NUR1020C MODS 1&2 Objectives: Session 1.1 Articulate the criteria of a profession as applied to nursing. · Altruism – public service over personal gain · Accountability – accepting responsibility for actions and omissions · Autonomy – Make independent decisions within their scope of practice and are responsible for the results and consequences of those decisions · · · Advocate Assertiveness Ethics – standard of right and wrong behavior Discuss standards of practice and nurse practice acts. The Standards of Nursing Practice published by the ANA help to ensure quality care and serve as legal criteria for adequate patient care. ANA standards have two parts. The first part, the standards of practice, includes six responsibilities for the nursing process: assessment, diagnosis, outcomes identification, planning, implementation, and evaluation (ANA, 2010). The second part of Standards of Nursing Practice focuses on professional performance, which includes ethics, education, evidence-based practice and research, quality of practice, communication, leadership, collaboration, professional practice evaluation, resource utilization, and environmental health (ANA, 2010). Nurses who attend continuing education conferences or further their education; use evidence to guide their nursing practice; or communicate and collaborate with patients and other professionals are practicing within the standards. Discuss the nurse’s responsibility in making clinical decisions. assessment, diagnosis, outcomes identification, planning, implementation, and evaluation Define and describe the concept of Health Care Quality. Health care quality applies within the realm of health care delivery in any public or private setting. Whatever structures, systems, and processes an organization establishes, it must be able to show evidence that standards are upheld. Identify the context of health care quality in nursing and healthcare practice. Define and describe the concept of communication. Apply effective communication skills in the context of nursing practice. Objectives: Session 1.2 Define and describe the concepts of and thermoregulation. Optimal physiological function of the human body occurs when a near-constant core temperature is maintained. Normal body temperature ranges from 36.2° to 37.6°C (97.0°–100°F), or an average of 37°C (98.6°F). Fluctuation outside this range is an indication of a disease process, strenuous or unusual activity, or extreme environmental exposure. Thermoregulation is defined as the process of maintaining core body temperature at a near constant value. The term normothermia refers to the state in which body temperature is within the “normal” range. The term hypothermia refers to a body temperature below normal range (<36.2°C), and hyperthermia refers to a body temperature above normal range (>37.6°C). An extremely high body temperature is referred to as hyperpyrexia. 1 1 Notice risk factors that place individuals at risk for thermoregulation problems across the lifespan. Define and describe the concept of Functional Ability. Functional ability refers to the individual's ability to perform the normal daily activities required to meet basic needs; fulfill usual roles in the family, workplace, and community; and maintain health and well-being. Specifically, it reflects the adaptive dimension of development, which is concerned with the acquisition of a range of skills that enable independence in the home and in the community. For the purposes of this concept analysis, functional ability is defined as the cognitive, social, physical, and emotional ability to carry on the normal activities of life. Functional ability may differ from functional performance, which refers to the actual daily activities carried out by an individual. Functional impairment and disability refers to varying degrees of an individual's inability to perform the tasks required to complete normal life activities without assistance. 4 5 Notice situations that increase the risk for functional impairment. Recognize when functional impairment exists. Provide appropriate interventions to optimize functional ability and minimize complications. Define and describe the concept of Health Care Quality. Identify the context of health care quality in nursing and healthcare practice. Lab Objectives: 1.0 Describe the purpose and components of a health assessment interview. Describe the purpose and methods of obtaining the vital signs of temperature, pulse, respiration, and blood pressure. Demonstrate and document accurate assessments of temperature, pulses, respirations, and blood pressures Demonstrate the correct methods and sequence of inspection, palpation, percussion, and auscultation for all body systems. Objectives Session 2.1 Define and describe the concept of Gas Exchange. The process by which oxygen is transported to cells and carbon dioxide is transported from cells. Notice risk factors for impaired gas exchange. Chronic Disorder, Congenital Disorder, Lifestyle, Respiratory Defects (COPD, Asthma), Trauma Recognize when an individual has compromised gas exchange. Capillary refills >3 seconds, respiration elevated, tachycardia, blood pressure drops (hypotension), confusion, labored breathing, skin discoloration (cyanosis) Provide appropriate nursing and collaborative interventions for optimizing gas exchange. Lifestyle education, medications, turning positions, surgery, appropriate clothing, oxygen therapy, patient teaching, nutrition/hydration Define and describe the concept of perfusion. Circulation of oxygenated blood to the organs and surrounding tissues in the body and the removal of carbon dioxide and other gases Notice risk factors for impaired perfusion. Obesity, Diabetes, Cardiac defects, Trauma, Genetic conditions, Congenital defects, Infection & Inflammation Recognize when an individual has compromised perfusion. Respiratory acidosis, Metabolic acidosis, Increased Respiratory/Heart rate Provide appropriate nursing and collaborative interventions to optimize perfusion. Smoking cessation, Pharmacotherapy, Oxygen therapy, Airway Management and Breathing Support, Chest Physiotherapy and Postural Drainage, Invasive procedures, Nutrition therapy, Positioning Describe techniques used during physical assessment. Pulse Ox, Vital signs, skin discoloration, capillary refill, mental status Vital Sign Ranges Across the Life Span AGE GROUP TEMPERATURE PULSE (bpm) RESPIRATIONS (bpm) SpO2 BLOOD PRESSURE (mm Hg) SYSTOLIC DIASTOLIC Newborn 35.5°-37.5° C (96°-99.5° F) 80-160 30-80 >95% 60-90 20-60 1 yr old 37.4°-37.6° C (99.4°99.7° F) 80-140 24-40 >95% 74-100 50-70 6 yr old 36.6°-37° C (98°-98.6° F) 75-110 15-25 >95% 84-120 54-80 15 yr old 36.1°-37.2° C (97°-99° F) 50-90 15-20 >95% 94-120 62-80 Adult 35.5°-37.5° C (95.9°99.5° F) 60-100 12-20 >95% 90-120 60-80 Older adult 35°-37.2° C (95°-99° F) 60-100 15-20 >95% 90-120 60-80 Objectives: Session 2.2 Define and describe the concept of sensory/perception. Sensory perception can then be defined as the ability to receive sensory input and, through various physiological processes in the body, translate the stimulus or data into meaningful information. To describe the concept of sensory perception, it is important first to define both sensation and perception. Sensation is the ability to perceive stimulation through one's sensory organs such as the nose, ears, and eyes. This stimulation can be internal, from within the body, or external, from outside the body, and includes feelings of pain, temperature, and light. External stimuli are commonly received and processed through the five senses: vision, hearing, taste, smell, and touch. Perception is defined as the process by which we receive, organize, and interpret sensation. Notice risk factors for sensory/perception. Trauma, All individuals, regardless of age, gender, ethnicity, or socioeconomic status, are at risk for disturbances in sensation and perception. The population at the highest risk is the elderly population as a result of changes in sensory perceptual functioning associated with the aging process.Significant individual risk factors include genetic predisposition, adverse effects of medications, chronic medical conditions, lifestyle choices, and occupation. Recognize when an individual has impaired sensory perception. A comprehensive health assessment is essential to determining current health status, identifying present health risks, predicting future health risks, and identifying appropriate health-promoting activities. An assessment includes conducting a history and examination as well as diagnostic testing when sensory perceptual conditions are suspected. Provide appropriate nursing and collaborative interventions to sensory perception. Appropriate nursing skills for sensory perception are required as follows: • Assessment • General assessment • Assessment of senses • Irrigation of eye and ear • Medication administration • Oral hygiene demonstration/teaching • Prevention strategies for occupational and recreational exposure to hazards • Eye protection • Hearing protection • Other proper protective equipment • Foreign body removal • Age-appropriate teaching strategies for safety in the home (e.g., childproof cupboard locks and hot water heater setting) • Assistive devices • Hearing aide • Eyewear • Cane/walker/wheelchair • Prosthetics (e.g., eye and lower limb) Collaborative interventions for all categorical areas such as vision, hearing, smell and taste, and touch may incorporate surgical intervention, pharmacotherapy, and adaptive methods in order to assist the patient. Lab Objectives: 2.0 Describe and perform assessment of the head and neck including applicable cranial nerves. Describe assessment techniques used to assess chest and lungs and describe possible findings. Explain normal findings of lungs and give variations in infants, children adults, and aging adults. Demonstrate auscultation of the lungs including the posterior, lateral, and anterior areas. Perform auscultation of the normal heart sounds of S1 and S2. Describe capillary refill and its relationship to peripheral circulation. Describe location of arterial pulses in distal extremities of popliteal, posterior tibial and dorsal pedis, brachial, and radial in infants, children, adults, and aging adults. Define edema and the four-point grading of edema. Edema Module 3 Review Guide Giddens Concept 45 Communication Describe ISBARR (identify self, situation, background, assessment, recommendations, and read back) as it relates to consistent and accurate communication between professionals. ISBARR is a system that allows each step to be taken as a structured routine for passing information between healthcare team members thus ensuring consistency & accuracy. The approach provides the health care provider with the necessary information to make decisions about proposed interventions (Nurse consistently identifies him/herself, describes the patient situation, explains background information relevant to the situation, provides an assessment, provides recommendations for action & reads back orders) Concept 48 Technology Define and describe the concept of Technology and Informatics Technology describes the knowledge and use of tools, machines, materials, and processes to help solve human problems. It can be applied to a specific discipline such as education technologies, medical technologies, or health technologies. Informatics, like technology, also is a broad term and is derived from the French word informatique—it is the science that encompasses information science and computer science to study the process, management, and retrieval of information. Identify ways that technology and Informatics impact health care. Over time, health care providers have used technology to gather, process, and manage data and information about patients in order to provide the best possible care. Technology and informatics have impacted health care by providing safe, effective, efficient, and quality care. Define the following terms: . Computer science A branch of engineering that studies computation and computer technology, hardware, and software as well as the theoretical foundations of information and computation techniques. . Health informatics A discipline in which health data are stored, analyzed, and disseminated through the application of information and communication technology. · Health information technology The application of information processing involving both computer hardware and computer software that deals with the storage, retrieval, sharing, and use of health care data, information, and knowledge for communication and decision making. · Nursing informatics The science and practice (that) integrates nursing, its information and knowledge, with information and communication technologies to promote the health of people, families, and communities worldwide. Explain the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) The privacy and security rules issued under (HIPAA) of 1996 along with multiple state laws create a complex network of laws and regulations that address patient privacy and consent for the use of identifiable personal health information. In 2013, HIPAA rules were modified to reflect new technologies and to enhance personalization and the quality of health care. Building and maintaining the public's trust in health IT requires comprehensive privacy and security protections that establish clear rules on how patient data can be accessed, used, and disclosed. Concept 51 Care Coordination Define and describe the concept of Care Coordination One definition of coordinated care doesn't yet exist. There are more than 40 definitions. The American Academy of Pediatrics was the first organization to try and establish a definition. The definitions differ depending on the focus of care. The general understanding of this is doctors, nurses, patients, family, and other health care providers working together to establish goals of optimal health care and optimal patient outcomes. Identify how care coordination is applied in the context of nursing and health care practice Describe the target of Care Coordination efforts There are currently two tiers to coordinated care. First, is the elderly and frail. This would include children with special health care needs, frail elderly , those in crisis situations or catastrophic events, and people at end of life care before other high risk populations. The second tiers people with complex medical or mental health care needs, disabilities, low income and unstable health insurance coverage. Concept 52 Caregiving Define and describe the concept of Caregiving Caregiving is providing unpaid support and assistance to family members or acquaintances who have physical, psychological, or developmental needs. The scope of caregiving ranges from a temporary/limited caregiving role for an individual with an acute illness or condition to a long-term or permanent caregiving role. What are caregiver experiences related to the following? · Caregivers' Perception and Coping · Perception is the mental process of viewing and interpreting a person's environment Coping is how an individual handles and processes a situation; typically stressful. Can have positive or negative coping skills. Uncertainties and Inadequate Understanding Often face uncertainties about the present and future along with an inadequate understanding of the disease. Caregivers who do not understand a given diagnosis often can refuse to accept that certain symptoms are the result of a disease process. This can result in caregivers feeling guilty. · Caregivers' Financial and Social Distress Often experience negative financial consequences Have to leave work early, come in late, cut back on working Grandparents find their retirement funds dwindle rapidly to cover the unexpected costs of raising their children's children. · Changing Family Roles, Relationships, and Dynamics Majority of stress falls on head of family, roles change, puts new stress on rest of family that may not have had those responsibilities previously Lack of help from other family members, caregiver receives a lot of criticism but no help; children “stay busy” due to being upset about a parent being ill Lack of communication Must work towards family homeostasis to maintain healthy environment · Influence of Culture on the Caregiving Experience Culture plays a big part in how caregiver perceives role and cares for loved one Familism -This value refers to the central role of family in an individual's life and the individual's reliance on family as a priority. The Hispanic/Latino caregiver relies more heavily on unofficial sources of support, which include children, family members, and spouses. Outcomes of Caregiving A comprehensive review of quantitative studies reported post-traumatic growth of bereaved caregivers and a sense of existential meaning associated with the caregiver role, including a sense of pride, esteem, mastery, and accomplishment. Concentrating on the positive aspects can “reframe” their role and help it seem more manageable and meaningful. It strengthens the bonds between caregiver and care recipient and elicits feelings of fulfillment at a personal level and satisfaction derived from the act of assisting others. An understanding of the antecedents, attributes, and consequences of family caregiving are helpful when conducting a family caregiver assessment. An understanding of the antecedents, attributes, and consequences of family caregiving are helpful when conducting a family caregiver assessment. Identify appropriate interventions to support caregiver for positive outcomes. The Alzheimer's Association has developed 10 signs of caregiver stress (Table 52-1). Caregivers have been referred to as “hidden patients” because a common characteristic of caregivers is primarily having concern for their family member and often ignoring their own needs or being ignored by health care professionals. Signs