In community health nursing, a home visit is defined as a purposeful interaction where a nurse provides health care and guidance to individuals and families within their own living environment.
Because nurse interacts family home, it offers a unique perspective on their lifestyle, social dynamics, and environmental health risks that a clinic visit simply cannot capture.
1. Purposes of Home Visiting
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Assess Home Environment: Identify health hazards like poor sanitation, lack of clean water, or safety risks for elderly.
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Provide Direct Care: Administer treatments, dress wounds, or monitor chronic conditions like TB or hypertension.
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Health Education: Gives health education advice on nutrition, family planning, and immunization that fits family’s specific resources.
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Maternal and Child Health: Monitor antenatal and postnatal mothers, assess newborn health, and track growth in children under five.
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Early case Finding: Identify new health problems or communicable diseases within community early.
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Support & Referral: Act as a bridge between family and larger healthcare institutions.
2. Principles of Home Visit
A community health nurse must follow these core principles:
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Need Based: Visits should be prioritized based on urgency of family’s health needs.
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Scientific methods: All health teachings and procedures must be based on proven medical facts.
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Family Involvement: Nurse treatsentire family as a unit, not just individual patient.
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Autonomy and Respect: Always respect family’s culture, religion, and right to accept or refuse care.
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Bag Technique: Using community health bag correctly to prevent cross-contamination and provide efficient care.
3. Five Phases of a Home Visit
| Phase | Key Activities |
| 1. Initiation | Receiving a referral or identifying a need; clarifying reason for visit. |
| 2. Pre-Visit Planning | Reviewing records, gathering supplies in nursing bag, and scheduling visit time. |
| 3. In-Home Phase | Establishing rapport, conducting assessments (physical and environmental), and providing care. |
| 4. Termination | Summarizing what was done, setting goals for next visit, and saying goodbye. |
| 5. Post-Visit | Documenting visit in family folder and planning follow-up actions. |
4. Advantages & Challenges
Advantages
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You see family in action in their natural setting.
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Families are often more relaxed and open at home than in a clinic.
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Teaching is more effective when nurse uses family’s own equipment (e.g., showing how to boil water on their specific stove).
Challenges
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Time Consuming: Traveling between homes limits number of patients seen per day.
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Nurses may face non acceptance by family or encounter unsafe environmental conditions.
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Limited Resources: You only have what is in your nursing bag and what is available in the home.