Module 2
Module 2
Objectives:
At the end of the module, you are expected to:
1. Assume responsibility for lifelong learning, own personal development and maintenance of
competence.
2. Engage in advocacy activities to influence health and social care service policies and access to
services
3. Model professional behavior as a community health nurse.
4. Assess with the individual and family one’s health status/competence.
5. Formulate with the client a plan of care to address the health conditions, needs, problems, and
issues based on priorities.
6. Implement safe and quality interventions with the client to address the health needs, problems
and issues.
7. Provide health education using selected planning models to targeted clientele (individuals and
families) in the community
8. Participate in research study as member of a research team.
9. Evaluate with the client the health status/competence
At the start of the module, you are to take pre assessment test to see how much background
information and knowledge you have.
This module is self – instructional. You can read, analyze concepts and ideas presented and relied
on them. The Activities and Self – Check Questions will help you assess how you progress as you go
through the module.
Yours answers to the Self – Check Questions and Activities may be self – evaluated by your
facilitator if you so desire. These will be part of your formative evaluation. Do not write your answers in
the module. Your answers should be written in a separate notebook.
The answer key to the Self – Check Questions and Activities are found at the end of this module.
The post assessment will be given in a separate booklet upon completion of the module. It will serve as
the summative evaluation of your performance.
Remember, you are to work on this module independently. I shall not be around to supervise you
as you go through each lesson. It is expected that you will make the most of this module and grow
professionally in your desire to become a competent Nurse, determined to make a difference.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A5giOGjj5X8
1. Eradicate extreme
poverty and
1. Reduce by half the proportion of people living
hunger
on less than a dollar a day.
2. Achieve full and productive employment and
decent work for all including women and young
people.
Except for goals 2 and 3, all the MDGs are health or health related. Health is essential to the achievement
of these goals and is a major contributor to the overarching goal of poverty reduction.
In order to achieve these goals, the participation of all members of the society from both developing and
developed countries is required. Achievement of these goals by 2015 is now a priority of the global
community and dictates the priority public health programs that should be implemented.
At the country level, the Philippines has experienced considerable improvements in its health status for
the past 50 years, yet it has also in recent years experienced decline as shown in its poor performance in
reducing infant and maternal mortality rates. The Philippines is also experiencing an epidemiologic shift,
which means that while it is still contending with the burden of communicable diseases, it is also at same
time contending with the devastation brought about by non - communicable, chronic – lifestyle – related
diseases. Currently, the country is being threatened with the devastating effect of a “Triple whammy”
which will be brought about not only by this epidemiologic shift but also by the emergence of plague –
like infectious diseases such as Severe Acute Respiratory
Syndrome (SARS) and Avian Flu. With this scenario, the need to strengthen the capability of the public
health infrastructure including the Public Health Nurse to adequately respond is imperative.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_qLqLJq2954
On September 25, 2015, 193 heads of state at the United Nations General Assembly set up a collection of
17 goals known the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) Or Simply Global Goals.
The SDGs and their 169 targets form the core of Resolution 70/1 of the United Nations, which is a
breakthrough agreement called AGENDA 2030. The goals are to be achieved by all member states by
year 2030.
They are a universal call to action to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure all people enjoy peace
and prosperity.
The goals are broad, interdependent and cover social, economic and social issues and making them work
is everyone’s responsibility.
The following slides present a brief overview of the goals.
2. End Hunger, Achieve food Security and Improved Nutrition and Promote Sustainable
Agriculture
Many still suffer from hunger and malnutrition around the
world, mostly women and children.
The food and agriculture sector offers key solutions for
development and is central for hunger and poverty eradication.
Targets for this goal include ending malnutrition, protecting
small farmers, protecting the genetic diversity of crops produced
and investing in research to make farming more productive.
3. Ensure Healthy
Lives and
Ensuring healthy lives and promoting the well being for all at all Promote Well –
Being for all at All
ages is essential to sustainable development. Ages
Goal includes calls for universal health coverage, increasing
health care workforce, reducing illness and death by pollution,
comprehensive agenda for tackling a wide range of global health
challenges such as AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis
Vaccinate your family to protect them and improve public health
4. Ensure Inclusive and Equitable Quality Education and Promote Life Long Learning
Opportunities for
Obtaining a quality education is the foundation to improving all
people’s lives and sustainable development.
Targets for this goal include the need for access to university
level education, vocational training and entrepreneurial skills.
Help children in your community to read.
7. Ensure
Energy is central to nearly every major challenge and opportunity. access to
Affordable,
About 1.3 billion people globally have no access to electricity. Reliable,
Targets for this goal emphasizes a conversion to renewable sources Sustainable
and a dramatic improvement in efficiency everywhere. and Modern
Use only energy efficient light bulbs or appliances. Energy For
All
8. Promote Sustained, Inclusive and Sustainable Economic Growth, Full and Productive
Employment and
Sustainable economic growth will require societies to create the Decent Work For
all
conditions that allow people to have quality jobs.
About 75 million people between ages 15 and 24 are estimated to be
unemployed and out of school globally.
This goal targets closing the gap using innovation, as well as separating
growth from ecosystem degradation.