of caregiver stress: denial, anger, social withdrawal, anxiety, depression, exhaustion, irritability, sleeplessness, lack of concentration, health problems Nurses should encourage caregivers to seek and accept the support of family, friends, and community resources when needed. Nurses can and should act as facilitators who can access and provide information about local, regional, and national sources of help and resources for caregivers and care receivers. help them to understand and cope with the stressors of caregiving. Help care for the caregiver by offering support: mentally, emotionally, socially, cognitively, spiritually. Yoost Chapter 3 Communication Explain concerns and precautions related to electronic communication. Special care must be taken to maintain confidentiality while communicating electronically. Electronic communication in the form of information referencing, e-mail, social networking, and blogging can quickly contribute to a person's knowledge, providing patients and health care professionals with vital information. However, the potential for miscommunication exists, in part because nonverbal cues are not apparent. When communicating verbally by electronic media, patients and nurses must take time to validate and verify shared information because misunderstandings can occur if feedback is inadequate Identify techniques used to enhance therapeutic communication when talking with patients. Techniques such as active listening, open posture, and reflection used by nurses encourage patients to explore personal concerns. The use of therapeutic communication techniques enhances nurse–patient relationships and helps to achieve positive outcomes. Consistent use demonstrates empathy and concern for patients. Various techniques greatly assist the nurse in gathering, verifying, and validating assessment data. Describe the essential components of the nurse patient relationship for: · Respect: Respect for patients and their families is conveyed by nurses verbally and nonverbally. Asking a patient's name preference during initial contact demonstrates respect and establishes the foundation for a trusting nurse–patient relationship. Ensuring privacy, providing necessary health care information, and fostering autonomy in decision making are nursing actions that further strengthen the relationship. Controlling facial expressions and body language during challenging interactions with patients and health care team members is essential to consistently demonstrate respect. · Assertiveness: Assertive nurses communicate with patients, families, and other members of the health care team regularly and without hesitation. Assertive communication by nurses demonstrates confidence and elicits respect from patients and colleagues. · Collaboration: Collaboration with other health care professionals is a key factor in communicating necessary health care information and providing comprehensive patient care. Most patients require the collaboration of many different healthcare professionals during hospitalization or outpatient treatment, and the nurse is often the coordinator of this team. · Delegation: Delegation is a multifaceted responsibility of the registered nurse. When communicating during delegation, nurses must show collegiality and respect for all members of the health care team. It is important to call other health care team members by their preferred names. Accuracy while communicating helps ensure positive patient outcomes. Receiving feedback from the person to whom care is delegated is required by law and provides an opportunity for clarity, which ensures greater accuracy. Communicating therapeutically with colleagues during the delegation process shows respect and recognizes the many stressors with which all members of the health care team cope while providing patient care. · Advocacy: Patient advocacy is a hallmark of professional nursing. Advocacy involves defending the rights of others, especially those who are vulnerable or unable to make decisions independently. To be an effective advocate for patients, the nurse must be knowledgeable, organized, and able to communicate in a caring manner. Nurses who communicate therapeutically and assertively are better able to advocate for their patients. Chapter 5 Introduction to Nursing Process Define the nursing process. is the foundation of professional nursing practice. It is the framework within which nurses provide care to patients in an organized and effective manner. Paul (1988) describes critical thinking as a complex process during which individuals think about their thinking to provide clarity and increase precision and relevance in a specific situation while attempting to be fair and consistent. Critical thinking using the nursing process allows nurses to collect essential patient data, articulate the specific needs of individual patients, and effectively communicate those needs, realistic goals, and customized interventions with members of the health care team. Chapter 4 provides additional information on its importance in nursing. The term nursing process was first used by Lydia Hall in 1955 (de la Cuesta, 1983). In the late 1950s and early 1960s, other nurses (Johnson, 1959; Orlando, 1961; Wiedenbach, 1963) began using the term to define the steps used for decision making while initiating and providing patient care. In 1973, the American Nurses Association (ANA) identified five specific steps of the nursing process in its Standards of Clinical Practice (1991). These five steps—assessment, diagnosis, planning, implementation, and evaluation—define how professional nursing practice is conducted. Outcome identification was added as an essential aspect of the nursing process by the ANA in 1991. Most nursing professionals and educators recognize outcome identification as part of the planning step of the traditional five-step nursing process. Describe each step of the nursing process (ADPIE) · Assessment is the organized and ongoing appraisal of a patient's well-being. Assessment involves collecting data from a variety of sources that is needed to care for patients. Data collection begins at the first direct or indirect encounter with a patient. Specific data are collected during the patient interview, health history, and physical assessment. Nurses assess the state of a patient's physical, psychological, emotional, environmental, cultural, and spiritual health to gain a better understanding of his or her overall condition. This is known as a holistic approach to patient care. · Diagnosis identifies an actual or potential problem or response to a problem (NANDA-I, 2012). Accurate identification of nursing diagnoses for patients results from carefully analyzing, validating, and clustering related patient subjective (symptoms) and objective (signs) data. If data collection includes inaccurate or inadequate information or if data are not validated or clustered with related information, a patient may be misdiagnosed. · Planning the nurse prioritizes a patient's various nursing diagnoses, establishes short- and longterm goals, chooses outcome indicators, and identifies interventions to address patient goals. Deciding the order in which nursing diagnoses are addressed depends on several factors, including the severity of symptoms and the patient's preference. Obviously, a patient's ability to breathe is of greater concern than the need to complete activities of daily living independently. After emergent needs are dealt with, less critical problems take priority. This aspect of the nursing process is another indication of its dynamic nature and interrelatedness. · Implementation focuses on initiation of appropriate interventions designed to meet the unique needs of each patient. Interventions may be independent, dependent, or collaborative nursing actions requiring direct or indirect nursing care. All should be derived from evidence-based practice standards that have evolved from research conducted to elicit the best patient outcomes possible. · Evaluation focuses on the patient and the patient's response to nursing interventions and goal or outcome attainment. Evaluation is not a record of the care that was implemented. Evaluation must clearly identify the effectiveness of implemented interventions with the patient as its focus. During the evaluation step of the nursing process, nurses use critical thinking to determine whether a patient's short- and long-term goals were met and desired outcomes were achieved. Monitoring whether the patient's goals were attained is a collaborative process involving the patient. All goals should be should be patient focused, realistic, and measurable. Chapter 6 Assessment Describe the following methods of assessment: · · Observation Use the senses of sight, hearing, and smell during the observation A nurse can gather significant information about a patient's emotional condition and health status by observing the patient's o affect, clothing, personal hygiene, and obvious physical conditions, such as a limp or an open wound. o Using the senses of sight, hearing, and smell during the observation phase helps the nurse gather important patient information, which can guide later aspects of the assessment process. Patient Interview a formal, structured discussion in which the nurse questions the patient to obtain demographic information, data about current health concerns, and medical and surgical histories. essential for the nurse to gather information regarding developmental, cultural, ethnic, and spiritual factors that may affect the patient. These factors can significantly influence patient outcomes and must be considered when developing a patient-centered plan of care. Describe the following types of assessment: · Comprehensive thorough interview, health history, review of systems, and extensive physical head-to-toe assessment, including evaluation of cranial nerves and sensory organs, such as with sight and hearing testing. o often include a variety of laboratory and diagnostic tests that are ordered by the primary care provider. · Focused · brief individualized physical examination conducted at the beginning of an acute care– setting work shift to establish current patient status or during ongoing patient encounters in response to a specific patient concern. o may be conducted when signs indicate a change in a patient's condition or the development of a new complication. o most common type conducted by a nurse. o Vital signs are assessed during each focused examination, which includes assessment of the pain level and pulse oximetry readings o After completion of the basic head-to-toe assessment, attention turns to any health concerns raised by the patient. Emergency done when time is a factor, treatment must begin immediately, or priorities for care need to be established in a few seconds or minutes. treatment is based on a quick survey of accident or illness onset, followed by a narrowly focused physical examination of critical injuries or symptoms and signs. responsiveness is determined in an attempt to establish the potential extent of injury to vital organs. o Attention is paid to the patient's airway, breathing, and circulation. o noticeable deformities such as compound fractures, contusions, abrasions, puncture wounds, burns, tenderness, lacerations, bleeding, and swelling. nurse may never have time to do a complete assessment and may work to stabilize one body system at a time. o must remember to continually reassess every 5 to 15 minutes, depending on the stability of the patient Triage, a form of emergency assessment, is the classification of patients according to treatment priority. o classifications in the three-tier system are emergent, urgent, and nonurgent. The fivetier system classifies patients by levels numbered 1 through 5. TRIAGE TIER DESIGNATION INDICATIONS FOR CARE Level 1 Critical: life-threatening condition Requires immediate and continuous care • Severe trauma • Cardiac arrest • Respiratory distress • Seizure • Shock Requires care within 30 min • Chest pain • Major fracture • Severe pain Level 2 Emergent: imminently life-threatening condition Level 3 Urgent: potentially life-threatening condition Requires care within 30-60 min • Minor fracture • Laceration • Dehydration Requires care within 60-120 min • Sore throat • Abrasion Level 4 Nonurgent: stable health condition Requires care when possible • Conditions with symptoms for a week or longer • Cold symptoms • Minor aches and pains Level 5 Fast track: less urgent Marjory Gordon developed functional health patterns to help nurses focus on patient strengths and related but sometimes overlooked data relationships. FUNCTIONAL HEALTH PATTERN Health perception and health management Nutrition and metabolism FOCUS Patient's perceived level of health Social habits Living conditions Health and safety concerns Food consumption Fluid intake and balance Tissue integrity Elimination Excretory concerns • Bowel • Urinary Activity and exercise Activities of daily living Exercise and leisure Cardiac status Respiratory status Musculoskeletal status Cognition and perception Sensory intactness Cognitive ability Level of consciousness Neurologic function Sleep and rest Self-perception and self-concept Roles and relationships Sexuality and reproduction Values and beliefs Sleep patterns Rest and relaxation activities Fatigue levels Identity Body image Self-worth Self-esteem Role satisfaction Role strain Relationship function or dysfunction Sexuality patterns Satisfaction with intimacy Values Spiritual beliefs Cultural patterns Influences on decision making Chapter 10 Documentation, Electronic Health Records and Reporting Identify critical aspects and legal issues of documentation Critical Aspects - Nursing documentation is guided by the five steps of the nursing process: assessment, diagnosis, planning, implementation, and evaluation. Expected nursing documentation includes a nursing assessment, the care plan, interventions, the patient's outcomes or response to care, and assessment of the patient's ability to manage after discharge. Use of standardized language provides consistency, improves communication among nurses and with other health care providers, increases the visibility of nursing interventions, improves patient care, enhances data collection to evaluate nursing care outcomes, and supports adherence to care standards. The Joint Commission (2014b) has compiled a list of do-not-use abbreviations, acronyms, and symbols to avoid the possibility of errors that may be life-threatening. The Joint Commission supplies a toolkit to help facilities reach compliance in this area, and it recommends that each facility implement a “spell it out” campaign rather than using risky abbreviations. Legal Issues - Nurses' notes are legal documents. The medical record is seen as the most reliable source of information in any legal action related to care. When legal counsel is sought because of a negative outcome of care, the first action taken by an attorney is to acquire a copy of the medical record. Documentation that meets specific guidelines can prevent a case from going to court or can provide protection if a case does go to trial. Every entry into the medical record should include a date, time, and signature. Describe the process of accepting verbal and telephone orders If a verbal or phone order is necessary in an emergency, the order must be taken by a registered nurse (RN) who repeats the order verbatim to confirm accuracy and then enters the order into the paper or electronic system, documenting it as a verbal or phone order and including the date, time, physician's name, and RN's signature. Most facility policies require the physician to cosign a verbal or telephone order within a defined time period. What is the purpose of an incident report? The purpose of this report is to document the details of the incident immediately to ensure accuracy. Incident reports are factual accounts of an incident involving a patient, visitor, or staff member that are not part of the medical record. Chapter 27 Hygiene and Personal Care Describe the importance of hygiene related to skin, hair, nails, and mucous membranes. Skin is the body's vulnerable barrier to the outside world, but it is strong, self-renewing, and easily cleaned. Mucous membranes of the lips, nostrils, anus, urethra, and vagina join seamlessly with the skin. During hygienic care, the nurse cleanses all areas of the integumentary system to maintain healthy tissue, reduce body odor, and enhance comfort. Cleansing rids the skin of microorganisms that can cause infection and odor.. Located in the dermis, sebaceous glands secrete an oily substance that keeps the hair and skin soft. If left unwashed, hair becomes oily as a result of these secretions. Nails arise from the epidermis and are composed of keratinized epithelial cells. They grow from the nail matrix, which is the actively growing portion of the nail. Nails protect the ends of fingers and toes. Unlike skin, nails do not slough off and must be cut. Identify how alterations in skin, hair, nails, and mucous membranes affect hygienic care. Ulcers, Incisions, and Wounds - Any interruption in the skin, which is the body's first line of defense, may lead to infection. Excessively dry skin can lead to cracks and openings in the integumentary system. Excoriation (red, scaly areas with surface loss of skin tissue) occurs in patients whose skin is exposed to bodily fluids such as stool, urine, or gastric juices. Excoriation also occurs in areas where skin rests on skin, such as in the axilla (armpit); under large, pendulous breasts; or in abdominal folds. Decreased Sensation - Damage to peripheral nerves occurs for a variety of reasons. Patients with neurologic deficits, such as peripheral neuropathy due to diabetes, may not be able to identify extremes of hot and cold. The nurse should monitor the temperature of bath water for patients with decreased