Evaluate community linkages and relationships among or determinants affecting health

Evaluate community linkages and relationships among or determinants affecting health

Dear writer, I just received the announcement for week 8 final project due 7/31/2019 at 4pm. Max. 15 pages. Plagiarism less than 21%. The instructor did post anything before today. I sorry for the short time. Thank you. Your paper should include the application of the DNP Essentials that were covered or demonstrated in their Public Health Analysis Paper and the sub-headlines Post your final Public Health Analysis Paper in the Discussion Thread for Week 9 and provide a Peer Review Analysis of a colleague’s paper. See Rubric Submission Details: The Essentials of Doctoral Education for Advanced Nursing Practice 
  1. Scientific Underpinnings for Practice
  2. Organizational and Systems Leadership for Quality Improvement and Systems Thinking
III. Clinical Scholarship and Analytical Methods for Evidence-Based Practice
  1. Information Systems/Technology and Patient Care Technology for the Improvement and Transformation of Health Care
  2. Health Care Policy for Advocacy in Health Care
  3. Interprofessional Collaboration for Improving Patient and Population Health Outcomes
VII. Clinical Prevention and Population Health for Improving the Nation’s Health VIII. Advanced Nursing Practice   These sub-headings were published in Announcements previously. Thank you! Purpose Analysis of Public Health Issue Justice; Legal; and Regulatory Data APRN Impact Relation of Public Health Issue to Healthy People 2020 Public Health Policy Analysis and Application in US Communities Comprehensive Review of the Literature Summation of Findings Possible Application to a Capstone Project References Appendix (optional)
  • Post your response to the Submissions Areaby the due date assigned.
In Week 8 the Doctor of Nursing Practice will gain an understanding of the process of public health care spending and how the US Department of Health and Human Services determines specific resources based upon the needs of the American population. As you read and review all resources, analyze the process for discerning funding for health care in the United States. Describe the current demographics and how funding is utilized to ensure comprehensive health care for Americans and THEN…..Examine the cost of American health care compared to other global markets. Your Learning Objectives for the Week:
  1. Integrate findings from quantitative and qualitative data into strategies for population-focused intervention.
  2. Evaluate community linkages and relationships among or determinants affecting health.
  3. Develop strategies to impact a population health issues.
  4. Analyze implications of population health issues for the Doctor of Nursing Practice.
Health Care in the US In 2015, health care spending in the US increased 5.8 percent to reach $3.2 trillion, or $9,990 per person. The coverage expansion generated by the Affordable Care Act in 2014 influenced the growth of health care spending in 2015. A faster growth in total health care spending in 2015 in the US was influenced by a stronger growth in private spending for health insurance, hospital care, medical and clinical services, and the expansion of State Medicaid and retail prescription drug spending. The most recent data on US health care spending in the 2015 economy was 17.8 percent – this is up from 17.4 percent in 2014. Who Pays for Health Care in the US?
  • In 2015, the largest share of health care funding came directly from the federal government accounting for the largest amount of spending (29 percent),
  • Private Households accounted for the second largest sector of health care spending (28 percent),
  • Private businesses (20 percent), and;
  •  State and local governments (17 percent)
Federal government spending on health care increased 8.9 percent in 2015; an escalation from 11.0 percent in 2014, and surpassed all other sponsors of health care in 2014 and 2015. The increased federal share of health care expenditures is largely the result of State Medicaid Expansion a directive from the Affordable Care Act.  The growth in private house-hold spending is largely driven by contributions to employer-sponsored private insurance premiums. The acceleration of state and local government costs for health care correlate with an increased growth-rate in Medicaid spending and an increased effort to expand care in the home and community setting.

Additional Materials

Access weblinks from the syllabus: Affordable Care Act  Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services  US Department of Health and Human Services  Hickey, J., & Brosnan, C. (2016), Chapter Four, Economic Evaluation National Health Expenditure National Health Expenditure National health spending is projected to grow at an average rate of 5.6 percent per year from 2016 through 2025, and 4.7 percent per year on a per capita basis.
  • US health care spending is projected to grow 1.2% faster than the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per year over nine years between 2016 and 202. The GDP health care share is expected to rise from 17.8 percent in 2015 to 19.9 percent by 2025.
    • Throughout the 2016-25 projection period, growth in national health expenditures is driven by projected growth in medical prices
  • The largest health insurance coverage impact from the Affordable Care Act’s expansion has been observed in 2014-15, the insured share of the population is projected to increase from 90.9 percent in 2015 to 91.5 percent in 2025.
  • Health spending escalation by federal, state & local governments is projected to exceed the growth of private businesses, households, and other private third party payers over the projection period. This is largely due to the strong enrollment growth in Medicare by the baby boomer generation and the government funding for subsidizing premiums in lower income state marketplace enrollees.

Additional Materials

National Health Care Expenditure data 

Per Capita Health Spending Across Countries

PER CAPITA HEALTH SPENDING ACROSS COUNTRIES spans from more than 100 to 1, representing anywhere between 1 percent to well over 10 percent of the national income. The World Health Organization (WHO) recommendation suggests that countries should spend 5 percent of their gross domestic product (GDP) on health care. The US is at approximately 18% of the GDP. The WHO has produced extensive information and detail on health care financing issues, going back as far as 1963. The 5 percent figure first appeared in WHO documents in 1981 as an indicator that should be evaluated and assessed and not specifically as a recommended level of health care spending. Over time, researchers, journalists, and policymakers have transformed this figure into a recommendation. The historical WHO documents provide no explanation for why 5 percent of GDP was selected as the indicator, other than this percentage was close to the upper bound of health care spending estimates in the early 1980s. Setting a 5 percent goal sounds less ambitious today than now in history — partly because researchers underestimated the cost of health care spending largely because of the private spending of health care.

ANSWER.

PAPER DETAILS
Academic Level Masters
Subject Area Nursing
Paper Type  Essay
Number of Pages 13 Page(s)/3575 words
Sources 0
APA
Spacing Double Spaced

If the sample didn't load click the reload button below
If this is not the paper you were searching for, you can order your 100% plagiarism free, custom written paper now!
       

Item Details

Price: $52.00