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Florence Nightingale
- · Founder of modern nursing
- · Role of nurses: recover and remain free of disease
- · Sanitation and healing
- · ENVIRONMENT: believed in this influence
- · During 1860s Crimean War
- · Founded school of nursing
- · Had a list of nurse requirements (sober, honest, etc..)
- · Practicing epidemiologist
- · Kept and analyzed statistics, making recommendations based on data
- · HOLISTIC nursing
- · By 1950s, ideas totally accepted
- · Nursing field transitioned into a mostly female career
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Trends/Issues in Nursing
- * Nursing Shortage
- * Evidence Based Practice
- * Comunity Based Nursing
- * Decreased Length of Hospital Stay
- * Aging population
- * IncreaPed Chronic Health Issues
- * Independent Nursing Practice
- * Culturally Competent Care
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6 Standards of Practice (ANA) [ADOPIE]
- A: Assessment
- D: Diagnoses
- O: Outcomes identification
- P: Planning
- I: Implementation
- E: Evaluation
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9 Standards of Professional Performance [PPEECCRRL]
- P: Practice Quality
- P: Practive Evaluation
- E: Education
- E: Ethics
- C: Collegiality
- C: Collaboration
- R: Research
- R: Resource Utilization
- L: Leadership
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Nurse Practice Act
- Each state has its own
- identifies scope of practice
- Protects patients of that state
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Domain
- perspective of a profession
- provides practical/theoretical orientation for a discipline
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Paradigm
- main concepts overlapping
- *Nursing
- *Evironment
- *Health/Illness
- *Individual
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Descriptive
- Describes event
- Further identifies properties/components
- Circumstances of occurence
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Prescriptive
- addresses nursing interventions
- consequences of each
- control, promote, &change clinical nrsg practice
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Nursing Hx: Early Civilization
- Illness was supernatural
- Doctor: medicine man, priest
- Nurse: "slaves"
- males gave nrsg care and bury dead
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Nrsg Hx: 16-19th Century
- Religious warfare, exploration, expansion
- Nurse: criminal women serving sentence
- Social Reform in 18-19th century
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Nrsg Hx: Social Reform [Florence Nightingale]
- Socal Reform/Crimean War
- Challenged femal prejudice
- training school, wrote books
- Health/Illness different from medicine
- Nutrition, Therapies
- Continued Education, managing documentation
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Nrsg Hx: 19-21st century
- Civil War: need for nurses
- School based on Nightingale
- WWII: women increased independent, increased education
- School objective: degrees
- Nrsg knowledge base for Nrsg practive
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4 Aims of Nursing
- 1. Promote Health: optimal fxn + wellbeing; desire to increase wellbeing
- 2. Prevent Illness: decrease risk, early detection, promote good habits
- 3. Restore Health: inidiv. focus from early detection to rehab
- 4. Facilitate Coping: cope w/altered fxn, maximize strengths
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Practical Vocational (LPN)
- varied settings
- usually 1 year
- 1/3 class, 2/3 clinical
- Test: NCLEX-LPN
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Registered Nurse (RN)
- 1. Diploma: 3 yrs
- 2. ADN: 2 yrs, faster, comm/jr college, non-trad. students
- 3. BSN: 4 yrs, admin manager, community health, collaborative, research
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Graduate (Masters, Doctorate)
- Master: national cert, manager, ARNP, clinical specialist
- Doctorate: carry out research necessary to advance nrsg theory + practice
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ICN (Intn'l Council of Nrsg)
- 1st intn'l org of prof women
- maintain standards
- promote ethics
- natn'l nrsg orgs work together
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ANA (American Nurses' Assoc)
- late 1800s
- State level
- Standards of Practice
- Research to Advance Nrsg Practice
- Rep Nrsg for Legislative Axn
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NLN (Natn'l League for Nrsg)
- 1953
- Voluntary accredication
- Develop nrsg services + educ
- Largest prof. testing service
- Primary research source for data (surveys)
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AACN (Amer. Assoc. of Colleges in Nrsg)
- late 1800s
- Natn'l Voice for BSN or higher
- Estab. quality educ. standards
- Influence prof. + improve HC
- Promote public support of Bach/Grad educ.