sensation. Burns may result if skin is exposed to extremely hot water during bathing. Alopecia - Patients may have alopecia due to hereditary factors, certain illnesses, or the effects of drugs such as those used in chemotherapy. This condition may affect the patient's self-esteem. Special care should be given to the scalp. Pediculosis - A contagious scalp infection, this disorder is more commonly known as head lice. Transmission occurs through contact with infested personal items such as combs, hats, or linens. Symptoms of pediculosis are itching and redness of the scalp. If the condition is untreated, secondary bacterial infections can occur. Nails - Fungal, bacterial, and viral infections of the fingernails and toenails occur that cause discoloration and thickening of the nails. Some patients have a decreased ability to heal due to poor circulation. Any cut in the skin can lead to an ulcer in these patients. An order from the primary care provider (PCP) may be necessary for nail trimming, or a podiatrist may be consulted. Oral Cavity - Alterations in the health of the oral cavity can affect the patient's ability to chew or overall health. Sores anywhere in the oral cavity, gingivitis (inflammation of the gums), and broken or missing teeth create problems with chewing. Certain medications cause the mouth to be dry, creating discomfort for the patient. Halitosis (unpleasant breath odor) may result from poor dental hygiene, fungal or bacterial infections, and complications of medical conditions such as diabetic ketoacidosis or renal failure. Oral health depends on diligent oral hygiene. Self-Care Alterations - Many hospitalized patients have alterations in self-care abilities due to illness, recent surgery, immobility, and cognitive dysfunction. Assessing the patient's level of ability to perform skills such as self-bathing helps the nurse devise an appropriate plan of care and assist the patient when needed. Jarvis Chapter 12 Skin, Hair, and Nails (page 199-225) Describe the structure and function of skin, hair and nails. Skin Structure The skin is the largest organ of the body. It has three main layers, the epidermis, the dermis and the subcutaneous layer The epidermis’ major ingredient is the tough, fibrous protein keratin. The melanocytes interspersed along this layer produce the pigment melanin which gives brown tones to skin & hair. People of all skin colors have the same # of melanocytes; however, the amount of melanin they produce vary w/genetic, hormonal & environmental influences. The epidermis is completely replaced every 4 weeks and is avascular as it is nourished by blood vessels in the dermis below. Note: Skin color is derived from 3 sources: (1) mainly from the brown pigment melanin (2) from the yellow-orange tones of the pigment carotene & (3) from the red-purple tones in underlying vascular bed. The dermis is the inner supportive layer consisting mostly of connective tissue or collagen which is the tough, fibrous protein that enables the skin to resist tearing. The dermis has resilient elastic tissue that allows the body to stretch w/body movements. THe nerves, sensory receptors, blood vessels & lymphatics lie in the dermis. The subcutaneous layer is adipose tissue, which is made up of lobules of fat cells. The subcutaneous tissue stores fat for energy, provides insulation for temperature control & aids in protection by its soft cushioning effect. The loose subcutaneous layer also gives skin its increased mobility over structures underneath. Skin Functions Protects: minimizes injury from physical, chemical & thermal & light-wave sources Prevents penetration: Skin is a barrier that stops invasion of microorganisms and loss of water & electrolytes from within the body Perception: SKin is a vast sensory surface holding the neurosensory end-organs for touch, pain, temperature & pressure Temperature Regulation: Skin allows heat dissipation through sweat glands & heat storage through subcutaneous insulation. Indentification: People identify one another by uniques combinations of facial characteristics, hair, skin color & even fingerprints. Communication: Emotions are expressed in the sign language of the face and body posture. Wound Repair: Skin allows cell replacement of surface wounds. Absorption and excretion: Skin allows limited excretion of some metabolic wastes, by products of cellular decomposition such as minerals, sugars, amino acids, cholesterol, uric acid & urea. Production of vitamin D: The skin is the surface on which UV light converts cholesterol into vitamin D. Hair Structure Hairs are threads of keratin. The hair shaft is the visible projecting part, and the root is below the surface embedded in the follicle. At the root the bulb matrix is the expanded area where new cells are produced at a high rate. Hair growth is cyclical, with active and resting phases. Each follicle functions independently; thus while some hairs are resting, others are growing. Around the hair follicle are the muscular arrector pili, which contract and elevate the hair so it resembles “goose flesh” when the skin is exposed to cold or in emotional states. Hair Functions Hair functions as a means of regulating body temperature and it acts as a sensory organ. It also helps to protect the skin from external damage such as sun, wind and foreign particles and acts as insulation for the body Nail Structure The nails are hard plates of keratin on the dorsal edges of the fingers and toes (Fig. 12-2). The nail plate is clear, with fine longitudinal ridges that become prominent in aging. Nails take their pink color from the underlying nail bed of highly vascular epithelial cells. The lunula is the white, opaque, semilunar area at the proximal end of the nail. It lies over the nail matrix where new keratinized cells are formed. The nail folds overlap the posterior and lateral borders. The cuticle works like a gasket to cover and protect the nail matrix. Nail Functions Nails act as a protective plate and enhances sensation of the fingertip and protects ends of digits from trauma . They can also help grasp and manipulate objects. Identify abnormal characteristics of pigmented lesions using the ABCDE method Abnormal characteristics of pigmented lesions are summarized in the mnemonic ABCDE: Asymmetry (not regularly round or oval, two halves of lesions do not look the same Border irregularity (notching, scalloping, ragged edges, poorly defined margins) Color variation (areas of brown, tan, black, blue, red, white or combination) Diameter greater than 6mm (i.e., the size of a pencil eraser), although early melanomas may be diagnosed at smaller sizes Elevation or Evolution Additional symptoms: rapidly changing lesion; a new pigmented lesion; and development of itching, burning or bleeding in a mole. Describe the following skin changes · Pallor: changes in skin tone or complexion/paleness Caused by: Changes in light Skin: Changes in dark skin: Anemia or shock generalized pallor brown skin appears yellow-brown, dull: black skin appears ashen gray, dull; skin loses healthy glow Albinism Whitish pink Tan, cream, white Vitiligo Patchy milky-white spots, often Symmetric bilaterally Same · Erythema: redness of the skin or mucous membranes Caused by: Changes in light Skin: Changes in dark skin: Hyperemia Red, bright pink Purplish tinge but difficult to see; palpate for increased warmth w/inflammation, taut skin & hardening of deep tissues Polycythemia Ruddy blue in face, oral mucosa, Conjunctiva, hands & feet Well concealed by pigment check for redness in lips Carbon monoxide beds, poisoning Bright cherry red in face & upper Cherry-red color in nail torso lips & oral mucosa Venous stasis palpation Extremities; a prelude to necrosis w/pressure sore Dusky rubor of dependent Easily masked; use for warmth or edema · Cyanosis: the appearance of a bluish discoloration of the skin and/or mucous membranes due to excessive concentration of deoxyhemoglobin in the blood Caused by: Changes in light Skin: Increased amount of Dusky blue only hemoglobin apparent Central- Chronic heart & conjunctivae, lung disease cause arterial Desaturation Peripheral-Exposure to cold, Nail Beds dusky anxiety Changes in dark skin: Dark but dull, lifeless; severe cyanosis is in skin --check oral mucosa, nail beds · Jaundice: yellow coloring of the skin or eyes caused by too much bilirubin in the body. Caused by: Changes in light Skin: Changes in dark skin: Increased serum bilirubin, Yellow in sclera, hard palate, Check sclera for yellow near more than 2-3 mg/100 mL mucous membranes, then over limbus, do not mistake from liver inflammation or skin normal yellowish fatty hemolytic disease such as deposits in the periphery after severe burns, some under the eyelids for jaundice Infections Carotenemia Uremia ; best noted in junction of hard/soft palate & palms Yellow-orange in forehead, palms & soles, nasolabial folds, but no yellowing in sclera or mucous membranes Orange-green or gray overlying pallor of anemia; may also have ecchymoses & purpura yellow-orange tinge in palms & soles Easily masked; rely on lab & clinical findings · Warts: An example of a papule (can be felt). Raised bumps on the skin · Bulla/ Bullae (more than one): blisters that occur when fluid is trapped under a thin layer of skin. Usually larger than 1 cm diameter & shingle chambered (unilocular); superficial in epidermis & easily ruptures since thin walled. Examples: friction blisters, pemphigus, burns & contact dermatitis · Freckles: Small, flat macules of brown melanin pigment that occur on sun-exposed skin · Papules: Something you can feel (i.e. solid, elevated, circumscribed, <1 cm diameter) caused by superficial thickening in epidermis. Examples: elevated nevus (mole), lichen planus, molluscum, wart (verruca). Chapter 13 Head, Face and Neck, including Regional Lymphatics Describe Dizziness related to Presyncope, vertigo and disequilibrium Presyncope, a light-headed, swimming sensation or feeling of fainting or falling caused by decreased blood flow to brain or heart irregularity causing decreased cardiac output. Vertigo is true rotational spinning often from labyrinthine-vestibular disorder in inner ear. With objective vertigo the person feels like the room is spinning; with subjective vertigo the person feels like he or she is spinning. Disequilibrium is a shakiness or instability when walking related to musculoskeletal disorder or multisensory deficits. Identify cranial nerves involved in sensory and motor function of the face and neck The human face has many appearances and expressions that reflect mood. The expressions are formed by the facial 252 muscles, which are mediated by cranial nerve VII, the facial nerve. Facial muscle function is symmetric bilaterally, except for an occasional quirk or wry expression. Facial structures are symmetric; the eyebrows, eyes, ears, nose, and mouth appear about the same on both sides. The palpebral fissures—the openings between the eyelids—are equal bilaterally. Also the nasolabial folds—the creases extending from the nose to each corner of the mouth—should look symmetric. Facial sensations of pain or touch are mediated by the 3 sensory branches of cranial nerve V, the V trigeminal nerve. The neck is delimited by the base of the skull and inferior border of the mandible above and by the manubrium sterni, the clavicle, the first rib, and the first thoracic vertebra below. Think of the neck as a conduit for the passage of many structures that are lying in close proximity: blood vessels, muscles, nerves, lymphatics, and viscera of the respiratory and digestive systems. Blood vessels include the common and internal carotid arteries and their associated veins. The internal carotid artery branches off the common carotid and runs inward and upward to supply the brain; the external carotid artery supplies the face, salivary glands, and superficial temporal area. The carotid artery and internal jugular vein lie beneath the sternomastoid muscle. The external jugular vein runs diagonally across the sternomastoid muscle. (See assessment of the neck vessels in Chapter 19.) The major neck muscles are the sternomastoid and the trapezius; they are innervated by cranial nerve XI, the spinal accessory. The sternomastoid muscle arises from the sternum and the clavicle and extends diagonally across the neck to the mastoid process behind the ear. It accomplishes head rotation and flexion. The two trapezius muscles on the upper back arise from the occipital bone and the vertebrae and extend fanning out to the scapula and clavicle. The trapezius muscles move the shoulders and extend and turn the head. Describe the function of the Lymphatic system The lymphatic system is a separate vessel system from the cardiovascular system and a major part of the immune system, whose job it is to detect and eliminate foreign substances from the body. The vessels gather the clear, watery fluid (lymph) from the tissue spaces into the circulation. Lymph nodes are small, oval clusters of lymphatic tissue that are set at intervals along the lymph vessels like beads on a string. The nodes slowly filter the lymph and engulf pathogens, preventing harmful substances from entering the circulation. Nodes are located throughout the body but are accessible to examination only in four areas: head and neck, arms, axillae, and inguinal region. The greatest supply is in the head and neck. Chapter 14 Eyes (pages 281-312) Describe eye movement stimulated by CN III- oculomotor nerve (CN III) innervates all the rest—the superior, inferior, and medial rectus and the inferior oblique muscles. CN VI- The abducens nerve (CN VI) innervates the lateral rectus muscle (which abducts the eye) CN IV- trochlear nerve (CN IV) innervates the superior oblique muscle Six muscles attach the eyeball to its orbit (Fig. 14-4, A) and serve to direct our eyes to points of our interest. These extraocular muscles (EOMs) give the eye both straight and rotary movement. The four straight, or rectus, muscles are the superior, inferior, lateral, and medial rectus muscles. The two slanting, or oblique, muscles are the superior and inferior muscles. Module 4 Review Guidelines Giddens Concept 49 Evidence Define evidence-based nursing. The conscientious, explicit, and judicious use of theory-derived, research-based information in making decisions about the care delivery to individual needs and preferences. How is evidence used in nursing and health care? Evidence serves a similar function in health care as it does in the legal system. It provides proof of the usefulness of an intervention, the projected course of a disease, or the link between environmental insults and illness. Concept 40 Clinical Judgement Define Clinical Judgement. Inference or interpretation made in a caregiving setting A process resulting in such an inference or interpretation The capacity for making inferences or interpretations about patient care. Interpretation or conclusion about a patient's needs, concerns, or health problems, and/or the decision to take action (or not), use or modify standard approaches, or improvise new ones as deemed appropriate by the patient's response. Describe clinical judgement as it relates to experience, theoretical knowledge, and expertise. Clinical judgments require that the nurse recognize the unique situation of the patient, originating from deep knowledge of a variety of interrelated physiologic and psychosocial concepts resulting in a profound understanding of the clinical situation. Explain how each of the following contribute to the development of clinical judgment: · Knowledge or Deep Understanding Deep knowledge provides a basis for focused assessments, including salient factors, and for interpreting findings that lead to appropriate clinical judgments, specific to the patient's needs. · Learning to Recognize Patterns Pattern recognition of specific conditions is a significant aspect of noticing and interpreting patient care needs and leads to a deeper understanding of patient issues. Knowing patterns alerts the nurse to note what signs or symptoms may be present or absent in order to determine an appropriate response. · Apply Concepts to Nursing Practice Consider how the context (caregiving situation, your own values, knowing the patient and his or her specific personal qualities and needs, and your own past nursing and personal experiences with the concept) impacts the particular caregiving situation. · Skillful Responding Involves setting priorities and modifying them as the situation changes Discuss prioritization of care as a part of your daily routine in clinical Identify the resources in the clinical setting that support skill-related decision making and performance, ie procedure references Think about what you might expect the patient response to the intervention might be, and then observe the actual response · Reflective Practice Helps students to process and consolidate learning about caregiving situations Reflection on clinical experiences can support application of theoretical knowledge to clinical situations and improve prioritization of future nursing care Concept 43 Patient Education Define patient education. Patient education is defined as a process of assisting people to learn health-related behaviors so that they can incorporate these behaviors into everyday life. Describe the role of the nurse in patient education. The nurse facilitates patient educational approaches, which can range from formal educational programming, such as group lecture settings to informal, individualized one-on-one teaching and to selfdirected learning by the patient. Define and describe the following learning domains: · Affective Education that is intended to change attitudes, such as viewing the lifestyle modifications associated with the treatment of coronary artery disease as a positive change rather than a burden. · Cognitive Education intended to increase a patient's knowledge of a subject, for