CHN-FAMILY HEALTH NURSING CARE-SNOP-17-PHC

🏠 Family Health Nursing Care – Family as a Unit of Health

πŸ”· 1. Definition of Family Health Nursing:

Family health nursing is the process of providing comprehensive healthcare to families to promote, maintain, and restore the health of individuals within the family context.

πŸ”· 2. Concept of Family as a Unit of Health:

In family health nursing, the family is considered as a single unit of service and care, not just a collection of individuals. It focuses on:

  • Health of each individual
  • Interactions among members
  • Environment in which the family lives
  • The family’s role in health promotion and disease prevention

πŸ”· 3. Characteristics of Family as a Unit of Health:

βœ… Family members share a common environment
βœ… Health behaviors of one member affect others
βœ… The family provides physical, emotional, and financial support
βœ… Health decisions are often taken collectively
βœ… Family influences health-seeking behaviors

πŸ”· 4. Goals of Family Health Nursing:

πŸ”Ή Promote health and well-being of all family members
πŸ”Ή Prevent illness within the family
πŸ”Ή Help the family cope with health issues
πŸ”Ή Educate the family regarding nutrition, hygiene, immunization, and sanitation
πŸ”Ή Support in rehabilitation and chronic illness care

πŸ”· 5. Roles of Nurse in Family Health Nursing:

πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Health Educator: Provides knowledge on disease prevention and health promotion
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Care Provider: Direct care to sick individuals in the family
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Counselor: Offers emotional and psychological support
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Coordinator: Links the family with healthcare services
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Advocate: Helps families receive appropriate health resources

πŸ”· 6. Components of Family Health Nursing Process:

1️⃣ Assessment: Study family structure, health status, lifestyle, and environment
2️⃣ Diagnosis: Identify actual/potential health problems
3️⃣ Planning: Set goals for improving family health
4️⃣ Implementation: Deliver interventions (health teaching, immunization, sanitation)
5️⃣ Evaluation: Check outcomes and make necessary modifications

πŸ”· 7. Approaches in Family Health Nursing:

  • Family as context: Focus on individual within the family
  • Family as client: Focus on the entire family
  • Family as a system: Study interactions and relationships
  • Family as a component of society: Family’s role in larger social structure

πŸ”· 8. Importance of Family in Health Care:

🩺 Family is the first line of defense in health problems
🩺 Acts as a support system during illness
🩺 Influences lifestyle habits (e.g., diet, hygiene, exercise)
🩺 Plays a vital role in child health, elderly care, and chronic illness management


🩺 Family Health Nursing Care – Family Health Records

πŸ“˜ Important for Community Health Nursing, NHM, NORCET, AIIMS, BSc/GNM Nursing & Competitive Exams


🧾 πŸ”° Introduction:

Family Health Records are systematic, written, and updated documents used by nurses and health workers to assess, plan, and evaluate health care services provided to families. These records are essential in community health nursing to understand family structure, environment, diseases, and health needs.


πŸ“˜ 🎯 Objectives of Maintaining Family Health Records:

βœ”οΈ To identify health problems within the family
βœ”οΈ To assess risk factors and preventive needs
βœ”οΈ To provide continuity of care
βœ”οΈ To record family’s health history and services provided
βœ”οΈ To ensure timely follow-ups and referrals
βœ”οΈ To plan individualized family health interventions


πŸ—‚οΈ πŸ“’ Types of Family Health Records:

πŸ“˜ Type of RecordπŸ“ Purpose
Family FolderContains complete family profile and health status
Eligible Couple Register (ECR)Records reproductive health of married couples
Child Health CardTracks immunizations, growth, nutrition
Mother and Child Protection (MCP) CardComprehensive MCH services including antenatal care
Immunization RegisterRecords of vaccines administered to each child
Home Visit RegisterDocumentation of each field/home visit by health staff
Vital Events RegisterRecords of births and deaths
Nutrition Surveillance RegisterTracks undernutrition and intervention
Tuberculosis and Leprosy RegistersCase finding, treatment, and follow-up records