- Natn'l accreditation based on CCNE
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NSNA (Natn'l Student Nurses' Assoc.)
- Voluntary participation
- Students: self governance, advocate for student + patient's rights
- Collective responsible axn on social/political issues
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Deductive Reasoning
examines general idea, then considers specific actions/ideas
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Inductive Reasoning
builds from specific ideas/axns to conclusions about general ideas
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Adaptation Theory
- adjustment to other living things and evironmental conditions
- Internal (self)
- Social (others)
- Physical
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Developmental Theory
- Process is orderly/predictable
- Each stage highly individualized
- Erikson: socialization, 8 stages in life
- Maslow: psychosocial, 5 Basic Needs
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General Systems Theory
- Universal application
- One element affects all other aspects of the system
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Quantitative Research
- Basic: (pure/lab) generate/refince theory, often not directly useful in practice
- Applied: (practical) directly influence/improve clinical practice
- TYPES: Descriptive, Correlational, Quasi-Experimental, Experimental
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Qualitative Research
- Discovers meanings
- Reality if based on perceptions, thus always changes
- Focus on Words rather than #s
- TYPES: Phenomology, Grounded, Theory, Enthnography
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Model for EBP [ALSDII]
- A: Assess need for change in practice
- L: Link problem intrvn + outcome
- S: Synthesize best evidenct
- D: Design practice change
- I: Implement + Evaluation change in practice
- I: Integrate + Maintain change in practice
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3 steps of EBP
- 1. Identify a specific area of concern
- 2. Review the published literature to determine if enough research has been done
- 3. Critically Analyze the published literature to be sure it is accurate/relevant
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Public Hospital
- non-profit
- funded by local/state/natn'l orgs
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Private Hostpital
- for- or non-profit
- funded by communities, churches, corporations, charitable orgs
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Ambulatory Care
- kind of like walk-in clinic
- come for just procedure, then leave
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Case Management
- continuity of care
- critical pathway
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Primary HC
- essential HC
- scientific, socially acceptable
- accessible to community
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Medicare
- Social Security Act
- Elderly, Disabled, their Dependents
- DRG paid for
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Medicaid
any age w/ low income
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HMO: Health Maintenance Org
- prepaid group managed plans
- only affiliated providers
- pay zero or small copay
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PPO: Preferred Provider Org
- allows payer to contract w/group of HC provider
- provide low cost service in return for prompt payment/guaranteed business
- pay out of pocket if choose own provider
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Private Insurance
- large, nonprofit, tax exempt
- small, for profit, private
- monthly premiums
- 3rd part payer (insurance pays all/most of care)
- choose own provider
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LTC Insurance
- 90% paid by Medicaid + out of pocket
- Medicare + private only pays minimally
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Specialized Care Centers/Settings
- Daycare
- Mental Health
- rural
- Schools
- Industry
- Homeless Shelters
- Rehab
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5 Rights of Delegation
- 1. Right Task
- 2. Circumstances
- 3. Person
- 4. Direction/Communication
- 5. Supervision
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Autocratic Leadership
- Directive
- Complete control
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Democratic Leadership
- Participative
- Sense of equality
- decisions/activities shared
- mutually set goals/outcomes
- used most often
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Laissez-Faire Leadership
- relinquish power to group
- encourages independent activity
- difficult to successfully achieve
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Transformational Leadership
- creates revolutionary change
- charismatic
- inspires/motivates
- vulnerable: care, express ideas/emotions/concerns, willing to take risks
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Situational
- comprehensive approach to considering leadership style, work group's maturity, situation at hand
- often lacks in depth and responsiveness to challenges
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Quantum Leadership
- Old vs. New
- moves beyond traditional modea
- change is dynamic, everpresent, continually unfolding
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Functional Nursing
- increased efficiency, but impersonal care
- assigned specific tasks
- like industrial "assembly line"
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Team Nursing
- focus on individual care (personal)
- team of RN + caregivers care for designated group on specific shift
- delegation
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Total Care Nursing
- patient-centered
- nurse as caregive (all aspects of care)
- lack of continuity between shifts
- expensive
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Primary Nursing
- comprehensive, individualized, consistent care
- expensive
- nurse plans, evaluates, directs care of a pt 24 hrs/day thru entire stay
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Case Management Nursing
- one nurse oversees quality and financial outcomes of pt care
- works collaboratives along agreed-upon clinical pathway
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Cognitive Skills
ability to think critically and evaluate a situation systematically and accurately based on data
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Technical Skills
- practice to achieve confidence
- familiarize yourself w/procedure and equipment
- seek help if needed
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Interpersonal Skills
- building a positive nurse-patient caring relationship by interacting with them, not viewing them as an object or job to be done
- rewarding to both counterparts
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Ethical/Legal Skills
- develop accountability for your knowledge and implementation
- practice altruism
- always prioritizing needs of patient
- remain within legal rights and scope of practice
- advocating for your patient, self, peers, etc.