10. Reduced
Inequality within and Among Countries
13. Take urgent actions to Combat Climate Change and its Impacts
Climate change is a global challenge that affects everyone, everywhere.
This goal has an asterisk as it references the “Paris Agreement” of
December 2015, which guides nations to jointly commit to limiting global
warming to not more than 2 degrees Celsius.
Education young people on climate change to put them on a sustainable
path early.
14. Conserve and Sustainably Use the Oceans, Seas and Marine Resources for Sustainable
Development
17. Strengthen the means of Implementation and Revitalize the Global Partnerships for
Sustainable
Every country and every sector has a role to play in achieving the Development
SDGs.
This goal targets ensuring that countries have what is needed in
achieving the rest of the SDGs such as funds, capacities and
technologies.
The goal emphasizes the need for partnership and collaboration.
1. How many Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) have been agreed to by all the world’s
nations, as part of the 2030 Agenda?
a. 17 c. 10
b. 8 d. 16
2. Each SDG is supported by a set of Targets-specific objectives that are associated with that
Goal. How many targets are there in total?
a. 99 c. 169
b. 1016 d. 51
3. Goal 1 is about poverty. What is the aim of this Goal?
a. Cut poverty in half by 2030
b. Reduce poverty by 75% by 2030
c. End poverty in all its forms everywhere
d. Help each nation make progress on reducing poverty
4. Goal 17 is about strengthening the “means of implementation” and revitalizing the “Global
Partnership” for realizing all the other Goals. Which of the following is not part of Goal 17?
a. Mobilizing the financial resources necessary to achieve the Goals
b. Creating international sports tournaments and festivals to promote the Goals
c. Helping developing countries build the capacities they need in areas such as technology,
public policy and data for reporting on progress
d. Enhancing trade, especially to help developing countries increase their exports and grow
their economies.
5.In the 2030 Agenda, Sustainable Development Goal #13 on climate change, has * (asterisk)
after it. Why?
a. Because addressing climate change is more important than all the other Goals
b. Because the negotiation were unable to come to an agreement on a climate change
Goal.
c. Because the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (which is meeting in Paris in
late 2015) is the forum where more detailed decisions on climate will be made
d. Because the Goal on climate change is constantly shifting
6.Which of the following is not part of the Sustainable Development Goals?
a. Access to sustainable energy for all
b. Availability of water and sanitation for all
c. Provision of internet services for all
d. Promotion of decent jobs for all
7.Equality issues are specifically mentioned in how many of the sustainable Development Goals
(not including the targets)?
a. In two of them: Goal 6 on water and Goal 12 on sustainable production and consumption
b. In four of them: Goal 2 on hunger; Goal 7 on energy, Goal 8 on economic growth and
jobs ang Goal 14 on preserving the oceans and seas
c. In three of them, Goal 4 on education, Goal 5 on gender and Goal 10 on reducing
inequality within and among countries
d. In one of them, Goal 16 on promoting peaceful and just societies for all
8.Which of the following is not part of Goal 15, on ecosystems?
a. Halt and reverse and degradation
b. Halt biodiversity loss
c. Halt the use of biotechnology and genetic engineering
d. Use ecosystem sustainably while protecting and restoring them
9.Which of the following is not true about the SDGs?
a. They encourage the promotion of health, well – being, and education for all, at all ages
b. They explicitly promote innovation
c. They include the development of sustainable cities, infrastructure and industry
d. They are a legally binding international treaty that all nations are required to follow
10.What can individuals do to help realize the achievement of the Sustainable Development
Goasl?
a. Hold their governments and the private sector accountable and support reputable civil
society organizations
b. Create projects and partnerships of their own and participate in existing initiatives to help
achieve one or more of the goals
c. Use their position in society – as teachers, decision – makers, consumers, role models
and ordinary citizens – to voice support for the Goals, to make decisions that advance the Goals
and to take actions help to implement the Goals
d. All of the above
11. How many MDGs are there?
a. 8 c. 12
b. 10 d. 15
12.MDG is to eradicate extreme poverty and hunger. What does the UN currently define as the
global poverty rate?
a. $1 a day c. $1.25 a day
b. $0.5 a day d. $2 a day
Self - Assessment
Before you end this Lesson 3, evaluate your current competency by answering the checklist their
follow. Put a check ( / ) mark to best describe your current level of mastery of each list competency.
Competency I can do I can do this but I I am learning I can not
this very need to learn how to do this do this yet
well more and improve (Apprentice) (Novice)
(Expert) (Practitioner)
What are the 8 MDGs?
What are the 17 SDGs?
Why are SDG important and need to
be studied?
Why are MDG important and need to
be studied?
Let’s Reflet!
1. Barometer Check. How can this Millennium Development Goals and Sustainable Development
Goals affect the Health Care Delivery System in the Philippines.
2. How does this COVID – 19 Pandemic affect the Poverty Rate in the Philippines?
3. Make a Cloud Concept about Millennium Development Goals?
Bibliography:
1. Frances Prescilla L. Cuevas, Jean P. Reyala, Rosalinda Cruz – Earnshaw, Shiela Bonito, Jean M.
Sitioco, Lorenza C. Serafica, 2007 Public Health Nursing