πŸ‘¨β€πŸ‘©β€πŸ‘§β€πŸ‘¦ Contents of Family Folder:

βœ… Family Identification (Name, address, head of family)
βœ… Family Composition (members, age, sex, relationship)
βœ… Socioeconomic Status (occupation, income, housing)
βœ… Environmental Conditions (sanitation, water, drainage)
βœ… Health History (past and present illnesses)
βœ… Maternal and Child Health Status
βœ… Immunization status
βœ… Nutritional status
βœ… Record of Visits and Services provided


🩹 πŸ§‘β€βš•οΈ Role of Nurse in Family Health Record Maintenance:

πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Assess family needs during home visits
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Maintain accurate and up-to-date records
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Identify high-risk families and prioritize care
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Provide appropriate referrals and document outcomes
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Monitor immunization, nutrition, and chronic illness
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Educate families on record use and significance
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Submit reports to higher health authorities


πŸ›‘οΈ Importance of Family Health Records:

πŸ”Ή Promotes continuity of care
πŸ”Ή Assists in planning interventions
πŸ”Ή Helps in monitoring outcomes
πŸ”Ή Aids in early detection of health problems
πŸ”Ή Improves communication between community and health system
πŸ”Ή Acts as legal evidence if required


πŸ“š Golden One-Liners for Quick Revision:

🟨 Family folder is the most comprehensive family record
🟨 MCP card is used for maternal and child tracking
🟨 ECR is essential in family planning
🟨 Immunization status must be verified using Child Health Card
🟨 Home Visit Register helps track community outreach


βœ… Top 5 MCQs for Practice

Q1. Which card is used to monitor antenatal care, immunization, and child growth?
πŸ…°οΈ Child Health Card
πŸ…±οΈ Family Folder
βœ… πŸ…²οΈ MCP Card
πŸ…³οΈ ECR

Q2. What is the purpose of the Eligible Couple Register?
πŸ…°οΈ Record under-5 deaths
βœ… πŸ…±οΈ Maintain reproductive health info
πŸ…²οΈ Monitor elderly population
πŸ…³οΈ Track nutrition

Q3. What does the Family Folder include?
πŸ…°οΈ Income only
πŸ…±οΈ Immunization dates only
βœ… πŸ…²οΈ Family composition, health status, visits
πŸ…³οΈ Birth dates only

Q4. Which register is used during every field visit?
πŸ…°οΈ MCP Card
πŸ…±οΈ Immunization Register
βœ… πŸ…²οΈ Home Visit Register
πŸ…³οΈ TB Register

Q5. Which record helps track undernutrition in children?
πŸ…°οΈ Immunization Register
βœ… πŸ…±οΈ Nutrition Surveillance Register
πŸ…²οΈ Vital Events Register
πŸ…³οΈ ECR

🏑 Home Visit in Community Health Nursing

πŸ“˜ Important for GNM/BSc Nursing, NHM, NORCET, RRB, GPSC & Community Health Nursing Exams


πŸ”° Introduction:

A Home Visit is a planned visit by a health worker, nurse, or community health professional to the family’s residence for providing preventive, promotive, curative, and rehabilitative care.

πŸ‘‰ It strengthens the nurse–client relationship and allows care to be provided in the natural living environment of the client.


🎯 Objectives of Home Visit:

βœ”οΈ Assess health needs of the family
βœ”οΈ Provide health education and counseling
βœ”οΈ Promote preventive practices (e.g., immunization, sanitation)
βœ”οΈ Deliver basic treatment and nursing care
βœ”οΈ Monitor chronic diseases, pregnancy, child growth
βœ”οΈ Ensure continuity of care and follow-up
βœ”οΈ Collect vital statistics and health data


πŸ“‹ Principles of Home Visit:

🟒 Planned and purposeful
🟒 Regular and need-based
🟒 Respect client’s privacy and culture
🟒 Encourage family participation
🟒 Focus on education and empowerment
🟒 Cost-effective and time-bound


πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Steps of Home Visit Process:

1️⃣ Planning:
β–ͺ Identify the family
β–ͺ Prepare objectives
β–ͺ Collect necessary materials

2️⃣ Approach to Home:
β–ͺ Greet the family respectfully
β–ͺ Introduce yourself and explain purpose

3️⃣ Interview and Assessment:
β–ͺ Collect data on health, hygiene, illness, and needs
β–ͺ Use observation and questioning

4️⃣ Implementation of Care:
β–ͺ Provide education, treatment (as per protocol)
β–ͺ Support pregnant women, children, elderly, etc.

