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SAME INFORMATION, DIFFERENT USES 4










Same Information, Different Uses

Teleshia Colvin

Southern New Hampshire University

Journal Assignment

My major is in healthcare management, and I have conducted a cohort study on alcohol usage among first-term mothers. I aimed to explore the relationship between alcohol consumption during pregnancy. The study results indicated that pre-pregnancy drinking had a reduced risk on preterm birth, unlike consumption during pregnancy. This journal discusses and provides a personal reflection on alcohol consumption information among different health practitioners. Alcohol Consumption has effects on the health and the well-being of first-time mothers. The data can help other health practitioners advise these consumers and help them make informed decisions about their health drinking (Denny et al., 2019).

Health Information Management, according to AHIMA 2019, is a practice of obtaining, protecting, and analyzing the traditional and digital medical data essential in the provision of quality care to patients. People in health facilities work to find a statistical relationship between preterm birth and alcohol usage. The statistical results provide data to the community and health care providers for the higher provision of quality medical care (Kingsland et al., 2018). I firmly believe that knowing alcohol usage during pregnancy periods, I would use the information to watch for the signs that patients would show if they have been consuming alcohol. In my capacity as a trained nurse, I would educate the first-time mothers in their Ob appointments that alcohol consumption during pregnant periods is hazardous. Being a health administrator, I would utilize the information to advise first-time expectant mothers that there is no safer time to drink alcohol. Alcohol problems develop in a baby throughout pregnancy, even when they know that they are pregnant.

References

Denny, C. H., Acero, C. S., Naimi, T. S., & Kim, S. Y. (2019). Consumption of alcohol beverages and binge drinking among pregnant women aged 18–44 years—United States, 2015–2017. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report68(16), 365.

Kingsland, M., Doherty, E., Anderson, A. E., Crooks, K., Tully, B., Tremain, D., ... & Wiggers, J. (2018). A practice change intervention to improve antenatal care addressing alcohol consumption by women during pregnancy: research protocol for a randomised stepped-wedge cluster trial. Implementation Science13(1), 1-14.