Incorporating a built environment module into an accelerated second-degree community health nursing course.
Environmental quality is a leading indicator of population health. Environmental health content has been integrated into the curriculum of an Accelerated Bachelor of Science in Nursing program for second-degree students through development of an environmental health nursing module for the final-semester community health nursing course. The module was developed through collaboration between two professional schools at Duke University (the School of Nursing and the Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences). It focused on the role of the built environment in community health and featured a mix of teaching strategies, including five components: (1) classroom lecture with associated readings, (2) two rounds of online small-group student discussions, (3) assessment of the built environment in local neighborhoods by student teams, (4) team presentation of the neighborhood assessments, and (5) individual student papers synthesizing the conclusions from all team presentations. The goal of the module was to provide nursing students with an organizing framework for integrating environmental health into clinical practice and an innovative tool for understanding community-level components of public health.
Duke Scholars
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- Teaching
- Risk Assessment
- Program Evaluation
- Program Development
- Nursing Education Research
- Nursing Assessment
- Nursing
- North Carolina
- Interinstitutional Relations
- Humans
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Teaching
- Risk Assessment
- Program Evaluation
- Program Development
- Nursing Education Research
- Nursing Assessment
- Nursing
- North Carolina
- Interinstitutional Relations
- Humans