example, is cognitive in nature, and using methods such as written material, lecture, and discussion is appropriate. · Psychomotor domains Skill teaching or psychomotor teaching requires that the patient have opportunities to touch and manipulate equipment and practice skills. For example, a patient who must learn to change a dressing over a wound. Yoost Chapter 4 Critical Thinking in Nursing Define and describe critical thinking and clinical reasoning: Critical thinking is a complex process that is “the art of thinking about your thinking while you’re thinking so you make your thinking more clear, precise, accurate relevant, consistent and fair” Differentiated from trial & error, Nurses make life-and-death decisions on the basis of critical thinking influenced by scientific research and best practices. “Critical thinking involves the application of knowledge and experience to identify patient problems and to direct clinical judgments and actions that result in positive patient outcomes” Clinical reasoning uses critical thinking, knowledge, and experience to develop solutions to problems and make decisions in a clinical setting A nurse's clinical-reasoning skills develop over time with increased knowledge and expertise. Describe the following components of critical thinking: Knowledge review:Critical thinking is contextual and requires knowledge of the subject that is the focus of the thinking. A person can not think critically without knowledge of the subject matter. (i.e. baseline knowledge & information gathering contributes to knowledge review Reasoning: logical thinking that links thoughts in meaningful ways and is used in scientific inquiry, in examining controversial issues, and in problem solving. (inductive & deductive reasoning is used) Inference: intellectual acts that involve a conclusion being made on the basis of something else. Validation: the process of gathering information to determine whether the information or data collected are factual and true Attitudes necessary for critical thinking: Critical-thinking attitudes promote learning, reasoning, and discipline/Attitudes foster critical thinking that focuses on clarity, precision, clarification, validation, and recognition of bias Identify essential characteristics or traits of critical-thinking: See Table-3/page 60 which defines 11 intellectual traits identified as essential for competence in critical thinking Identify thinking errors: (to avoid) bias, illogical thinking, lack of information, closedmindedness, erroneous assumptions (slide #24 PP) Describe the process referred to as thinking like a nurse. Because nursing requires the application of knowledge to make clinical decisions and guide care, it involves active participation by the nurse. The application of knowledge requires development of a questioning attitude. This process is sometimes referred to as thinking like a nurse. Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Define nursing diagnosis. Identification of an actual or potential problem or response to a problem Differentiate between the following: · Actual nursing diagnosis Diagnostic label used when there is an increased potential or vulnerability for Pt to develop a problem or complication. · Risk nursing diagnosis Risk nursing diagnosis guide the initiation of treatments to avoid potential problems. · Health promotion nursing diagnosis Health-promotion nursing diagnoses identify opportunities for patient improvement · Medical and nursing diagnoses Whereas medical diagnoses identify and label medical (physical and psychological) illnesses, nursing diagnoses are much broader in focus. Nursing diagnoses consider a patient's response to medical diagnoses and life situations in addition to making clinical judgments based on a patient's actual medical diagnoses and conditions. Nursing diagnoses take into consideration a patient's attitudes, strengths, and resources—not just the medical problems identified—which are critical for planning holistic, individualized care Describe each of the following components of a nursing diagnosis: · Diagnosis label diagnosis label is a concise term or phrase that represents a pattern of related, clustered data · Related factors and risk factors Related factors are the underlying cause or etiology of a patient's problem. Risk factors are environmental, physical, psychological, or situational concerns that increase a patient's vulnerability to a potential problem or concern. · Defining characteristics Defining characteristics are cues or clusters of related assessment data that are signs, symptoms, or indications of an actual or health-promotion nursing diagnosis. Describe the process of data clustering. Clustering involves organizing patient assessment data into groupings with similar underlying causes. The nurse looks for cues among the data that support the diagnosis of a problem. For example, objective and subjective data related to mobility can be clustered. Data related to nutritional status, such as weight, height, and dietary intake, can be clustered. Chapter 8 Planning Describe the planning step of the nursing process. Prioritizes the patient's nursing diagnoses, determines short- and long-term goals, identifies outcome indicators, and lists nursing interventions for patient-centered care. Describe how each of the following is used to prioritize care: · Maslow’s hierarchy of needs Helps organize the most urgent to less urgent; a patient’s physiological needs must always be met first. · Life threatening concerns vs routine care Use the ABC’s to determine situation. · Conflicting priorities Nurse-patient collaboration in the goal-setting process can help to alleviate the incidence of conflicting priorities. Define each of the following goal characteristics: · Realistic Consider the patient's physical, mental, and spiritual condition in relation to the ability to attain goals. · Patient centered Written specifically for the patient. The goal should specify the activity the patient is to exhibit or demonstrate to indicate goal attainment. Goals are written to reflect patient, not nursing, activities. · Measurable Specific, with numeric parameters or other concrete methods of judging whether the goal was met. Chapter 13 Evidence-Based Practice Define each of the following topics: · Research: a systematic inquiry that uses disciplined methods to answer questions or solve problems. Also defined as a diligent, systemic inquiry or study that validates and refines existing knowledge and develops new knowledge · Nursing Research: a formal, systematic, and rigorous process of inquiry used to generate and test theories about the health related experiences of human beings within their environments and about the actions and processes that nurses use in practice · American Nurses Association Research Standards: Require nurses to use research findings in practice where two criteria are measured. 1. Nurses need to use the best available evidence 2. Nurses participate in research activities that are appropriate for their position and level of education Chapter 9 Implementation and Evaluation Define each of the following: · Implementation Performing a task and documentation of each intervention. · Evaluation Focuses on the patient and the patient’s response to nursing interventions and outcome attainment. · Direct care nursing interventions Interventions that are carried out by having personal contact with patients. Types: Reassesment, ADL’s, Physical Care, Informal Counseling, Teaching · Indirect care nursing interventions Nursing interventions that are performed to benefit patients but do not involve face to face contact Types: Communication and Collaboration, Referrals, Research, Advocacy, Delegation, Prevention-Orientated Interventions · Independent nursing interventions Tasks within the nursing scope of practice that the nurse may undertake without a Physician or PCP order. · Dependent nursing interventions Tasks the nurse undertakes that are within the scope of practice but require an order from PCP to be implemented. Chapter 20 Health History and Physical Assessment Describe each of the following: · Cranial nerve assessment A complete cranial nerve assessment involves testing all 12 of the cranial nerves in their numbered order · CRANIAL NERVE ASSESSMENT I - Olfactory After assessing patency of both nares, have the pt. close the eyes, obstruct one nare, and inhale to identify a common scent. II - Optic Check visual acuity (have the pt. read article or use a Snellen chart), and test visual fields for each eye. III - Oculomotor Assess pupil size and light reflex; note direction of gaze. IV - Trochlear Ask the pt. to gaze downward, temporally, and nasally. (Note: CN III, IV, and VI are examined together because they control eyelid elevation, eye movement, and pupillary constriction.) V - Trigeminal Motor: Palpate jaws and temples while pt. clenches teeth. Sensory: With pt. eyes closed, gently touch a cotton ball to all areas of the face. VI - Abducens Assess directions of gaze. VII - Facial Motor: Check symmetry of the face by having the pt. frown, close eyes, lift eyebrows, and puff cheeks. Sensory: Assess the pt. ability to recognize taste (sugar, salt, lemon juice). VIII - Auditory (Vestibulocochlear) Assess the pt. ability to hear a spoken and whispered word. IX - Glossopharyngeal Sensory: Assess the pt. ability to taste sour or sweet on last two thirds of tongue. Motor: Check for presence of the gag reflex by inserting a tongue blade two-thirds into the pharynx. X - Vagus Depress the tongue with a tongue blade, and have the pt. say “ah” or yawn. The uvula and soft palate should rise and be symmetric. Assess speech for hoarseness. XI - Accessory Have the pt. rotate the head and shrug the shoulders against passive resistance. XII - Hypoglossal Assess tongue control (e.g., have the patient stick out the tongue and move it from side to side). Sensory nerve assessment The CNS is composed of sensory pathways that detect and conduct sensations of pain, temperature, vibration, position, and touch. Screening for sensory nerve dysfunction can be accomplished during other parts of the physical examination, such as during skin assessment. With eyes closed, the patient should feel dull and sharp sensory stimuli equally on both sides of the body. Ask the patient to describe the quality of each stimulus, and note the presence or absence of bilateral symmetry when the stimuli are applied to the patient's extremities and trunk. Compare distal with proximal sensations. · Motor nerve assessment Motor skills are divided into two groups: gross motor skills, which include the larger movements of arms, legs, or the entire body, and fine motor skills, which include activities using the smaller muscles of the fingers, hands, or feet and hand-eye coordination. To test gross motor skills during the assessment, assess the quality of the patient's actions for smoothness and ease of movement. To test fine motor skills and function, have the patient perform actions such as transferring an object from one hand to the other successfully, picking up and holding two or more objects in the same hand, turning pages one at a time, and writing a signature Jarvis Chapter 22 Musculoskeletal System Define the following terms: Flexion - Bending movement of a limb at a joint. Extension - Straightening a limb at a joint, it is the reverse of flexion, and occurs at the same joints. Abduction - Movement of a limb AWAY from the midline of the body. Adduction - Movement of a limb TOWARD the midline of the body, it is the opposite of abduction. Pronation - Refers to the movement of the radius around the ulna, rotating the forearm so that the palm faces DOWN. Supination - Refers to the movement of the radius around the ulna, rotating the forearm so that the palm faces UP. Circumduction - Moving a limb so that it describes a cone in space eg. moving the arm in a circle around the shoulder. Inversion - Special movement of the foot, moving the sole of the foot medially, inwards at the ankle. Eversion - Special movement of the foot, moving the sole of the foot laterally, outwards at the ankle. Rotation - The turning of a bone around its own long axis, eg. moving the head around a central axis. Active and Passive Range of Motion (ROM) - Active range of motion, or AROM, is the range of flexibility in a joint reached by voluntary movement, eg. when you stretch forward to touch your toes. In contrast, passive range of motion, or PROM, is the range that can be achieved by external means such as another person or a device, eg. a trainer pressing into your leg to stretch your hamstring. Chapter 23 Identify normal findings of cranial nerve 3 to 12, Cerebellar function, Balance function and Stereognosis. Normal Findings: Cranial Nerve III: Oculomotor nerve, Cranial Nerve IV: Trochlear nerve, Cranial Nerve VI: Abducens nerve/movement of eyeballs Cranial Nerve V: Trigeminal nerve,/ equal feelings of the temporal and masseter muscles, inability to separate jaw, person has full facial sensation Cranial Nerve VII: Facial nerve, /ability to make facial expressions Cranial Nerve VIII: Acoustic (Vestibulocochlear) nerve/ ability to hear Cranial Nerve IX: Glossopharyngeal nerve/ uvula and soft palate should rise in the midline and tonsillar pillars should move medially upon saying 'ahhh” or yawning Cranial Nerve X: Vagus nerve/ should initiate gag reflex & voice should sound smooth and not strained Cranial Nerve XI: Spinal accessory nerve,/ ability to shrug shoulders and move head against resistance, equal size and strength of muscles bilaterally Cranial Nerve XII: Hypoglossal nerve,/ voluntary movement of the tongue and ability to articulate words Cerebellar function: movements should be smooth & accurate Balance function: can walk straight & stay balanced Stereognosis: person can explore familiar items with eyes closed by feeling with fingers and correctly identify it Exam: 1/3 rd each subject 1. Safety 2. Legal 3. Abdominal assessment Safety: Joint Commission (makes national patient safety goals) QSEN: 6 Competencies o Patient Centered Care o Teamwork and Collaboration o Evidence-Based Practice o Quality Improvement o Safety o Informatics Safety concerns in the healthcare field: o Falls o o o o o Restraints Med administration errors Radiation Drug resistant microorganisms (MRSA) Procedural errors 4 Environmental Health Risk Factors o Pollution o Lighting (poor lighting) o Workplace hazards o Communicable diseases Toxin Bioterrorism Carbon Monoxide o Colorless, odorless gas that can cause sudden illness or death o Symptoms: dizziness, light-headed, nausea, death if exposed long term o leading cause of unintentional death in US Number 1 cause of children poisoning in ages 1-5: o Lead Poisoning Symptoms: developmental delays, weight loss, headaches, sluggishness or fatigue, vomiting, abdominal pain, irritability Sentinel events o Any unanticipated event in a healthcare setting resulting in death or serious psychological or physical injury to a patient o #1 sentinel event: falls RACE o Rescue, Alarm, Confine, Extinguish PASS o Pull, Aim, Squeeze, Sweep National Safety Goals o Identify patients correctly o Use medications correctly/safely o Improve Staff communication o Prevent infection o ID patient risks o Prevent mistakes in surgery o Use alarms correctly o Prevent falls o Prevent bed sores Risk Nursing Dx o Scopes of Nursing Practice: o Regulatory or Statutory o Nurse is responsible for knowing scope of practice o Know who makes these (government) o State Boards make laws Know what QSEN stands for o Quality Safety and Education for Nurses Legal: Liable o written form of defamation of character. Slander o verbal defamation of character Negligence o creating a risk of harm to others by failing to do something that a reasonable person would ordinarily do, or doing something that a reasonable person would ordinarily not do. Malpractice o is negligence committed by a person functioning in a professional role. Regulatory Law o outline how the requirements of statutory law will be met. Nursing rules and regulations are categorized as regulatory law. ( Administrative in nature made by the executive branch of government, and restrictive and impose sanctions upon people and companies.) Policy o a course of principal of action adopted or proposed by a government party, business, or individual. ( General made by individual organizations and even governments. Helps organization achieves its goals.) Assault o threat to harm another (can be an attempt, written, or spoken threat) Battery o actual physical harm to another. (can involve forceful touching of people, their clothing or anything attached to person; performing procedure w/o consent.) Legal Documents: Advanced directive: consist of three documents: (1) living will, (2) durable power of attorney, and (3) health care proxy, commonly referred to as durable power of attorney for health care. o Living will specifies the treatment a person wants to receive in circumstances in which that person is unconscious or no longer capable of making decisions independently. o Durable Power of Attorney legal document that allows a designated person to make legal decisions on behalf of an individual unable or not permitted to make legal decisions independently. (Health decisions) o Health care proxy specific durable power of attorney for medical care. This document specifies who is to make health care decisions for an individual who is unable to comprehend information or communicate his or her wishes for any reason. Code status o Limited code- This is a code “shopping list” pick and choose what you want. o Full code - do whatever necessary to save life o AND (Allow Natural Death) AKA “DNR” or “No code” Power of Attorney o Make legal decisions for person that is no longer capable; Typically financial Informed consent o permission granted by a patient after discussing each of the following topics