Role of Nurses in Policy Making to Improve Outcomes, prevent Illnesses and Reduce Hospital Readmissions.
Nurses spend significant time working directly with patients, so they are familiar with the specific needs of the people they serve. As a result, nurses can advocate for public policy changes that benefit the patients they care for. They develop policies where none exist, reform harmful or ineffective policies, and ensure those good policies are implemented and enforced (Turale & Kunaviktikul, 2019).
One of the most critical areas where nurses can influence policy is smoking cessation, where policies such as imposing heavy taxes on cigarettes or prohibiting smoking within specific areas may aid in smoking cessation. Because smoking is a risk factor for hypertension, smoking reduction or cessation is an evidence-based lifestyle modification to lower blood pressure (improve outcomes), prevent hypertension, or reduce readmission of already hypertensive patients.
Nursing Theory or Conceptual Framework that frames and guides Actions during my Practicum
Nursing theories provide the foundations for the knowledge and skills used in practice. Comfort is a valuable outcome of care during delivery; I would thus refer to Katharine Kolcaba’s theory of comfort. Kolcaba distinguished three types of comfort: relief, which involves relieving patients of, say, pain, ease, which addresses comfort in a state of contentment, and transcendence, which is a state of comfort in which patients can rise above their challenges. (Oliveira et al., 2020). Understanding that comfort can take the form of physical, psychospiritual, environmental, or sociocultural contexts; I will ensure that all strategies and care interventions delivered aim to provide comfort to the population group identified.