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Intervention SchemeThe Scheme is a comprehensive, orderly, nonexhaustive, mutually exclusive taxonomy designed to address specific problems for diverse clients. It consists of three levels of professional actions or activities. Four broad categories of interventions appear at the first level. An alphabetical list of 75 targets or objects of action and one “other” appear at the second level. Client-specific information generated by practitioners is at the third level. Because the Intervention Scheme is the basis for planning and intervening, it enables practitioners to describe and communicate their practice including improving or restoring health, decreasing deterioration, or preventing illness. Categories:Teaching, Guidance, and Counseling: Activities designed to provide information and materials, encourage action and responsibility for self-care and coping, and assist the individual/family/community to make decisions and solve problems. Treatments and Procedures: Technical activities such as wound care, specimen collection, resistive exercises, and medication prescriptions that are designed to prevent, decrease, or alleviate signs and symptoms of the individual/family/community. Case Management: Activities such as coordination, advocacy, and referral that facilitate service delivery, improve communication among health and human service providers, promote assertiveness, and guide the individual/family/community toward use of appropriate resources. Surveillance: Activities such as detection, measurement, critical analysis, and monitoring intended to identify the individual/family/community’s status in relation to a given condition or phenomenon. Targets:anatomy/physiology |
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