with the physician, surgeon, or advanced practice nurse who will perform the surgery or procedure: (1) exact details of the treatment, (2) necessity of the treatment, (3) all known benefits and risks involved, (4) available alternatives, and (5) risks of treatment refusal. Began when Research Trials came about Governing Laws EMTALA o A policy that states that a hospital with emergency departments have a duty to care for those requiring emergency medical assistance whether or not they have the ability to pay. OmNiBus 2007 o Protection of patients in long-term care facilities against chemical and physical restraints (nursing homes) Good Samaritan o Protects health care professionals from charges of negligence in providing emergency care in scenes of disaster, emergency, or accident o Can be suspended for not offering help HIPAA o Established to protect a patient’s privacy and personal information. This includes accessibility, privacy, security, and confidentiality. COBRA o insurance coverage that can be purchased at the end of one policy terminating to cover until new policy is effective. Patient Self Determination Act o requires that health care providers supply all patients with written information regarding their rights to make medical decisions and implement advance directives. AMA Abdominal Assessment: Jarvis CH21 PP Appendix → Cecum → Ascending → hepatic flexure → Transverse → Splenic Flexure → Descending → Sigmoid → Rectum Normal amount of bowel sounds to hear: 5-30 a minute Use Bell when listening for bruits or AV fistula (connection of artery and vein) Use Diaphragm to auscultate Define what is normal and abnormal Know order of examination: slide 82 o Inspect: o Auscultate: RLQ → RUQ → LUQ → LLQ o Palpate: lighty ½ inch deep all over each Q, deeper 1-1 ½ inch all over each Q o Percuss: tympany (sounds) Abnormal Findings -Normal finding: 5-30 sounds in 1 min. Listen for 5min each quadrants if no sounds heard. -Hypo-active sounds -Hyper-active sounds o Obesity o Air or gas o Ascites (accumulation of fluid in the peritoneal cavity, causing abdominal swelling) o Ovarian cyst o Pregnancy o Feces o Tumor o Umbilical hernia, Epigastric hernia, Incisional hernia, Diastasis hernia o Enlarged organs Types of Contour (4) o Flat - normal o Scaphoid - anorexia A scaphoid abdomen is due to malnutrition. o Rounded - overweight (considered normal as well) after pregnancy, loss of abdominal muscles. o Protuberant - Type 2 diabetes, cirrhosis of liver, pregnancy a protuberant abdomen is caused by one of three things: excess fat stored in the midsection, a loss of muscle tone, or a buildup of substances inside the abdominal region (such as in the intestines) o Six F's of Abdominal Extension 1. Fetus 2. Flatus 3. Fecal 4. Fat 5. Fluid 6. Fatal-tumor Other Testing Info: Review HTT for ears, eyes, neuro Organs that are midline Uterus (only if enlarged) Aorta Bladder (only feel if distended) Organs in RLQ Appendix R ovary and tube R ureter R spermatic cord R cecum (small and large intestine meet) Organs in RUQ R Kidney Adrenal gland Gallbladder Liver Ascending colon Transverse colon Hepatic flexure of colon Head of pancreas Duodenum (first part of stomach) Organs in LUQ Left part of liver Pancreas L Kidney Adrenal gland Splenic flexure of colon (connect transverse to descending) Part of Transverse and Descending colon Spleen Stomach Organs in LLQ L ovary and tube L ureter L spermatic cord Transverse colon Descending colon Sigmoid colon Dysphagia- difficulty swallowing Ascites- accumulation of fluid in the peritoneal cavity causing abdominal swelling Ecchymosis-blood from intraperitoneal or retroperitoneal hemorrhage may discolor the abdominal skin (ex: ectopic pregnancy and AAA) Diastasis Recti-separation between the left and right side of the rectus abdomens muscle (Bulge) ridge-like in appearance, helps a little if they improve the tone of the abdominal muscles Cushing Disease -The most common cause is the use of steroid drugs, but it can also occur from overproduction of cortisol by the adrenal glands.Signs are a fatty hump between the shoulders, a rounded face, and pink or purple stretch marks. Loss of salivation is normal as a person ages (dry mouth) Genital Identification and Health Promotion Lab Objectives: a. b. . a. b. . a. . a. . 1. Perform a sequentially correct assessment of the abdomen. Inspect, Auscultate, Palpate, Percuss PER BOOK: Inspect, Auscultate, Percuss, Palpate 2. Demonstrate proper auscultation of the aorta, renal and iliacs for bruits. Aorta: belly button area Renal: identify location of aorta and auscultate to left and and right of that Iliacs: below umbilicus, and inward from iliac crest 3. Interpret findings obtained during inspection, palpation, percussion, and auscultation of the abdomen. 4. Incorporate health promotion concepts when performing an assessment of the abdomen. 5. Describe the structures of the male genitals. Know basic internal Know basic external 6. Discuss the importance of teaching testicular self-examination as health promotion during assessment. Testicular cancer is common 15-35 Know how to examine and palpate scrotum 7. Describe developmental care for examination of anal, rectal, and prostate structures. 8. Incorporate health promotion concepts when performing an assessment of the anus, rectum, and prostate. 9. Describe the structures of the internal and external female genitalia. Look at Jervis slide show 10. Outline the changes observed during puberty. 11. Cite changes found during pregnancy. . Cardiac changes i. increased HR 10-20bpm ii. Increase in blood by up to 50% a. Renal changes b. Body water metabolism c. Respiratory changes d. Thyroid changes e. Adrenal changes f. Glucose changes (gestational diabetes) g. Skeletal changes (hips widen, feet flatten) 12. Outline the changes observed during the peri-menopausal period. 13. Incorporate health promotion concepts when performing an assessment of the female genitourinary system. 14. Differentiate the different types of pain. 15. Compare acute and chronic pain. . Acute: 6 months or less a. Chronic: 6 months or more 16. Describe developmental care as well as cross-cultural and gender considerations regarding pain. 17. Compare available pain assessment tools. 18. Compare acute and chronic pain behaviors (nonverbal behaviors of pain). . objective, vital sign changes 19. Describe the physical changes that may occur because of poorly controlled pain. 20. Demonstrate proper use of personal protective equipment (PPE). . 1. Gown, 2. mask/respirator, 3. goggles/face shield, 4. gloves 21. Verbalize appropriate PPE to utilize for each isolation category. . Gloves and gown are standard precautions a. Standard Precaution 2: goggles, mask, or face shield (expecting blood) b. Expanded Precautions (Droplet, Airborne, Contact) . Airborne: mask, gown, gloves, particulate respirated, negative pressurized isolation room (eg Whooping cough, Influenza) i. Droplet(can travel 3ft): surgical mask within 3ft of pt, gown, gloves ii. Contact: gown, gloves Module 5 Review Guide Giddens Concept 47 Safety Define and describe the Concept of Safety Freedom from accidental injury ensuring patient safety involves: o establishment of operational systems and processes that minimize the likelihood of errors o maximizes the likelihood of intercepting them when they occur Concept of safety is broad and encompasses the ideal of keeping all patients safe to the unfortunate reality that errors can lead to injury or death Define and describe the following types of Safety concerns: · Diagnostic The result of a delay in diagnosis Failure to employ indicated tests Use of outmoded tests Failure to act on results of monitoring or testing · Treatment occur in the performance of an operation, procedure, or test in administering a treatment in the dose or method of administering a drug in avoidable delay in treatment or in responding to an abnormal test · Preventive when there are failures to provide prophylactic treatment and inadequate monitoring or follow-up of treatment · Communication lack of communication or a lack of clarity in communication Describe the following in the context to nursing and healthcare · Just Culture system's value of reporting errors without punishment one in which people can report mistakes or errors without reprisal or personal risk. DOES NOT mean individuals are not accountable for their actions or practice o does mean that people are not punished for flawed systems promotes sharing and disclosure among stakeholders balance the need to learn from mistakes and the need to implement disciplinary action. · Transparency in healthcare Hospitals should make available information on a system's performance on safety, evidence-based practice, and patient satisfaction (HCAHPS) also defined as open communication and information sharing with patients and their families about their care, including adverse and sentinel events. Timely, open, honest communication with patients and families about adverse events helps restore trust Michigan Model Concept 57 Concept of Health Care Policy Define and describe the concept of Health Policy Health Policy can be defined as a form of public policy, differentiating it from other kinds of decision making. A classic and basic definition of public policy is what governments decide to do or not to do.Public policy can also be defined as the choices made by a society or social entities that relate to public goals and priorities as well as the choices made for allocating resources to those goals and priorities. Health policy would therefore be the result of choices and resource allocation decisions made to support health-related goals and priorities. Health policy as a concept can first be differentiated by locating it within the realm of public decision making by political authority including executive order, legislation, judicial process, or regulatory rulemaking agencies. The scope of health policy is wide and as varied as the numerous entities responsible for decisions, funding, enactment, and oversight as well as the many populations and individuals who are affected by these decisions. Health policy decisions can have both macro-level (Medicare program funding) and micro-level effects (co-payments for episodes of care) and can be made on the basis of economics, social justice, political trends, and/or changing social values. Health policy can also be the source of much political conflict because it has the potential to affect a large number of people, depending on the health policy goal. Describe the Scope and Standards of Professional Nursing Practice The licensing and regulation of health professionals, including nurses, are the responsibility of state governments. States create laws that establish professional practice acts meant to regulate health professionals. A state regulatory agency and a politically appointed board of nursing are tasked with the implementation and administration of nurse practice acts, including issuing licenses to individuals to legally practice nursing. Some state regulatory boards are specifically created for nursing and some boards are tasked with regulation of several health care professions, but all of these regulatory boards establish the scope of legally licensed practice and minimum standards for professional performance under that license. Regulatory boards have authority delegated by the state legislature to make rules, and these rules have the force of law. Professional practice errors that violate the provisions of the practice act are subject to disciplinary action by boards and are adjudicated by the regulatory agency through established disciplinary procedures. Boards have the authority to revoke licenses for unsafe practice as defined by the practice act, including actions or behaviors by the nurse that lie outside of the scope and standards of practice established by the license. Concept 58 Concept of Health Care Law Define and describe the concept of Health Law Health care law is defined as the collection of laws that have a direct impact on the delivery of health care or on the relationships among those in the business of health care or between the providers and recipients of health care. Health care laws represent presciptive (it defines something that must be done) and proscriptive (it prohibits something from being done) principles. Explain the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA) The policy which underlies EMTALA is that hospitals that have emergency departments have a duty to care for those requiring emergency medical services irrespective of patients' ability to pay. Any Medicareparticipating hospital that offers emergency services must provide an appropriate medical screening exam to any person who presents for treatment of an emergency medical condition and must stabilize any emergency medical condition before transfer to another facility. At the patient's request, or if the hospital is unable to stabilize the patient's condition, the hospital can arrange for transfer to appropriate level of care. (Basically it is a federal law that requires anyone coming to an emergency department to be stabilized and treated, regardless of their insurance status or ability to pay.) Explain the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) HIPAA was enacted to provide individuals with preexisting medical conditions access to health insurance specifically if they changed or lost their job. The other element of HIPAA was to prevent health care fraud and abuse and medical liability reform. The act also included a provision (known as the Privacy Rule) for health information privacy requirements for individually identifiable health information. The Privacy Rule protects the confidentiality of health information relating to the provision or payment of health care for a past, present, or future physical or mental health condition but does permit the “minimum necessary” use and disclosure of protected health information without patient authorization for purposes of treatment, payment, and health care operations. (Basically it is a legislation that provides data privacy and security provisions for safeguarding medical information.) Yoost Chapter 25 Safety Discuss safety concerns for each of the following · Home-Poisoning (carbon monoxide, plants, household chems, medications, lead, toxins), fire and electrical hazards, abuse, bioterrorism, suffocation and drowning · Community- The same as home · Health care environments- falls, restains, med administration errors, radiation, drug resistant microorganism , procedural errors. List Safety Interventions in the Home and Community- Pt education on safety and prevention. The nurse should be able to identify possible concerns. Some interventions could include installation of handles in showers, indoor and outdoor lights, poisoning prevention, fire prevention, and fall prevention. List Safety Interventions in the Healthcare Organization Consistent with the focus of the QSEN project, nurses must possess the knowledge, skills, and attitudes to maintain safety and prevent patient injury across health care settings. For example, a nurse must have adequate knowledge of the variety of risk factors for falls, the skill to select patient-specific interventions to prevent falls, and the attitude that falls can be preventable. When nurses lack the necessary knowledge, skills, and attitudes to care for the population of interest, the delivery of competent care is at risk, and legal issues related to patient safety may result. List each standard of the National Patient Safety Goals developed by The Joint Commission • Identify patients correctly. • Improve staff communication. • Use medicines safely. • Use alarms safely. • Prevent infection. • Identify patient safety risks. • Prevent mistakes in surgery. List the 6 Quality and Safety Education for Nursing (QSEN) competencies Teamwork and collaboration knowledge are demonstrated when the nurse describes examples of the impact of team functioning on safety and quality of care. For a patient with safety concerns, members of the multidisciplinary team together address the issues associated with safety-related nursing diagnoses. Team members work to accomplish the goals set forth in what is commonly referred to in hospital settings as an interdisciplinary plan of care (IPOC). The nurse may implement several safety interventions: • Educate the patient and family about the role of protective-equipment use in injury prevention when individuals are engaged in contact sports. • Collaborate with the social worker to identify community resources for obtaining inexpensive or free protective equipment. • Educate the patient and family about the importance of removing clutter, throw rugs, cords, and obstacles from the floor and the path of the patient. • Collaborate with the social worker to identify community resources to install appropriate supportive equipment in the home. • Educate the patient and family on the importance of and strategies for preventing children from gaining access to household poisons. • Collaborate with social services for the scheduling of periodic home safety inspections. Jarvis Describe the correct assessment techniques of the abdomen Inspection: Abdomen flat, symmetric, with no apparent masses. Skin smooth with no striae, scars, or lesions. Auscultation: Bowel sounds present, no bruits. Palpation: Abdomen soft, no organomegaly, no masses, no tenderness. Percussion: Tympany predominates in all 4 quadrants, liver span is 8 cm in right MCL. Splenic dullness located at 10th intercostal space in left midaxillary line. Describe the appropriate assessment techniques for inspection, palpation, percussion, and auscultation of the abdomen These should be performed in this order, and follow the route of the colon. You should start in the in the lower right quadrant(LRQ), upper right quadrant(URQ), upper left quadrant(ULQ), and than lower left quadrant(LLQ) Define and compare acute and chronic pain Acute pain is short term and self-limiting, often follows a predictable trajectory, and dissipates after an injury heals. Examples of acute pain include surgery, trauma, and kidney stones. Acute pain has a selfprotective purpose; it warns the individual of actual or threatened tissue damage. Incident pain is an acute type that happens predictably when certain movements take place. Examples include pain in the lower back on standing or whenever turning a hospitalized patient from side to side. In contrast, chronic (persistent) pain is diagnosed when the pain continues for 6 months or longer. It can last 5, 15, or 20 years and beyond. Chronic pain can be divided into malignant (cancer-related) and nonmalignant. Malignant pain often parallels the pathology created by the tumor cells. The pain is induced by tissue necrosis or stretching of an organ by the growing tumor. It fluctuates within the course of the disease. Chronic nonmalignant pain is often associated with musculoskeletal conditions such as arthritis, low back pain, or fibromyalgia. Chronic pain does not stop when the injury heals. It persists after the predicted trajectory. It outlasts its protective purpose, and the level of pain intensity does not correspond with the physical findings. Chronic pain originates from abnormal processing of pain fibers from peripheral or central sites. Review Jarvis CH15 Identify structure, function and assessment techniques for the Ears and list lifespan considerations sensory organ for hearing and maintaining equilibrium It has three parts: o external ear called the auricle or pinna consists of movable cartilage and skin o middle ear o contains tiny ear bones, or auditory ossicles: the malleus, incus, and stapes. 