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What is nursing?
the protection, promotion, and optimization of health and abilities, prevention of illness and injury, alleviation of suffering through the diagnosis and treatment of human response, and advocacy in the care of individuals, families, communities, and populations
What is health?
state of optimal functioning/well-being
Florence Nightengale (1820-1910) is famous for
Founder of modern nursing
How did Florence Nightingale change the course of history?
She limited the amount of soldiers dying from infection by implementing cleaning practices
Dorothea Dix
A reformer and pioneer in the movement to treat the insane as mentally ill, beginning in the 1820's, she was responsible for improving conditions in jails, poorhouses and insane asylums throughout the U.S. and Canada. She succeeded in persuading many states to assume responsibility for the care of the mentally ill. She served as the Superintendant of Nurses for the Union Army during the Civil War.
Clara Barton
Nurse during the Civil War; founder of the American Red Cross
Lillian Wald
Founder of Henry Street Settlement House in NY and Founder of Public Health Nursing
Mary Brewster
worked with Lillian Wald on the Henry St settelment as a visiting nurse.
Edward Lyon
was the first male nurse to be commissioned in the Army Nurse Corps in the United States
Lavinia Dock
A nursing leader and women's rights activist; instrumental in the Constitutional amendment giving women the right to vote. Created first drug manual for nurses
Mary Mahoney
First professionally trained African American nurse
Which individual provided care in tents and was founder of American Red Cross?
Clara Barton
What is the difference between LPN and BSN?
LPNs provide more traditional bedside care and perform the tasks that RNs tell them to do
LPN
licensed practical nurse
Diploma nursing
3 years in a hospital based nursing education program affiliated with a college or university, few remain, is educated in a hospital-based nursing education program, takes the NCLEX-RN
Associate degree nursing
A 2-year community college or technical school program. The title RN is used after passing the NCLEX-RN
RN to BSN
A degree program that enables registered nurses who do not have a bachelors degree to obtain a BSN more quickly than would be the case for those without a RN
List some master's degree to obtain in nursing
1. Nurse practitioner
2. Nurse education
3. Leadership
Doctorate in Nursing
2 or more years in a doctoral program at a university
What are the 5 stages of nursing
1. Novice
2. Advanced Beginner
3. Competent
4. Proficient
5. Expert
Novice nurse
has no experience with specific patient populations and uses rules to guide performance.
Advanced beginner nurse
has enough experience to recognize patterns in work but continues to need help in setting priorities; relies on rules and protocols
Competent nurse
usually been in practice 2-3 years
demonstrate increasing levels of skill and proficiency and clinical judgment
proficient nurse
understands a patient situation as a whole rather than as a list of tasks, attends to an assessment data pattern, and acts without consciously labeling it
Expert nurse
has an intuitive grasp of a clinical situation and zeroes in on the accurate solution. Takes around 5 years
Nurse practice act
law established to regulate nursing practice in each state. Defines the criteria to be an RN, defines practice of professional nursing, and defines scope of practice
What can a LPN not do?
-Can not be a charge nurse or hold leadership positions
-cannot do head to toe evaluations
Who gives you your nursing license?
The state board of nursing after you pass the NCLEX
Standards of practice for nursing
what the average person expects an RN to be able to do
Which organization is directly responsible for regulating the practice of nursing in each state?
State board of nursing
Who creates the board of nursing in each state?
The state legislature who enacts the nurse practice act (NPA).
How is the nursing scope of practice defined at the national level?
By the licensure exam (NCLEX)
How does the state define nursing scope of practice?
-GA Nurse Practice Act
-Board of Nursing
-institutions
How do institutions define a nurse's scope of practice?
Each facility has own written instructions of how to perform each duty
American Nurses Association
ANA - Professional organization for RNs in the US. Founded in 1800's. Primary mission is to be involved in public education, clinical nursing standards, and lobbying of state and federal lawmakers to advance the profession of nursing. Addresses ethics, public policy and the economic and general welfare of nurses.
National League for Nursing (NLN)
Establishes and maintains a universal standard of education
ex: rules for the course guidelines
International Council of Nurses (ICN)
A federation of more than 130 national nurses associations (NNAs), representing the more than 16 million nurses worldwide.
National Student Nurses Association (NSNA)
Student-run and student-funded organization for student nurses. Gives rise to GANS which gives rise to GCANS
Sigma Theta Tau International (STTI)
International honor society for nursing to foster nursing scholarship, leadership, service, and research to improve health worldwide.
Specialty Groups
network of nurses to better advance a specific specialty of nursing
4 broad aims of nursing
1. Promote health
2. Prevent illness
3. Restore health
4. Facilitate coping with disability and death
8 roles of the nurse
1. caregiver
2. communicator
3. teacher
4. counselor
5. leader
6. researcher
7. collaborator
8. advocate
What is in an RN's scope of practice?
assessment, education, planning care, triage, interpret data, discharge planning, care of invasive lines, parenteral medications
Three types of healthcare prevention
primary, secondary, tertiary
primary prevention
Efforts to prevent an injury or illness from ever occurring.