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Types of Assessment
- Initial: shortly after admittance (baseline)
- Focused: gather data about specific problem identified
- Emergency: in phys/psych crisis (conditions are life-threatening)
- Time-Elapsed: present data compared to baseline data (reassess, make necessary revisions)
- Medical: target data pointing to pathological conditions
- Nursing: focus on pt's responses to health problems (Holistic)
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5 Types of Nursing Diagnoses
- Actual: Label, Definition, Def. Charac, Related Factors
- Risk: potential for developing actual
- Possible: additional data needed
- Wellness: "readiness for.." higher level
- Syndrome: cluster of actual/risk data all defined by a particular event
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Subjective Data
- info perceived only by affected person
- cannot be perceived/verified by anyone else
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Objective Data
- observable, measurable by someone other than pt
- can be measured on a diff pt as well, or on the same pt but by a diff person
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4 Phases of Interview
- Preparatory: review info w/open mind
- Introduction: expectations
- Working: gather info for database
- Termination: key points, what to expect, any questions?
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3 Part Nursing Diagnosis
- Problem: describes health state/problem
- (related to)
- Etiology: factors/causes
- (evidenced by)
- Defining Characteristics: obj/subj data
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Goal vs. Outcome
- Goal: aim or end
- Outcome: expected conclusion to helath problem/expectation
- Expected Outcome: specific measurable criteria used to evaluate extent to which patient has met outcome
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Comprehensive Planning: 3 Times
- Initial: admission
- Standardized Care Plan: common to specific problem
- Ongoing: develop new diagnoses as old outcomes are met
- Discharge: begin at admission, teaching/counseling, leaves w/knowledge
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Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs: Life Threatening always the priority
- 1. Physiologic
- 2. Saftey & Security
- 3. Love & Belonging
- 4. Self-Esteem
- 5. Self-Actulization
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Writing Outcomes
- Nursing: outcomes derived from problem statement in nrsg Dx
- Patient Goals: suggested by problem statement
- Nrsg Intrv: suggested by etiology/cause
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3 Types of Outcomes
- Cognitive: increase in patient knowledge/intellect
- Psychomotor: new skill
- Affective: change in pt value/belief/attitude
- Physiologic: physical change is targeted
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Implementation: Organize Clinical Responsibilities
- Patient Profile: hx bckgrnd info, strength/problems
- Patient's Preferred Name: many be diff
- Chief Complaint/Reason for Admission
- Patient's current health status: phys/emotional changes requiring modification
- Routine assitance pt needs to meet basic human needs
- Priorities for nursing care
- Special "Events": diagnostic studies, consultations, therapies
- Special teaching, counseling, advocacy needs
- Special needs of family
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Prioritization of Nursing Care
- 1. Life threatening
- 2. What's important to the patient
- 3. What you know needs to be done, regardless
- 4. Last: Long-term goals, patient teaching
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Quality Assurance Programs
- specially designed to promote excellence
- enable accountability of care to society
- Quality by Inspection: find/remove deficient workers
- Quality by Opportunity: find opportunities for improvement, thrives on tmwrk & fixing probs in the system
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ANA 3 Essential Components of Quality Care
- STRUCTURE evaluation: describe physcial facility/equip, organization characterisitics/policies, resources avail
- PROCESS evaluation: nature/sequence of activities of nurses/nursing process
- OUTCOME evaluation: focus on measurable changes in patient health status; end results
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Concurrent vs. Retrospective Evaluation
- Concurrent: during pt care: observations, patient interviews, chart review
- Retrospective: post discharge: questionaire, pt interview, chart review
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