3 Functions: (1) it conducts sound vibrations from the outer ear to the central hearing apparatus in the inner ear; (2) it protects the inner ear by reducing the amplitude of loud sounds; and (3) its eustachian tube allows equalization of air pressure on each side of the tympanic membrane so the membrane does not rupture inner ear embedded in bone not accessible to direct examination, but can assess its functions contains the bony labyrinth holds the sensory organs for equilibrium and hearing within bony labyrinth, the vestibule and the semicircular canals compose the vestibular apparatus, and the cochlea contains the central hearing apparatus Lifespan Infants and Children o o The inner ear starts to develop early in the 5th week of gestation In early development the ear is posteriorly rotated and low set; later it ascends to its normal placement around eye level. If maternal rubella infection occurs during the first trimester, it can damage the organ of Corti and impair hearing. infant's eustachian tube is shorter and wider, position is more horizontal o thus it is easier for pathogens from the nasopharynx to migrate through to the middle ear The lumen is surrounded by lymphoid tissue, which increases during childhood These factors place the infant at greater risk for middle ear infections than the adult The infant's and the young child's external ear canals are shorter and have a slope opposite to that of the adult's Adult Otosclerosis is a common cause of conductive hearing loss in young adults between the ages of 20 and 40 years o a gradual bone formation that causes the footplate of the stapes to become fixed in the oval window, impeding the transmission of sound and causing progressive deafness. Elderly ilia lining the ear canal become coarse and stiff o this may cause cerumen to accumulate and oxidize, reducing hearing. o The cerumen itself is drier because of atrophy of the apocrine glands. o life history of frequent ear infections also may result in scarring on the drum Presbycusis: type of hearing loss that occurs with 60% of those older than 65 years o gradual sensorineural loss caused by nerve degeneration in the inner ear that slowly progresses after the fifth decade. first notices a high-frequency tone loss harder to hear consonants than vowels speech information is lost, and words sound garbled ability to localize sound is impaired Review Jarvis CH16 Identify structure, function and assessment techniques for the Nose, Mouth and Throat and list lifespan considerations Nose: figure 16-1 to 16-3 first segment of the respiratory system warms, moistens, and filters the inhaled air sensory organ for smell Only the maxillary and ethmoid sinuses are present at birth. maxillary sinuses reach full size after all permanent teeth have erupted ethmoid sinuses grow rapidly between 6 and 8 years of age and after puberty frontal sinuses are absent at birth, are fairly well developed between 7 and 8 years of age, and reach full size after puberty sphenoid sinuses are minute at birth and develop after puberty The nose develops during adolescence, along with other secondary sex characteristics. This growth starts at age 12 or 13 years, reaching full growth at age 16 years in females and age 18 years in males. Gradual loss of subcutaneous fat starts during later adult years, making the nose appear more prominent. The nasal hairs grow coarser and stiffer and may not filter the air as well. The sense of smell may diminish after age 60 years because of a decrease in the number of olfactory nerve fibers. Mouth: figure 16-4 and 16-5 the first segment of the digestive system and an airway for the respiratory system oral cavity is a short passage bordered by the lips, palate, cheeks, and tongue o contains the teeth and gums, tongue, and salivary glands mouth contains three pairs of salivary glands o glands secrete saliva, the clear fluid that moistens and lubricates the food bolus, starts digestion, and cleans and protects the mucosa. Adults have 32 permanent teeth—16 in each arch In the infant salivation starts at 3 months. The baby drools for a few months before learning to swallow the saliva. Both sets of teeth begin development in utero. Children have 20 teeth. These erupt between 6 and 24 months of age. All 20 teeth should appear by years of age. The deciduous teeth are lost beginning at 6 years through 12 years of age. The permanent teeth appear earlier in girls than in boys, and they erupt earlier in Black children than in White children. Oral cavity: the soft tissues atrophy, and the epithelium thins, especially in the cheeks and tongue. This results in loss of taste buds, with about an 80% reduction in taste functioning. Throat area behind the mouth and nose Tonsillar tissue enlarges during childhood until puberty and then involutes The oral cavity and throat have a rich lymphatic network Tongue in children are larger than throat Module 6 Review Guide Giddens Concept 44: Health Promotion Define and describe Health Promotion Health promotion is defined as the process of enabling people to increase control over, and to improve, their health. Health promotion requires the adoption of healthy living practices and often necessitates a change in behavior.Health promotion is viewed broadly as behaviors that promote optimal health across the lifespan within an individual, family, community, population, and environment Describe each of the following health promotion strategies and give examples of each · Primary Prevention Primary prevention refers to strategies aimed at optimizing health and disease prevention. The focus is on health education for optimal nutrition, exercise, immunizations, safe living and work environments, hygiene and sanitation, protection from environmental hazards, avoidance of harmful substances (e.g., allergens, toxins, and carcinogens), protection from accidents, and effective stress management. EXAMPLE: Avoiding smoking helps to promote health and reduce the individual's risk for pulmonary, cardiovascular, and immunologic disease. · Secondary Prevention The goal of secondary prevention is to identify individuals in an early state of a disease process so that prompt treatment can be initiated. Early treatment provides an opportunity to cure, limit disability, or delay consequences of advanced disease. Secondary prevention measures typically involve screening tests EXAMPLE: Screenings for cancer and sexually transmitted diseases such as HIV. · Tertiary Prevention Tertiary prevention involves minimizing the effects of disease and disability; the focus of tertiary prevention is restorative through collaborative disease management. The aim is to optimize the management of a condition and minimize complications so that the individual can achieve the highest level of health possible. EXAMPLE: Aerobic exercise is used as a primary prevention strategy to maintain health, but it may be a specific weight loss intervention for the obese patient or a rehabilitation strategy following an acute myocardial infarction. Concept 55: Health Care Organizations Define and describe Health Care Organizations: A purposefully designed, structured social system developed for the delivery of health care services by specialized workforces to defined communities, populations, or markets. Explain the difference between Profit and Non-Profit Health Care Organizations: For Profits are business or investment driven whereas Non-Profits are more service driven, For-profit hospitals pay property and income taxes while nonprofit hospitals don’t. And for-profit hospitals have avenues for raising capital that nonprofits don’t have. List a Health Care Organizations in Florida that are for Profit: Memorial Hospital List a Health Care Organizations in Florida that are Non-Profit: Florida Hospital List a Health Care Organizations in Florida that operate by Charity Donations: The Donna Foundation List a Health Care Organization in Florida that operate by completely Government funding What are the major attributes of health care organizations? HCOs are distinguished from other types of organizations by their unique purpose (to help others by providing health care services), by their specialized workforce, and by a level of public trust that separates HCOs from other types of organizations. What are the minor attributes of health care organizations? The minor attributes of HCOs differ from major attributes in terms of HCOs' relationship to other kinds of organizations. The major attributes of HCOs are identified with health care and the health care services sector. The minor attributes of HCOs are those that define them as forms of purposeful organizations and are features they share in common with other types of organizations. List nursing contributions to successful Health Care Organizations: Nursing contributions to successful HCOs go beyond providing bedside, patient-focused care to include active management and administration of patient care and patient units, conducting research and collaborating with other professionals to coordinate and deliver safe and effective patient care. Nurses work as case managers, infection control specialists, managers of information technology, human resources specialists, and quality/risk managers. Nurses are also directors and executives, advanced practice providers, and administrative specialists in HCOs and HCO networks. Furthermore, professional nurses affect the environments of HCOs by creating partnerships with other institutions, educating future nurses in universities and community colleges, and working with public policy decision makers to create policies that enhance health services environments. It is likely that professional nurses will be associated in some way with HCOs for most, if not all, of their professional nursing careers. Concept 56: Health Care Economics Define and describe Health Economics Health care economics focuses on how people deal with scarcity and finite resources, it is defined as a behavioral science that begins with two propositions about human behavior: 1) Human behavior is purposeful or goal directed, implying that persons act to promote their own interests. 2) Human desires and demands are unlimited, especially for something such as health care. Health care economics represents the availability (or scarcity) of healthcare resources and financing, or payment mechanisms, to pay for these resources. Define and describe each of the following payer systems: · Managed Care Organizations In managed care, health care providers and insurance companies assume a part of the financial responsibility for health care. Patients pay a monthly premium for health care insurance. Patients choose from several different plans under the managed care system, including preferred provider organizations (PPOs) and health maintenance organizations (HMOs). Patients receive health care from a list of providers who participate in the PPO or HMO. · Private or Indemnity Health Insurance Private health insurance may be purchased on a group basis (e.g., by a firm to cover its employees) or purchased by individual consumers. Most Americans with private health insurance receive it through an employer-sponsored program. Nearly 60% of Americans are covered through an employer, whereas approximately 9% purchase health insurance directly.An example of private indemnity health insurance that can be purchased either by an employer for its employees or by an individual is that provided by the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association. · Medicare Medicare provides health care coverage for all people ages 65 years or older, people who are permanently disabled, and individuals with end-stage renal disease. It is a federal health insurance program that individuals or their spouses have paid into through employment or self-employment taxes.Medicare includes hospital insurance (Part A), supplemental medical insurance (Part B), Medicare Advantage plans (Part C), and outpatient prescription drug coverage (Part D). · Medicaid Medicaid is the nation's major public health insurance program for low-income Americans. Enacted in 1965, Medicaid has improved access to health care for low-income individuals, financed innovations in health care delivery, and functioned as the nation's primary source of long-term care financing. Medicaid is funded by state and federal government sources such as legislative appropriations, intergovernmental transfers, certified public expenditures, permissible taxes, and provider donations. Medicaid eligibility is determined by income and need. Define and explain the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) One of the major impacts on health care economics in recent years has been the PPACA. The goal of the PPACA is to help provide affordable health insurance coverage to most Americans and to improve access to primary care. The PPACA is expected to cover an estimated 32 million uninsured Americans. Without the PPACA, the Census Bureau estimates the number of uninsured persons would reach to more than 60 million or one out of five U.S. residents.The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates that 95% of legal U.S. residents will be covered under the legislation, including the aforementioned 32 million who otherwise would have been uninsured. According to the Kaiser Foundation, the following are some of the law's major provisions: • The requirement that most U.S. citizens and legal residents have health insurance by 2014 • The creation of state-based exchanges through which individuals can purchase coverage, with subsidies available to lower income individuals • A major expansion of the Medicaid program for the nation's poorest individuals • The requirement for employers to cover their employees or pay penalties, with exceptions for employers with few employees • New regulations on health plans in the private market requiring them to cover all individuals, regardless of health status • Establishment of a national, voluntary insurance program for purchasing community living assistance services • Increases in payments for primary care services • Greater support for prevention, wellness, and public health activities Yoost Chapter 11: Ethical and Legal Considerations Define and describe the Concept of Ethics Compare the following ethical principles or legal issues and give examples of each: · Deontology vs Utilitarianism Medical ethics is a sensible branch of moral philosophy and deals with conflicts in obligations/duties and their potential outcome. Two strands of thought exist in ethics regarding decision-making: deontological and utilitarian. ... In brief, deontology is patient-centered,will not allow the parents to stay because it is against the rules, whereas utilitarianism is society-centered. Utilitarians consider consequences to be an important indicator of the moral value of one's actions · Beneficence vs Nonmaleficence- Beneficence is the act of doing good. Nonmaleficence is doing no harm or the least amount of harm. · Malpractice vs Negligence -negligence is doing something that a reasonable person would not do, or not doing something that a reasonable person would do. Malpractice is the negligence on a professional level. · Battery vs Assault - verbal threats vs actually harming/attacking a person. Assault is pulling a gun. Battery is shooting or hiting someone with the gun. · Slander vs Libel - spoken defamation of character vs written defamation of character Define each of the following ethical principles and give examples of each: · Fidelity- loyalty, fairness, truthfulness, advocacy, and dedication to our patients. It involves an agreement to keep our promises · Justice -giving each person or group what he/she or they are due. It can be "measured" in terms of fairness, equality, need · Veracity - being truthful · Autonomy - making independent decisions in regards to one's own health · Accountability - accepting responsibility for actions Chapter 23: Public Health, Community Health and Home Health Care Define Community Health Addresses issues of health, disease, and disability found within a defined group of people (or population) or in a specific person as a member of that community. Define and describe the focus of each of the following community health systems: · Public Health Nursing Examines the greater community as a whole and designs collaborative and interdisciplinary strategies to keep the population healthy by preventing or controlling disease and threats to human health. · Community Health Nursing Focuses on interventions necessary to help people prevent illness, maintain or regain their health, or die with dignity while living in a community. The term client, rather than patient, is commonly used in this area of nursing practice to identify the person seeking care. · Home Health Nursing Promote, maintain, or restore health at an optimal level of functioning and to reduce the effects of disability and illness for individual clients and their families. Module 1: Thermoregulation 1. Radiation- heat loss through electromagnetic waves that emit heat from skin to air Which are modes of heat loss in the newborn? Select all that apply. a. Radiation b. Urination c. Convection d. Conduction e. Evaporation (a,c,d,e) https://quizlet.com/76385452/nclex-thermoregulation-questions-flash-cards/ 2. Convection- loss of heat by air currents moving across body (wind, fan) What is the definition of CONVECTION? a. When heat transfers through waves. b. When heat transfers from objects that are touching. c. movement in a gas or liquid in which the warmer parts move up and the colder parts move down d. Heat traveling from the sun https://quizizz.com/admin/quiz/580a687d14bfe25871d0b884 3. Conduction- transfer of heat through direct contact of one surface to another (sit on cold bench) Recall question from first exam about cutting off wet clothes because of hypothermia. 