5️⃣ Documentation:
β–ͺ Update home visit register, MCP card, etc.
β–ͺ Record findings and actions taken

6️⃣ Follow-Up:
β–ͺ Revisit as needed
β–ͺ Refer cases to PHC/CHC if required


🧰 Articles Required for Home Visit:

🩺 Stethoscope, BP apparatus
πŸ’‰ Thermometer, dressing tray
πŸ“‹ MCP card, home visit register
🧼 Soap, hand towel, cotton
πŸ’Š Basic medications (as per policy)
πŸ“– IEC materials for education


🩹 Role of Nurse in Home Visit:

πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Identify high-risk individuals/families
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Promote immunization, hygiene, nutrition
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Educate mothers on newborn care, breastfeeding
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Provide antenatal and postnatal care
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Support elderly and chronic illness patients
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Refer serious cases for institutional care
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Maintain accurate records


πŸ’‘ Benefits of Home Visit:

βœ… Builds trust with the community
βœ… Reaches vulnerable populations
βœ… Saves time and transport cost for the client
βœ… Encourages early detection and prevention
βœ… Strengthens the community health system


πŸ“š Golden One-Liners for Quick Revision:

🟨 Home visit is individual and family-centered care
🟨 MCP card is updated during maternal/child visits
🟨 Home visit is key for antenatal, postnatal, and under-5 care
🟨 Home visit register is maintained by ANM and CHO


βœ… Top 5 MCQs for Practice

Q1. What is the main objective of a home visit?
πŸ…°οΈ Financial support
βœ… πŸ…±οΈ Provide need-based health services
πŸ…²οΈ Construction of toilets
πŸ…³οΈ Legal counseling

Q2. Which tool is essential during a home visit for pregnant women?
πŸ…°οΈ Immunization card
βœ… πŸ…±οΈ MCP Card
πŸ…²οΈ Voter ID
πŸ…³οΈ Ration Card

Q3. What is the first step in the home visit process?
βœ… πŸ…°οΈ Planning
πŸ…±οΈ Interview
πŸ…²οΈ Implementation
πŸ…³οΈ Documentation

Q4. What is one principle of a good home visit?
πŸ…°οΈ Frequent visits without need
πŸ…±οΈ Only treatment focused
βœ… πŸ…²οΈ Respect for cultural beliefs
πŸ…³οΈ Ignoring family participation

Q5. Who maintains the Home Visit Register in India?
πŸ…°οΈ Anganwadi Worker
βœ… πŸ…±οΈ ANM/CHO
πŸ…²οΈ ASHA
πŸ…³οΈ PHC Doctor

πŸ‘œ Bag Technique in Community Health Nursing

πŸ“˜ Important for GNM/BSc Nursing, NHM, AIIMS, NORCET, RRB, and Community Health Nursing Exams


πŸ”° Introduction:

The Bag Technique is a systematic method of using a community health nurse’s bag during home visits to prevent cross-infection and deliver efficient care in the home setting.

πŸ‘‰ It ensures aseptic procedures while using the bag in various household environments.