Examples of primary prevention
Vaccines, healthy diet, exercise, showering daily
secondary services
Efforts to limit the effects of an injury or illness that you cannot completely prevent by early identification and treatment of illness.
example of secondary services
screening for cancer
Tertiary services
actions taken to contain damage once a disease or disability has progressed beyond its early stages
-what can we do so it does not get any worse?
example of tertiary services
Tertiary services refer to long-term rehabilitation services and care for the dying. Historically, these services were provided in extended care facilities. Now, however, many tertiary care services are provided in the home or in outpatient settings.
How can a nurse delegate?
By transferring responsibility, sometimes to an unlicensed assistive personnel
T/f: an RN can delegate tasks including the nursing process
False! Nurse is responsible for dealing with result of of the UAPs findings
t/f: an RN is responsible for monitoring safety of actions to minimize risks
true
Explain HIPPA
legislation enacted by congress to minimize the exclusion of preexisting conditions as a barrier to healthcare insurance, designate special rights for those who lose either health coverage, and eliminate medical underwriting in group plans. the act includes the privacy rule, which creates national standard for of the disclosure of private health information
Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act
When a patient presents to an emergency department, they must be treated
Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH)
when information breaches do occur, patients must be notified within a reasonable amount of time
Patient Self-Determination Act (PSDA)
A federal law that mandates that every individual has the right to make decisions regarding medical care, including the right to refuse treatment and the right-to-die
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
Legislation passed in 1990 that prohibits discrimination against people with disabilities. Under this Act, discrimination against a disabled person is illegal in employment, transportation, public accommodations, communications and government activities.Includes accommodations by employers and for students
Who is prosecutor in criminal law?
federal or state gov
What can criminal cases lead to for the defendent?
fine, imprisonment death
Misdemeanor v. Felony
Misdemeanor is usually defined as a crime which is punishable by up to a year in jail time (minor crime, DUI).
Felony is usually defined by the fact that they are punishable by prison sentences of greater than one year (homocide).
A DUI is an example of a
misdemeanor
Civil Law
Allows for resolutions of dispute between private parties.
Result of civil law
monetary compensation
Who brings lawsuit to trial in civil cases?
plaintiff
Who is the person being sued in civil law?
defendant
List the 6 intentional torts
1. assault
2. battery
3. defamation
4. invasion of privacy
5. false imprisonment
6. fraud
intentional torts
deliberate acts intended to cause harm
Assault vs. Battery
assault = intentional threat to bring harm. Battery = intentional touching/contact w/o consent (harmful or only offensive)
A nurse tells the patient that they will restrain them if they do not behave. What intentional tort does this describe?
Assault. They are threatening to make bodily contact with person without their consent
Two types of defamation
libel and slander
Slander vs. Libel
slander (spoken) and libel (written)
invasion of privacy
violating a person's right not to have his or her name, photo, or private affairs exposed or made public without giving consent
False Imprisonment
restraining an individual or restricting an individual's freedom. Nurse needs formal order before restraining patient
Fraud in nursing
Making fraudulent patient record by purposefully entering in wrong information
Two types of unintentional torts
negligence and malpractice
Negligence
careless neglect, often resulting in injury
Malpractice
Failure by a health professional to meet accepted standards
"I see you are working with Beth today. Beth is one of the worst nurses and hides her medication errors." This information about Beth is incorrect, so it is an example of
slander because the person is reflecting only her opinion that may cause harm to her colleague's reputation
To win and recover damages (money) in a malpractice lawsuit, the plaintiff must prove what four elements?
duty, breach of duty, causation, damages
When does a duty form?
when the patient is assigned to the nurse or seeks treatment from the nurse, or when the nurse observes another person doing something that could harm the patient.
When does a nurse commit a breach of duty?
nurse fails to meet standard of nursing care. If it was not charted, it did not happen.
What is causation?
The breach of duty or deviation from acceptable standards of care by the nurse must be the direct and proximate cause of the injury sustained by the patient.
How is causation established?
Causation is usually established based on the testimony of experts who can link the nurse's actions with the injury
What are damages?
a sum of money roughly equivalent to the loss suffered as a result of the wrong committed
5 values of nursing
altruism, autonomy, human dignity, integrity, social justice
altruism
unselfish regard for the welfare of others
autonomy value
-right to self-determination
-Realizing that the only one who knows what is best for patient is patient
Human dignity value
respect for all people and populations
Integrity value
Acting in accordance with an appropriate code of ethics and accepted standards of practice. Includes honesty.
How is the value of social justice upheld by nurses?
when the nurse works to ensure equal treatment under the law and equal access to quality healthcare.
5 ethical principles of nursing
1. autonomy
2. nonmaleficence
3. beneficence
4. justice
5. fidelity
Nonmaleficence
The duty to do no harm to a patient; related nursing actions include avoiding doing any deliberate harm while rendering nursing care.
Beneficence
Doing good or causing good to be done; kindly action
Justice
is the obligation to be fair. It implies equal treatment of all patients.
fidelity
is the duty to keep promises
Not allowing a patient to drink coffee unsupervised out of fear of injury is demonstrating what ethical principal?
nonmaleficence because the nurse is decreasing risk of harm by not leaving patient alone with hot coffee
Impaired nurse
Refers to a nurse's inability to perform essential job functions because of chemical dependency on drugs or alcohol or mental illness.
informed consent
giving potential participants enough information about a procedure to allow them to decide to do it or not
If patient says "I do not understand this paperwork about my procedure", what should the nurse do to practice informed consent.
Grab the provider to further explain the procedure