4. Evaporation- perspiration (sweating) 5. Respiration- air is inhaled, warmed, exhaled Risk factors for population: Infants (96-99.5) 1 yr old temp range (99.4-99.7) o Infants lose heat through fontanels; low body mass/surface area; don’t shiver Children (97-99) o Appropriate clothing, playing “sport” outside, risk of dehydration Adults (95.9-99.5) o drug/alcohol abuse, unlining health conditions, work/fun exposure, genetics, economic status Elderly (95-99) o loss of sub Q fat, loss of temp sensation, poor perfusion and circulation, reduced heat production and shiver response https://quizlet.com/220763862/fundamentals-of-nursing-yoost-chapter-19-vital-signs-flash-cards/ Altruism- Pt comes first. ANA standards of practice guide and direct the practice of nursing. State Nurse Practice Acts define nurse’s scope of practice. Physiological adjustments to body temp are controlled by the hypothalamus Module 2: Perfusion Be able to assess heart and lungs Heart (auscultate with diaphragm first for S1 and S2, use bell for murmurs) o Right of Sternum 2nd intercostal- Aortic o L Sternum 2nd Intercostal - Pulmonic o L Sternum 4th Intercostal- Tricuspid o L Sternum, 5th Intercostal Midclavicular- Mitral / Apical Lungs ( Listening for adventitious sound everywhere.) o Anterior: Supraclavicular to 6th intercostal; Bronchovesicular sounds o Posterior: Starting at the Apices C7 working you way around each shoulder blade until T10. Listening for vesicular sounds o Axilla: At the 7th and 8th intercostal space. Listening for vesicular sounds. ( There has been a question about crackles in a newborn baby lungs. This is normal because of the amniotic fluid being breathed in during pregnancy.) Poor gas exchange & appearance of patient with conditions Gas Exchange: process by which oxygen is transported to cells and CO2 is transported from cells. The nurse is caring for a patient who is slow to awaken following general anesthesia. The patient is breathing spontaneously but is minimally responsive and having difficulty maintaining a patent airway. Which intervention is the most appropriate for the patient to improve oxygenation? a a. Insert an oral airway. b. Lower the head of the bed. c c. Turn the patient’s head to the side. d d. Monitor the patient’s pulse oximetry. Disorders: Asthma (acute), Pneumonia, COPD, Emphysema (chronic) [causes: smoking, family history, air pollution] Which of the following conditions would be associated with a wheezing sound on inspiration in a patient's lower posterior chest? a. Myocardial infarction b. Congestive heart failure c. Pulmonary edema d. Asthma https://quizlet.com/229315510/chapter-38-oxygenation-and-tissueperfusion-yoost-critical-thinking-flash-cards/ Examples of Deficiencies: o Hypoxia: insufficient oxygen reaching cells (There was a question on the first exam about this) o Anoxia: total lack of oxygen in tissue o Hypoxemia: reduced oxygenation of arterial blood A nurse has assessed a patient's capillary refill, which was 5 seconds. What action by the nurse is most appropriate? a. Document the findings and continue the examination. b. Ask the patient about the use of artificial nails. c. Ask the patient about his/her occupation. d. Assess the patient for signs of hypoxia. Oxygenation Perfusion: ability of blood to transport oxygen-containing hemoglobin to cells and return carbon-dioxide containing hemoglobin to alveoli The nurse is explaining to a student nurse about impaired central perfusion. The nurse knows the student understands this problem when the student states, "Central perfusion a. is monitored only by the physician." b. involves the entire body." c. is decreased with hypertension." d. is toxic to the cardiac system." https://quizlet.com/157998015/concept-15-flash-cards/ Pulses & the ranges Carotid, Brachial, Radial, Femoral, Popliteal, Dorsalis Pedis, Posterior Tibial, Apical Ranges: 0 to +3, Regular or Irregular Blood flow Vena Cava→R Atrium→Tricuspid Valve→R Ventricle→Pulmonic Valve→ Pulmonary A.→ Lungs→Pulmonary Vein→L Atrium→Mitral Valve→L Ventricle→Aortic Valve→Aorta to body 5 Rights of Delegation (what you can delegate) Task/job Person Situation Directions Evaluation “The Pie Station Deserves Eating” The Communication Process: Referent- event or thought initiating conversation Sender- person who initiates and encodes the communication Receiver- person who receives and decodes or interprets the communication Message- information that is communicated Channel- method of communication (any of the 5 senses can be used to communicate ex: pt calls for help=auditory, pt’s wound smells=olfactory) Feedback- the response of the receiver Edward Hall’s Theory of Proxemics: Intimate Space (0 - 1.5 ft) Personal Space (1.5 - 4 ft) (Americans) Social Space (4 - 12 ft) Public Space (12 ft or more) 93% of communication is nonverbal Module 3: Communication Know Professional Communication & examples: Interpersonal: communication between you and another person Intrapersonal: communication within self Interdisciplinary: communication between nurse and doctor Intradisciplinary: communication between nurse to nurse Transcommunication: spiritual communication Therapeutic communication: attentive listening, non- judgemental, calm, thoughtful. Non-Therapeutic communication: Judgemental, opinionated, and aggressive. Documentation: Guidelines of documentation - accessible, accurate, timely, clear, concise, complete and objective - non-judgemental and factual - Should be written in order of how events happened - should occur as soon as possible after event - Every entry should include date, time, and signature with credentials (These are all PROBLEM-ORIENTATED examples of documentation) SOAP: Subjective (HH), Objective (HH), Assessment, Plan (Nursing Interventions) SOAPIE: Subj., Obj., Assessment, Plan, Intervention, Evaluation SBAR: (communication w/DR) Situation- what is happening right now? Background- what led up to the current situation? Assessment- what is the identified problem, concern, or need? Recommendation- what actions or interventions should be initiated to alleviate the problem Which note is an example of the S in SBAR? a. Patient resting; 1 hour after receiving narcotic analgesic pain was rated 3 of 10 b. Patient was admitted on evening shift with a fractured right femur after a fall at home. c. Patient's pain was rated 8 of 10 before administration of narcotic pain medication. d. Assess pain every 2 hours, continue pain medication as prescribed, and provide backrub. PIE: Problem, Intervention, Evaluation Narrative: tell a story, includes “patient quotes” chronologic charting, w/ a baseline recorded on a shift-by-shift basis, time consuming & includes lengthy notes DAR: Data, Action, Response Informatics: Refer to handout from class Critical Thinking: education, experience, attitude Learning Requirements: ability, desire, attitude & environment Module 4: Nursing Dx: Actual Dx o PES = Problem, Etiology, Signs/Symptoms o Acute Pain r/t Injury to Femur AEb pain scale 8/10 Potential/Risk Dx o PE= Problem, Etiology o “Risk for” Fall r/t unsteady gait For a school-age child who enjoys riding a bicycle, which is the priority nursing diagnosis? a. Risk for injury b. Risk for falls c. Risk for impaired skin integrity d. Risk for impaired mobility Health Promotion Dx o PS= Problem, Signs/Symptoms o ”Readiness for enhancement” The nursing diagnosis readiness for enhanced communication is an example of a(n): A) Risk nursing diagnosis. B) Actual nursing diagnosis. C) Health promotion nursing diagnosis D) Wellness nursing diagnosis. A nurse is assigned to a new patient admitted to the nursing unit following admission through the emergency department. The nurse collects a nursing history and interviews the patient. Place the following steps for making a nursing diagnosis in the correct order. __2___ 1. Considers context of patient's health problem and selects a related factor __3___ 2. Reviews assessment data, noting objective and subjective clinical criteria __4__ 3. Clusters clinical criteria that form a pattern __1___ 4. Chooses diagnostic label https://quizlet.com/162659783/fundamentals-of-nursing-nursing-diagnosis-flash-cards/ https://quizlet.com/224579324/chapter-12-nursing-diagnosis-flash-cards/ https://quizlet.com/188979470/chapter-17-nursing-diagnosis-flash-cards/ Nursing Process: ADPIE 1. ASSESS: Objective & Subjective Date 2. DIAGNOSIS: Actual- PES; Potential- PE; Health Promotion-PS 3. PLAN: Short Term; Long Terms; S.M.A.R.T Goals 4. INTERVENTION: action taken 5. EVALUATION: Eval if goals were met; met, not met, partially met The basic guideline used for nursing documentation is(this was similar to what was on a test) a. HIPAA. b. the Code of Ethics. c. the Nursing process (assessment, diagnosis, planning, implementation, and evaluation). d. the patient's diagnosis. ABCDEF & Maslow’s 1. Airways ( There was a question on the last test about a child with an empty bottle of chemical next to a child. The answer is assess airway.DO NOT CALL POISON CONTROL FIRST IN THIS CASE) 2. Breathing 3. Circulation 4. Drugs & Diet 5. Emotional Dx, coping mechanisms 6. Family 7. In adults, healthy lymph nodes can be palpable (able to be felt), in the axilla, neck, inguinal, arms. Module 5: Safety QSEN & The Joint Commission- safety regulation QSEN Competencies: o Patient centered care; Teamwork & Collaboration; Evidence Based Practice; Quality Improvement; Safety; Informatics. The three elements of nursing competency described in the Quality and Safety for Nurses (QSEN) initiative are knowledge, skill, and a. Accountability. b. Attitude. c. Education. d. Value. What actions by the nurse are critical to ensure patient safety? (Select all that apply.) a. Place the call light on the patient's nightstand. b. Clean up fluid spills on the floor immediately. c. Instruct the patient to wear socks when ambulating. d. Keep linens and intravenous tubing off the floor. e. Return the bed to low position prior to exiting the room. Factors of safety: Environment: 1. Lighting 2. Pollution 3. Workplace hazard 4. Communicable Diseases PPE: On: Gown, mask, goggles, gloves Off: Gloves, goggles, gown, mask ANA- nursing code of ethics Legislature makes Statutory Laws → gives state power to make Regulatory Laws Florida Board of Nursing is regulated by Regulatory Laws in each State Outlines scope of practice for nursing Gives Licensure National Patient Safety Goals: Identify patient correctly (2 identifiers) Use medications safely/Correctly Improve Staff Communication Prevent infection ID patient risks Prevent mistakes in surgery Use alarms correctly Prevent falls (new for 2018)- # 1 sentinel event Prevent bed sores (new for 2018) Safety related test questions: The group with the lowest risk of MRSA are food service workers Conversations about safe sex are most important to the adolescent population. The nurse is taking a patient from the bath and patient starts to have a seizure. FIRST, you should lower the patient to the floor if standing. If you leave equipment outside and have a confused patient in the room, get another staff member to get the equipment so you don’t have to leave the room. “It feels like the room is spinning around me.” Vertigo 80 yr old patient: not noticing vibrations at ankle, slower gait, impaired tactile sensation normal signs of aging Cranial Nerves: Number What it does Sensory or motor 1 Smell Some 2 Optic Say 3 Movement of eye Marry 4 Eyes down and in Money 5 Facial sensory and Jaw But 6 Side to side move My 7 Facial Brother 8 Hearing Says 9 Speech Big 10 Gag Boobs 11 Shoulders Matter 12 Tongue movement More Legal Definitions: 1. Liable- written form of defamation 2. Slander- spoken form of defamation 3. Negligence- creating risk of harm by failing to do job 4. Malpractice- negligence committed by a person functioning in professional role Example: having sex with a Pt 5. Regulatory Law- out of how the requirements of Statutory Law will be met 6. Policy- course of action adopted/proposed by a government party/business/individual 7. Assault- threatening to harm 8. Battery- actual physical harm 9. EMTALA- An emergency room must stabilize you before sending you to a different hospital regardless of your ability to pay. 10. OmNiBus- Prevents physical and chemical restraints in your own home. This includes nursing homes and long term care facilities.There was a question on the last test. I forgot how it was worded. Just that the answer does not contain COBRA. But is the same as the one that does say COBRA. 11. COBRA- an insurance provision allowing you to keep insurance coverage if you leave a job. 12. Near miss- Caught the mistake before something bad happened. 13. Adverse events- Something bad happening because of doing something wrong. 14. R.A.C.E.- RESCUE the pts. Pull the ALARM. CONTAIN the fire. EXTINGUISH if safe. 15. P.A.S.S.- PULL the pin. AIM the nozzle. SQUEEZE the handle. SWEEP the base of the fire. ( spraying the top could cause the fire to spread) Glasgow Coma Scale (Not a fall scale) Higher number is better Abdomen: Inspect, Auscultate, Palpate, Percuss Be familiar with basic organs in abdomen: LRQ: Appendix, Ovary, Ureter, Spermatic cord URQ: Kidney/adrenal gland (rests 1-2cm lower), Gallbladder, Ascending/Transverse Colon LUQ: Kidney/adrenal gland, Liver, Pancreas, Spleen, Stomach, Transverse/Descending Colon LLQ: Ovary, Ovary, Ureter, Descending/Sigmoid Colon Dysphagia- difficulty swallowing (G=gag) Dysphasia- difficulty speaking https://quizlet.com/182004261/chapter-25-safety-yoost-flash-cards/ https://quizlet.com/142132077/test-1-ethicslegal-giddens-health-law-summer-flash-cards/ Module 6: Ethics Values- priority that has been instilled by external factors (society, family, friends, cultural) & adopted within (there was a question on the last test about where there values come from on the last test) Ethical Principle- concept used to make decisions; how to apply values Ethical Dilemma- when 2 ethical principles cause conflict *needs a question still* involves a problem for which in order to do something right you have to do something wrong. It is not possible to meet all of the ethical requirements in the situation. For instance, determining whether aggressive treatment at the end of life will cause more harm than benefit. 7 Principles Autonomy: freedom to make decisions supported by knowledge & self confidence Test question: Goals must be mutually acceptable to the nurse, patient, and family. Accountability: willingness to accept responsibility for actions Justice: acting fairly and equitable (providing fair tx. regardless of race, religion, class) Fidelity: keeping your promises * needs a question still* Veracity: being truthful A male patient suffered a brain injury from a motor vehicle accident and has no brain activity. The spouse has come up to see the patient every day for the past 2 months. She asks the nurse, "Do you think when he moves his hands he is responding to my voice?" The nurse feels bad because she believes the movements are involuntary, and the prognosis is grim for this patient. She states, "He can hear you, and it appears he did respond to your voice." The nurse is violating which principle of ethics? a. Autonomy b. Veracity c. Utilitarianism d. Deontology Non-Maleficence: inflicting least amount of harm possible to reach beneficial outcome A homeless man presents to the emergency room with hypothermia. He tells the nurse that he is positive for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and sought revenge by deliberately having sex with his mate, who does not know of his HIV status. This patient is violating which ethical principle? Beneficence: doing good despite personal beliefs (ex: treating pt who abused a child) A nursing student is doing a survey of fellow nursing students. Which ethical concept is the student following when calculating the risk-to-benefit ratio and concluding that no harmful effects were associated with a survey? a. Beneficence b. Human dignity c. Justice d. Human rights Deontology: follow rules regardless of outcome Utilitarianism: pick and choose which rules to follow to get desired outcome Select all that apply The nurse believes that a patient who states he is in pain is "faking it" and is hoping to get high. The nurse decides to give the patient a placebo instead of pain medication that was ordered for the patient. The nurse is violating which principle(s) of ethics? Autonomy Utilitarianism Beneficence Veracity Fidelity Dentology https://quizlet.com/236923744/giddens-concept-42-ethics-flash-cards/ https://quizlet.com/217066032/giddens-chapter-42-ethics-flash-cards/ https://quizlet.com/234605004/giddens-42-flash-cards/ https://quizlet.com/232766043/giddens-concept-42-quiz-flash-cards/ https://quizlet.com/147777427/week-2-giddens-concept-42-ethics-flash-cards/ Types of Hospitals: For Profit- pay taxes Not For Profit - don’t pay property taxes; charity level care Charity- Bills insurance first, eats rest of cost; pays no taxes; organizes fundraising; Ex: Shriners, St. Judes Government- hospitals owned & operated by government; Ex: VA, state mental hospital Medicare 65+ age, Disabled, end of life renal failure; must have worked 1/10th of life to qualify; Income does not matter; Federal care/Acute care Government funded Medicaid Any age, low income; “State Funded”; largest population of users are elderly; Acute or Chronic Care PPO Preferred Provider Option; larger provider network, Private payer option, Health Maintenance Organization limited network; pre-arranged copays for services, can’t go to a specialist without a referral from your primary care provider Affordable Care Act Federally subsidized insurance; Marketplace offers plans Prevention: Primary Does not have disease; no greater risk than general population Taking measures to prevent disease, i.e. diet & exercise, vaccines, washing hands An example of a primary prevention strategy to prevent obesity is to 1. a. hold an education event about healthy eating habits and exercise. Make this a mandatory part of a fun education day for students and families. 