Topic is SDG Goal 3: Good Health And Well Being: There are a lot of contributing

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Topic is SDG Goal 3: Good Health And Well Being: There are a lot of contributing things to promote good health in aging adults. However, there are some not so good things about aging adults who are have their sense of independence taken from them.
Note: The project will explore promoting positive mental and physical health for the elderly.
In our program, we are fortunate to have students and instructors from a variety of disciplines – some are
direct healthcare practitioners, some are corporate healthcare leaders, some are in other human services
functions such as social services and public education. Still others come from many other backgrounds. This diversity is one of the things that makes the VUL DHA program so dynamic. The most important part
of our diversity is that in one way or another, each of you comes from a background of making the world a
better place for people.
One of the things we discuss during this term is the importance of recognizing, as a leader, how you
substantively contribute to a larger mission through your actions – and how a system of actions makes
positive impacts on the world. Regardless of your positional title (we have CEOs and front leaders alike in
our program), as leaders, each of you are obligated to make your organization, community, and the world
a better place through your actions. The purpose of the final exercise is to think about your team and your
role in the world and how you can make significant progress on an issue about which you care greatly.
The United Nations describes its Sustainable Development Goals (or SDGs) in the following way:
“An urgent call for action by all countries – developed and developing – in a global partnership.
They recognize that ending poverty and other deprivations must go hand-in-hand with strategies
that improve health and education, reduce inequality, and spur economic growth – all while tackling
climate change and working to preserve our oceans and forests.”
The SDGs provide a list of global goals that can apply to many of the fields in which each of you work.
More importantly, we should think about how actions in our own organizations substantively contribute to
the larger goals described in the SDGs – each of us have to contribute in our own, even sometimes small,
way to make them successful. For example, none of us can solve global poverty individually, but working
to solve poverty in our own community helps towards that global goal. For this project, you should choose
one of the Sustainable Development Goals and develop a radical plan to make progress on this issue from
where you sit in your specific organization, whatever that organization may be. You should consider, as a component of your thought process, the Systems Practice Workbook from.
Please note that you are invited, and expected, to dream and think big, but you must have a clear and focused
target audience and a very specific plan. Please note that I’m looking for direct impacts and, as such,
proposing informational campaigns alone is not sufficient as a radical idea, nor are descriptions of
existing programs. Finally, I’m asking you to think outside the box and do something different from what’s
been done before. Therefore, proposing COVID-19-specific interventions like vaccinations clinics or
informational campaigns are not sufficient for this exercise (that doesn’t mean you can’t address other
follow-along issues like provider burnout or the now known lack of quality public health capacity in many
localities).
The final paper is a 2000-word report which will present an idea for a project your team at your work can
undertake to make progress on one of the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals. Ideally, you should address
how this can be implemented in the fastest and most effective way possible. This report should have your
organization’s leadership as the audience in mind but requires a very limited introduction to the
organization as needed for non-local audiences. Your report should include the following components and
structure (the word limits for each line are just a guideline – you may deviate from this as necessary, but
this gives you a general understanding of the detail with which you should address each topic):
• Section 1 – Introduction: Brief introduction to your organization and/or team. (100 words)
Section 2 – Sustainable Development Goal: A brief description of the SDG that your report will consider and your radical idea for accomplishing that goal. (300 words)
Section 3 – The Problem and the Solutions – A brief discussion of the problem that you’re
trying to solve and a brief description of what your proposed solutions will be (350 words)
Section 4 – Logic Model: A refined logic model of the existing policy or plan which
sketches out the key assumptions related to its inputs, outputs, outcomes and impact. See https://www.acf.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/docume… for a discussion of logic models. Please consider a graphical representation rather than a narrative approach for this section. And remember to start from the outcomes in mind and work backwards! (100 words)
Section 5 – Stakeholders: An approach to tactics building the team you need to accomplish this goal and helping to secure buy-in from your team and your chain of command (everyone has a boss!), which also addresses potential opposition to your idea. Your recommendations should include ideas for mobilizing key stakeholders to support the proposed policy or plan and to become agents of change. See this brief video on Stakeholder Analysis: for an overview of the process. While a narrative in this section is critical, a graphical representation summarizing this information can be helpful. (350 words)
Section 6 – Implementation: A process of implementation with key steps and milestones.
(350 words)
Section 7 – Consequences: A brief discussion of potential risks and unintended
consequences of the proposed interventions. (250 words)
Section 8 – Conclusions: Conclusion, including a discussion of why this work is important
(200 words)
This paper should be 2000 words (+/- 10% is acceptable) (see APA and Submission Guidelines above; note the
exception that the paper should be submitted without cover page and should be single
spaced). Basic style elements include Times New Roman typeface, 12-point font size,
one-inch margins, indent the first line of every paragraph, paragraphs with three or more sentences, page
numbers, and a reference page. All text elements should be formatted with the 12-point Times New Roman
typeface with no other graphics attached. APA style should also be used for citations and references; many
sources of APA guidelines can be found on the Internet.
Submission Issues: Outside of tables and graphics, observations must be written in the form of complete
sentences. Please note that deviation beyond the allowed 10% from word length requirements will result
is a grade reduction. Generally, every 10% beyond the allowed range will result in a 5-point grade
reduction. These requirements are in place for instructional reasons: part of executive communication
is the ability to convey information in a concise and organized manner. Students are advised to support their observations with supporting
documentation and evidence in all writing assignments. Not bullet points or numbers.