🎯 Objectives of Bag Technique:

βœ”οΈ Prevent contamination of sterile articles
βœ”οΈ Avoid cross-infection between patients
βœ”οΈ Ensure efficient and hygienic care delivery
βœ”οΈ Promote professional conduct during home visits
βœ”οΈ Protect nurse and patient from health hazards


🧰 Articles in Community Health Bag:

🩺 ItemπŸ“ Use
Soap and towelHand hygiene
Cotton swabs and gauzeCleaning and dressing wounds
Antiseptics (Betadine, etc.)Disinfection
Thermometer, BP apparatusVital sign monitoring
StethoscopeAuscultation
Dressing trayMinor wound care
Gloves and maskInfection prevention
MCP card and registerDocumentation
Scissors and forcepsCutting and holding
Dropper, spoonMedication administration

πŸ“‹ Principles of Bag Technique:

🟒 Maintain asepsis
🟒 Arrange articles systematically
🟒 Avoid placing the bag on bed or floor
🟒 Clean and disinfect bag regularly
🟒 Replace used/expired items after each visit
🟒 Use new cotton/swab for each client


πŸ”„ Steps of Performing Bag Technique:

1️⃣ Preparation Before Visit:
βœ”οΈ Clean and check all items
βœ”οΈ Arrange sterilized articles properly
βœ”οΈ Carry bag safely to the visit site

2️⃣ During the Visit:
βœ”οΈ Place newspaper or mat on the table/floor
βœ”οΈ Open bag and remove only required items
βœ”οΈ Perform handwashing before and after the procedure
βœ”οΈ Use aseptic techniques while giving care

3️⃣ After the Procedure:
βœ”οΈ Dispose used items properly (as per biomedical waste rules)
βœ”οΈ Clean reusable articles before replacing them in the bag
βœ”οΈ Document services provided in home visit register/MCP card

4️⃣ After Return to Health Center:
βœ”οΈ Disinfect used items
βœ”οΈ Re-sterilize tools if needed
βœ”οΈ Restock supplies


πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Nurse’s Responsibilities in Bag Technique:

πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Ensure cleanliness and sterility of articles
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Educate family on infection control
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Use separate articles for each patient
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Prevent contamination of unused items
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Maintain documentation accurately


πŸ›‘οΈ Advantages of Bag Technique:

βœ… Prevents cross-contamination
βœ… Promotes organized care
βœ… Builds community trust
βœ… Ensures readiness during emergencies
βœ… Encourages professionalism


πŸ“š Golden One-Liners for Quick Revision:

🟨 Bag technique prevents cross-infection
🟨 Always place a mat or paper under the bag
🟨 Bag should be cleaned and restocked after each visit
🟨 Aseptic techniques are essential during home care


βœ… Top 5 MCQs for Practice

Q1. What is the primary purpose of the bag technique?
πŸ…°οΈ Carry heavy equipment
βœ… πŸ…±οΈ Prevent cross-infection during home visits
πŸ…²οΈ Promote patient education
πŸ…³οΈ Store medicine permanently

Q2. What should be placed under the bag during a home visit?
πŸ…°οΈ Cloth from the patient’s home
βœ… πŸ…±οΈ Clean paper or mat
πŸ…²οΈ Pillow
πŸ…³οΈ Bag directly on bed

Q3. Which principle is followed in bag technique?
πŸ…°οΈ Cost-effectiveness
βœ… πŸ…±οΈ Aseptic technique
πŸ…²οΈ Quick care
πŸ…³οΈ Team care

Q4. What should be done with used articles after the visit?
πŸ…°οΈ Leave at patient’s house
βœ… πŸ…±οΈ Clean, disinfect, and restock
πŸ…²οΈ Discard everything
πŸ…³οΈ None of the above

Q5. Which document is updated during the bag technique use?
πŸ…°οΈ Birth certificate
βœ… πŸ…±οΈ Home visit register/MCP card
πŸ…²οΈ Voter ID
πŸ…³οΈ OPD card

πŸ₯ Community Health Nursing Process

πŸ“˜ Essential for GNM/BSc Nursing, NHM, NORCET, AIIMS, GPSC & Community Health Nursing Exams


πŸ”° Introduction:

The Community Health Nursing Process is a systematic, problem-solving approach used by nurses to assess, plan, implement, and evaluate health care in the community. It focuses on the health of individuals, families, and communities as a whole.

πŸ‘‰ It is based on the nursing process model but applied to community settings rather than individual clinical care.


