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Chronic Illness

Chronic Illness. Lisa B. Flatt, RN, MSN, CHPN. Chronic Illness. Chronicity – last indefinitely Medical care – treating symptoms vs. curing. Models. Chronic Illness Trajectory Model Pretrajectory phase – wellness Trajectory phase – onset of symptoms Stable phase – start treatment

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Chronic Illness

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  1. Chronic Illness Lisa B. Flatt, RN, MSN, CHPN

  2. Chronic Illness • Chronicity – last indefinitely • Medical care – treating symptoms vs. curing

  3. Models • Chronic Illness Trajectory Model • Pretrajectory phase – wellness • Trajectory phase – onset of symptoms • Stable phase – start treatment • Unstable phase – changes in treatment/decrease in improvement or management • Acute phase – Sick hospital • Crisis phase – life-threatening • Comeback phase – get a little better • Downward phase – moving towards death • Dying phase – actively dying

  4. Chronic vs. Acute • Chronic – lasting • Acute – short term with end in sight

  5. Adjustment Patterns • Kubler Ross – stages -- LOOK IT UP • Change lifestyle • Change location/environment • Acceptance of limitations • Modifications

  6. Disability • Limitations • Face discrimination • Limitations at home and work • ADA of 1990 protection • Deal with environmental conditions that we don’t think about - curbs

  7. Chronic Illness Issues • Self-care – ADL assistance • Deterioration of Health – progressively grow worse – ie. COPD • Quality of life – decreases, increased problems – such as financial, depression • Caregiver Dimension – family steps in – if there is one – dramatic changes in family life and dynamics

  8. Factors Influencing Adjustment • Gender roles – caregiver is male or female • Age – is there a spouse/SO still there, adult children • Age – ability to continue with their disability • Preferences – who they want to help – relationship with their HCP’s • Spiritual/religious/cultural beliefs • Support • Physical condition at start • Role insufficiency- loss of job, changes

  9. Assumptions • People want to return to their previous state • Intrarole conflict – inability of client to meet new demands of new role • Interrole conflict – cannot perform expected or previous role • Hiding symptoms are normal • “Want to pass”

  10. And more… • Culture – Chinese (oldest male cares for parents) Middle Eastern – women caregivers hard to be sick and step down Different rituals • Some cultures remove from society • Different interpretations of quality of life • Response to chronic illness and why you became ill in the first place

  11. And more…. • Socioeconomic factors • Unemployment • Cost • Health insurance or lack of • Food and healthy eating

  12. And more…. • Environmental factors • Structural • Transportation • Occupational hazards • Safety issues • Patient safety needed equipment/lifts

  13. Psychological • Depression • Anger • Isolative • Stigma to be ill • Dependence • Clingy • Want to be normal • Learned helplessness

  14. Review… • Alternative and complementary therapies • Right to Health Care • ??What kind of and how good is it???

  15. Model of Chronic Illness • 133 million Americans have a chronic illness • This number will increase 1% a year until 2030 • CDC – CV disease, cancer, diabetes • Medicare/medicaid/private insurance/HMO • Ethical and legal implications – Patient advocate

  16. Developmental Disabilties Acts • 1975 – mental disorders • 1980- advocacy program • OBRA (omnibus reconciliation act) 1990 – right to refuse treatment • PSDA (patient self determination act) 1991 – inform of rights and have signed papers • Advanced and DNR

  17. Nursing Process • Assessment – adl’s; advocacy; ethical and legal aspect • Analysis – collaboration, establish diagnosis and goals • Planning – plan short term realistic goals for illness “caregiver will state plan for respite” • Implementation – intervene for person, simple measures • Evaluation – effectiveness of interventions determine further needs

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