED later.”

6. What do you think is the biggest obstacle to overcoming teen pregnancy?
a. “The biggest obstacles for teenage mom’s is getting enough support to raise the baby and take care of

Related Documents

  • Decent Essays

    It is hard for a teenager to lose the support of their friends and family when they are going through difficult times in their life. They depend on the people close to them to have their backs and be there for them to lean on when having a rough day. However, pregnant teens are losing that social support because their peers do not want to be associated with the girl that got pregnant in high school. Many of the teens are seen as an outcast and are judged harshly by their peers. This rift between pregnant teens and their peers causes many negative implications.…

    • 436 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    After reading the excerpt from “Dubious Conceptions: The Politics of the Teenage Pregnancy Crisis” by Kristin Luker, I found myself agreeing with multiple topics she discussed. The first point of agreement is how our society has been using scapegoats for social issues, especially teenage pregnancy, and blaming that social issue and others for creating poverty rather than viewing it as a result of poverty. This social issue started a stereotype or perceived image of a teen mother. Teen goes to college, grows up and gets married, and obtains financial stability before bearing children is the basic American image. Being a teen mom would disrupt, the woman who financially stable and have a steady career should only bear children narrative.…

    • 566 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In the article “Unmarried with Children” the authors Edin, Kathryn and Maria Kefalas, discuss with a young girl named Jen Burke the struggles of becoming a mother at a young age without any education, husband or much money. The question “why do they have children while still young and unmarried when they will face such an uphill battle to support them?” is asked and Jen opens up about why she chose to make the decisions that she did. I chose this article because I relate to it. Although I did not grow up in the same social setting as Jen, we are both young women unmarried with children. Kathryn Kefalas is a Professor in the Department of Sociology.…

    • 839 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Schools and parents need to start concentrating on teaching their young teenagers about how the body works and what are ways to prevent teen pregnancy. They need to do this is because the research from the article “A Strategy Backfires, Increasing Teen Births," written by Zoe Greenberg, has shown that using the computerized baby system increases the number of teens getting pregnant and giving births. Educating teens at a younger age, such as 12 and 13, about using contraceptives and becoming abstain has shown to decrease the amount of teen pregnancies and teen births. The research shown in the articles from the New York Times written by Kate Zernike and another author from the Opinions Page shows that educating kids and talking to them about using contraception’s and going to abstinence programs could decrease the amount of teen pregnancies…

    • 2282 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Teen pregnancy and childbearing affect the education, income, well-being and health of both the parents and their children. Only half of teens moms earn a high school diploma by the time they reach age 22, compared to nearly 90 percent of women who do not give birth as teens. Less than 2 percent of teen moms earn a college degree by age 30. Studies show that young fathers often have lower levels of educational achievement as well. Teen pregnancy and a lack of education often contribute to a cycle of economic hardship that spans generations.…

    • 1290 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Babies are Having Babies Teen Pregnancy is a major concern in today’s society. Over the years teen pregnancy rates has changed. Being a teenager and finding out you are pregnant, especially if the pregnancy is unexpected and not wanted, can put massive stress on a young woman and her family. There are many ways to try and reduce teen pregnancy, and everyone has an opinion on it. However, mothers and daughters go through so many phases (financially, emotional, mental, physical) and these could be prevented if teen pregnancy were reduced by kids using contraceptives, birth control, and sexual abstinence.…

    • 1317 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Community Health Nursing

    • 1841 Words
    • 8 Pages

    Specified objectives: #1 Describe the characteristics of the community health nursing #2 Apply the roles of the professional nurse to community setting #6 Assess factors that affect family health and its impact on individuals, families, and aggregates in their community #8 Assess a selected community and develop a plan to address health problems in the community Description: As I arrived to Lansdale Catholic high school I pulled into a large parking lot with a beautiful field out back. The high school was fairly small, 2 floors with about 6 hundred students total. Each grade had approximately 150 students, the freshman grade being the largest. The school only has one nurse present during the day who handles all the students and faculty.…

    • 1841 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Abstinence Education for the Adolescent Teen Like many other teens, Susan always thought about having sex because most of her friends stated that they had already done it. At the age of 16 years old, Susan was an honor roll student, was never dishonest, nor disobedient, and had a lot going for herself. She was a junior in high school when she met her boyfriend Jim. The couple were inseparable. Susan and Jim after a double date outing with some friends, made the choice to engage in a sexual activity of romance.…

    • 2423 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Abstinence In Teens

    • 1512 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Almost all teens state they or their partner got pregnant because they did not know what to do. (Promise) This is also a reason that sexual diseases are spread. A lack of sexual education can also create problems for teens in their later life. Neglecting to instruct teens about practicing safe sex can result in many different things such as pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases. To help prevent this public schools should teach everything that they can about sex to help educate these teens.…

    • 1512 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    The Bean Trees is a story about young women who live at a disadvantage because of an not planned parenthood but is trying to improve her life. However, Taylor Greer, one of the main characters in The Bean Trees, by Barbara Kingsolver, fell into motherhood that was not planned, “…she sets this bundle down on the seat of my car...take this baby... it’s my dead’s sister’s…and walked away…”(Kingsolver 18). Taylor had to take in a baby because it was thrown into her car. Although wanting to reject the girl who gave it to her, the girl left and went back into a bar before she could give the child back.…

    • 1203 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    “For example, there are health risks for the baby, and children born to teenage mothers are more likely to suffer health, and children born to teenage mothers are more likely to suffer health, social, and emotional problems than children born to older mothers. Also, women who become pregnant during their teens are at increased risk for medical complications such as premature labor, and social consequences” (Swierzewski). If there are higher chances of post-partum effects, young mothers should be informed and clarified of this information before they give…

    • 1053 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Holly was only sixteen. How was she supposed to tell her mom, her dad, her boyfriend. She couldn’t move from the end of the bed where she’d been sitting, waiting to see the results. She was going to get kicked out of her house, Keith would probably leave her. It was just one time, there’s no way this could happen.…

    • 1346 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Over the last decade, the number of teenage pregnancies in the United States has been on a steady decline. Television shows like 16 and Pregnant and Teen Mom are using the media as a platform to have open discussions about pregnancy preventions and young motherhood. While teenage pregnancy is decreasing, it is still high. It is very important to educate teens and young adults on young pregnancies and the effects on themselves and their children. Children who are born to teenage mothers are faced with struggles in their lives due to higher risks for birth defects and health issues, education struggles, and the likelihood of teenage pregnancies themselves.…

    • 1247 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The Community Nursing (3QQ3) course has been an eye opening journey for me in to the world of community nursing. At the start of the initial course doing the practice tools I was quite apprehensive and had no idea what to expect. It was hard in the early few weeks to see how this course would evolve. But, as I became oriented and more familiar with the community the bigger picture began to form. Indeed, the windshield survey was a great tool to assess our community.…

    • 819 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    FINAL PAPER: ACTION RESEARCH PAPER ABOUT “TEENAGE PREGNANCY” By: Matthew Olavydez Submitted to: Mr. Lance Sayurin ID Number: 11553132 OVERVIEW In the Philippines, especially the poor rural areas, ages from 10-19 years old is said to have experienced premarital sex and that merits those teens to become a teenage parents. Teenage is pregnancy is an important issue for several reasons.…

    • 1009 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays

Related Topics