πŸ“˜ Purpose:

βœ”οΈ Identify community health needs
βœ”οΈ Provide need-based, holistic care
βœ”οΈ Empower individuals and groups through health education
βœ”οΈ Promote disease prevention and health promotion
βœ”οΈ Evaluate effectiveness of interventions


πŸŒ€ Steps of Community Health Nursing Process:


πŸ” 1. Community Health Assessment

🎯 Purpose: Collect data to understand the health status and problems of the community

πŸ”Ή Collect information on:

  • Demographics
  • Morbidity & mortality rates
  • Housing, water, sanitation
  • Health services availability
  • Education & occupation

πŸ”Ή Methods:

  • Interviews, surveys, home visits
  • Observation
  • Records and reports (e.g., census data)

πŸ”Ή Tools:

  • Community map
  • Family folder
  • Survey checklist

πŸ“ 2. Community Health Diagnosis

🎯 Purpose: Analyze data to identify key health problems or risks

πŸ”Ή Types of Diagnoses:

  • Actual (e.g., high prevalence of malaria)
  • Potential (e.g., risk of waterborne diseases due to poor drainage)
  • Wellness (e.g., motivation to improve nutrition)

πŸ› οΈ Example:
β€œHigh incidence of diarrhea among under-5 children related to contaminated water supply.”


🎯 3. Planning

🎯 Purpose: Set goals and design strategies to solve the identified problems

πŸ”Ή Set SMART objectives (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic, Time-bound)
πŸ”Ή Prioritize problems
πŸ”Ή Develop action plan:

  • What? (intervention)
  • Who? (responsibility)
  • When? (timeline)
  • Where? (location)
  • How? (resources needed)

πŸš€ 4. Implementation

🎯 Purpose: Put the plan into action

πŸ”Ή Provide health education, immunization, treatment
πŸ”Ή Conduct home visits, screenings, referrals
πŸ”Ή Organize awareness camps and campaigns
πŸ”Ή Encourage community participation

πŸ“Œ Important: Follow ethical principles, ensure cultural sensitivity, use IEC materials


πŸ“Š 5. Evaluation

🎯 Purpose: Measure the effectiveness of the care and interventions provided

πŸ”Ή Compare actual outcomes with expected goals
πŸ”Ή Identify areas of success or failure
πŸ”Ή Modify the plan if needed
πŸ”Ή Collect feedback from the community


πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Role of Nurse in the Process:

🟒 Conduct community survey and data collection
🟒 Diagnose health issues of population
🟒 Plan interventions with PHC/CHC staff
🟒 Deliver health services and education
🟒 Maintain documentation
🟒 Evaluate and report health outcomes


πŸ“š Golden One-Liners for Quick Revision:

🟨 Community diagnosis is made after data analysis
🟨 SMART goals guide planning in CHN process
🟨 Implementation includes home visits, education, and treatment
🟨 Evaluation is based on expected vs. achieved outcomes


βœ… Top 5 MCQs for Practice:

Q1. What is the first step in the community health nursing process?
πŸ…°οΈ Diagnosis
βœ… πŸ…±οΈ Assessment
πŸ…²οΈ Planning
πŸ…³οΈ Evaluation

Q2. What does SMART stand for in planning?
πŸ…°οΈ Simple, Measurable, Achievable, Reliable, Time-bound
βœ… πŸ…±οΈ Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic, Time-bound
πŸ…²οΈ Safe, Measurable, Appropriate, Realistic, Timely
πŸ…³οΈ Specific, Measurable, Action-oriented, Realistic, Timely

Q3. Which step involves setting goals and objectives?
πŸ…°οΈ Assessment
βœ… πŸ…±οΈ Planning
πŸ…²οΈ Evaluation
πŸ…³οΈ Diagnosis

Q4. In which step are family visits and IEC activities performed?
πŸ…°οΈ Diagnosis
πŸ…±οΈ Planning
βœ… πŸ…²οΈ Implementation
πŸ…³οΈ Evaluation

Q5. The outcome of health interventions is reviewed in which step?
πŸ…°οΈ Assessment
πŸ…±οΈ Planning
πŸ…²οΈ Implementation
βœ… πŸ…³οΈ Evaluation

πŸ₯ Clinic: Purposes, Types, and Their Functions

πŸ“˜ Essential for Community Health Nursing, GNM/BSc Nursing, NHM, NORCET, AIIMS, and RRB Exams


πŸ”° Definition:

A Clinic is a healthcare facility where outpatient medical care is provided. It is usually smaller than a hospital and focuses on diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of diseases.


🎯 Purposes of Clinic:

βœ”οΈ Provide primary healthcare to individuals and families
βœ”οΈ Deliver preventive and promotive services
βœ”οΈ Offer diagnostic and therapeutic services
βœ”οΈ Support maternal and child health
βœ”οΈ Educate the public on healthy lifestyle
βœ”οΈ Reduce burden on hospitals by treating minor ailments
βœ”οΈ Serve as referral points for advanced care


🩺 Types of Clinics & Their Functions:

🏷️ Type of Clinic🩻 Functions / Services Provided
General ClinicDiagnosis & treatment of common illnesses, health advice
Maternal and Child Health (MCH) ClinicAntenatal, postnatal care, immunization, family planning, growth monitoring
Family Planning ClinicCounseling, contraception, sterilization services
Immunization ClinicVaccination against preventable diseases (e.g., BCG, DPT, MMR)
Dental ClinicOral check-ups, extraction, filling, hygiene education
Tuberculosis Clinic (DOTS)Sputum testing, anti-TB drugs, monitoring treatment
Leprosy ClinicDiagnosis, MDT treatment, disability prevention
HIV/AIDS ClinicCounseling, testing (ICTC), ART distribution
Non-Communicable Disease (NCD) ClinicScreening and management of diabetes, hypertension, cancer
Mental Health ClinicPsychiatric counseling, medication, community support
Eye ClinicVision screening, refraction, minor eye procedures
Nutrition ClinicDietary counseling, anemia screening, growth charting
Adolescent Clinic (RKSK)Counseling on puberty, nutrition, mental health
Geriatric ClinicHealth care services for elderly (NPHCE)

πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Role of Nurse in Clinics:

πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Assess patients and record history
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Assist in diagnostic procedures
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Administer medications and injections
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Educate clients on health promotion
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Maintain records and registers (OPD, MCH card, immunization)
πŸ‘©β€βš•οΈ Provide referrals and follow-up care


πŸ›‘οΈ Advantages of Clinics:

βœ… Easily accessible to community
βœ… Reduces burden on hospitals
βœ… Offers preventive, promotive, and curative care
βœ… Encourages early detection and treatment
βœ… Enhances community participation in health


πŸ“š Golden One-Liners for Quick Revision:

🟨 MCH clinics offer antenatal and child health services
🟨 NCD clinics screen for diabetes, hypertension, cancer
🟨 Family Planning clinics provide contraceptive services
🟨 DOTS is the standard strategy in TB clinics
🟨 ICTC is found in HIV/AIDS clinics for testing and counseling


βœ… Top 5 MCQs for Practice:

Q1. Which clinic focuses on antenatal care and child immunization?
πŸ…°οΈ Dental clinic
βœ… πŸ…±οΈ MCH clinic
πŸ…²οΈ HIV clinic
πŸ…³οΈ NCD clinic

Q2. DOTS strategy is used in which clinic?
πŸ…°οΈ NCD
πŸ…±οΈ Eye
βœ… πŸ…²οΈ TB clinic
πŸ…³οΈ Dental

Q3. What is the purpose of a Nutrition Clinic?
πŸ…°οΈ Mental illness treatment
πŸ…±οΈ HIV testing
βœ… πŸ…²οΈ Dietary counseling and anemia screening
πŸ…³οΈ Physical therapy

Q4. What does an Immunization Clinic provide?
πŸ…°οΈ Family planning services
βœ… πŸ…±οΈ Vaccinations for preventable diseases
πŸ…²οΈ Dental fillings
πŸ…³οΈ ECG and X-ray

Q5. Who receives care in Geriatric Clinics?
πŸ…°οΈ Children
πŸ…±οΈ Adolescents
πŸ…²οΈ Pregnant women
βœ… πŸ…³οΈ Elderly population


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