2. b. screen for BMI and send letters home to parents of identified at-risk children. 3. c. instruct an obese child with type 2 diabetes about diabetes medication and blood glucose monitoring. 4. d. instruct an obese child with type 2 diabetes about blood glucose monitoring; children should not handle their own medications. For the example below the primary prevention would be never smoking in the first place. Secondary Screenings are always secondary prevention Screening for disease (Screenings DO NOT PREVENT disease, allow for early detection) Controlling disease Screen people that are at higher risk than general population If you are obese, diet and exercise are secondary because they are preventing diabetes A 65-year-old male patient has been a one-pack-per-day smoker for 40 years. He was recently diagnosed with early-stage chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and would like to attend a smoking cessation class. The nurse recognizes smoking cessation as which level of prevention for this patient? a. Primary prevention b. Secondary prevention c. Statutory prevention d. Tertiary prevention Tertiary Already has disease, symptoms of disease Prevention of additional complications & comorbidities If we use the same COPD example but this time we would be giving O2 to help him breathe the answer would be tertiary prevention. Module 1 Review Guide Giddens Concept 45 Communication Define and describe the concept of communication. A process of interaction between people in which symbols are used to create, exchange, and interpret messages about ideas, emotions, and mind states. linguistic—the verbal exchange of messages through spoken words and written symbols. paralinguistics—nonverbal exchange of symbols. Metacommunication—consists of the factors that comprise the context of the message. Metacommunication factors that affect how messages are received and interpreted include internal personal states (e.g., disturbances in mood), environmental stimuli related to the setting of the communication, and contextual variables (e.g., the relationship between the people in the communication episode). Explain Communication Competence. Communication competence in nursing means that communication is both effective and appropriate. Effectiveness is achieved when the goals of the communication are met. Appropriate means the communication has been adapted to the people and situation involved in the act of communication. Assertive communication refers to a process in which positive and negative ideas and feeling are expressed in an open and direct way. Therapeutic communication is defined as “an interactive process between the nurse and the client that helps the client overcome temporary stress, to get along with other people, to adjust the unalterable, and to overcome psychological blocks which stand in the way of selfrealizations.” Part of an internal perspective, intrapersonal communication takes place within the individual. Embedded in relationships, interpersonal communication is the verbal and nonverbal interaction that occurs among human beings. Many types of interpersonal relationships exist, including friendships, family, romantic, and, in nursing practice, nurse–patient relationships. Concept 50 Health Care Quality Define and describe the concept of Health Care Quality. Health care quality applies within the realm of health care delivery in any public or private setting. Whatever structures, systems, and processes an organization establishes, it must be able to show evidence that standards are upheld. What are the attributes of Health Care Quality. A fundamental attribute inherent in the concept of health care quality is that you cannot improve what you cannot or do not measure. • Safe • Effective • Timely • Patient-centered • Efficient • Equitable Describe quality in terms of structure, process and outcome. Avedis Donabedian defined quality as values and goals present in the medical system and defined outcomes as a validator of the quality and effectiveness of medical care. Structure is defined as the attributes of settings in which care is delivered. These include the adequacy of facilities, equipment, supplies, staff training, provider knowledge and attitudes, and supervision. Process dimensions include the services offered; the technical quality of the services (i.e., the staff and providers perform the technical aspects of the task or job) Outcomes are the impact of structure and process on the patient's satisfaction; perceptions of quality, knowledge, attitudes, and behavior; and health outcomes. Concept 2 Functional Ability Define and describe the concept of Functional Ability. Functional ability refers to the individual's ability to perform the normal daily activities required to meet basic needs; fulfill usual roles in the family, workplace, and community; and maintain health and well-being. Specifically, it reflects the adaptive dimension of development, which is concerned with the acquisition of a range of skills that enable independence in the home and in the community. For the purposes of this concept analysis, functional ability is defined as the cognitive, social, physical, and emotional ability to carry on the normal activities of life. Identify situations that increase the risk for functional impairment (risk recognition). Functional impairment and disability refers to varying degrees of an individual's inability to perform the tasks required to complete normal life activities without assistance. There are multiple risk factors for impaired functional ability because of the multiple variables that impact function, including developmental abnormalities, physical or psychological trauma or disease, social and cultural factors including beliefs and perceptions of health, and physical environment. Explain functional ability in terms of basic activities of daily living (BADL) and instrumental activities of daily living (IADL). ADLs as indicators of functional ability evolved in the late 1950s with the identification of a group of basic physical activities, the performance of which was to be used to evaluate the success of rehabilitation programs. A decade later, IADLs were identified as indicators of ability to live independently in the community. This led to the use of ADLs as a measure of need and eligibility for long-term care and other support services and to the development of an array of assessment tools. Describe aspects of a functional assessment. Comprehensive functional assessment is a time-intensive, interprofessional effort requiring use of multiple assessment tools. Comprehensive functional assessment is indicated under specific circumstances. The two basic types of assessment tools are self-report and performance-based. Self-report tools provide information about the patient's perception of functional ability, whereas performancebased tools involve actual observation of a standardized task, completion of which is judged by objective criteria. Performance-based assessments are preferred because they avoid potential for inaccurate measurement inherent in self-report. What does care delivery involves in terms of functional ability? Functional level determines the patient's need for assistance as well as the type and amount of assistance required. Functional Assessment Components: vision, hearing, mobility, fall history, continence, nutrition, cognition, affect, home environment, social participation, ADLs. No assistance, partial assistance, or total assistance are examples of common options related to dependency used when scoring functional assessment tools. Common scoring options related to difficulty are some, a lot, or unable to perform. Concept of Thermoregulation Define and describe the concept of thermoregulation. Thermoregulation is defined as the process of maintaining core body temperature at a near constant value. Normothermia refers to the state in which body temperature is within the “normal” range. The term hypothermia refers to a body temperature below normal range (<36.2°C), and hyperthermia refers to a body temperature above normal range (>37.6°C). An extremely high body temperature is referred to as hyperpyrexia. Identify factors that place individuals at risk for thermoregulation. Risk factors that affect thermoregulation include age, environment, and physiological condition of the individual. Individuals with impairments in cognition, surgeries, preexisting medical conditions, genetics, recreational or occupational exposures, persons under influence of alcohol or drugs, poor nutrition. Identify assessment findings for hyperthermia and hypothermia. When an individual has hyperthermia or hypothermia, the most reliable means available for assessing core temperature is a rectal temperature. Hyperthermia: Vasodilation occurs, causing the skin to appear flushed and warm or hot to touch. If the sweat mechanism has been activated, the individual will be diaphoretic. Patients will often present with dry skin and mucous membranes, decreased urinary output, and other signs of dehydration and electrolyte imbalance. Seizures may occur and the patient's cognitive status may range from slightly confused or delirious to coma. Hypothermia: Peripheral vasoconstriction causes the skin to feel cool and have slow capillary refill; skin color is pale and becomes cyanotic. Muscle rigidity and shivering is typically present in an effort to generate heat. The shivering response diminishes or ceases when the core temperature decreases to 30°C. Cognition is affected because of a gradual reduction in cerebral blood flow. A person may experience poor coordination and sluggish thought processes at 34°C; this progresses to confusion and eventually stupor and coma by the time the temperature decreases to 30°C. Dysrhythmias (e.g., atrial and ventricular fibrillation) may occur due to myocardial irritability. As hypothermia progresses, the metabolic rate declines and perfusion of blood is significantly reduced, leading to diminished urinary function, coma, and cardiovascular collapse. Describe clinical management in terms of primary prevention, secondary prevention and collaborative interventions. Primary: prevention through education and planning ahead. Primary prevention measures include environmental control and shelter, appropriate clothing for different conditions, and physical activity. Secondary: the goal of secondary prevention refers to the detection of a disease or condition. Collaborative: (Hyperthermia) The underlying cause of the elevated body temperature should be identified. The goal is to minimize cardiovascular and neurologic complications associated with excessive body temperature. The goal of managing hypothermic patients is to increase the body temperature to the normal range. An initial step is to remove the individual from the cold. Yoost Chapter 1 What is the criteria of a profession as applied to nursing? Altruism, Accountability, Autonomy, Advocate, Assertiveness, Ethics The study of nursing requires a broad base of knowledge from the physical and behavioral sciences, humanities, nursing theories, and related non-nursing theories. Functions/Roles: care provider, educator, advocate, leader, change agent, manager, researcher, collaborator, delegator. Provide an overview of the following nursing theorist: Florence Nightingale - Nightingale is considered the founder of modern nursing and is known for her care of the sick in the Crimean War. Her contributions influenced developments in the field of epidemiology by connecting poor sanitation with cholera and dysentery. Her role in nursing included establishing nursing as a respected profession for women that was distinct from the medical profession. She founded a nursing school and stressed the need for university-based and continuing education for nurses. Her concept of the environment emphasized illness prevention, clean air, water, and housing. Her nursing theoretical work discussed environmental adaptation with appropriate noise levels, hygiene, light, comfort, socialization, hope, nutrition, and conservation of patient energy. Linda Richards - America's first trained nurse, graduating from Boston's Women's Hospital in 1873. Dorothea Dix - the head of the U.S. Sanitary Commission, which was a forerunner of the Army Nurse Corps. Lena Higbee - superintendent of the U.S. Navy Nurse Corps, was awarded the Navy Cross in 1918. Clara Barton - practiced nursing in the Civil War and established the American Red Cross. Jean Watson - theory is based on caring, with nurses dedicated to health and healing. The nurse functions to preserve the dignity and wholeness of humans in health or while peacefully dying. The caring process in a nurse-patient relationship is known as transpersonal caring and includes carative factors that satisfy human needs. Additional concepts include the caring moment or occasion, caring or healing consciousness, and clinical caring processes such as sensitivity and mindfulness. Imogene King - developed a general systems framework that incorporates three levels of systems: (1) individual or personal, (2) group or interpersonal, and (3) society or social. The theory of goal attainment discusses the importance of interaction, perception, communication, transaction, self, role, stress, growth and development, time, and personal space. In this theory, the nurse and the patient work together to achieve the goals in the continuous adjustment to stressors. Explain how Maslow hierarchy of needs is used in nursing practice. The nurse's understanding of these factors helps with formulating nursing diagnoses that address the patient's needs and values. Needs at the lower levels of the pyramid-shaped hierarchy must be met before needs at higher levels are addressed. Physiological Needs, Safety and Security, Love and Belonging, Self-Esteem, Self-Actualization What are the functions of the following organization? Quality and Safety Education for Nurses (QSEN) - adds safety as a competency. The six QSEN competencies are patient-centered care, teamwork and collaboration, evidence-based practice, quality improvement, safety, and informatics. Institute of Medicine (IOM) - outlined five core areas of proficiency for students and professionals: delivering patient-centered care, working as part of an interdisciplinary team, practicing evidence-based medicine, focusing on quality improvement, and using information technology. Describe the National Patient Safety Goals. • Identify patients correctly • Improve staff communication 18 • Use medicines safely • Use alarms safely • Prevent infection • Identify patient safety risks • Prevent mistakes in surgery Explain the following terms: · Altruism – public service over personal gain · Accountability – accepting responsibility for actions and omissions · Autonomy – Make independent decisions within their scope of practice and are responsible for the results and consequences of those decisions · · · Advocate Assertiveness Ethics – standard of right and wrong behavior Describe the standards of practice and the nurse practice act. The Standards of Nursing Practice published by the ANA help to ensure quality care and serve as legal criteria for adequate patient care. ANA standards have two parts. The first part, the standards of practice, includes six responsibilities for the nursing process: assessment, diagnosis, outcomes identification, planning, implementation, and evaluation (ANA, 2010). The second part of Standards of Nursing Practice focuses on professional performance, which includes ethics, education, evidence-based practice and research, quality of practice, communication, leadership, collaboration, professional practice evaluation, resource utilization, and environmental health (ANA, 2010). Nurses who attend continuing education conferences or further their education; use evidence to guide their nursing practice; or communicate and collaborate with patients and other professionals are practicing within the standards. Chapter 3 Define the following terms: · Rationalization · Suppression · Sublimation · Displacement · Denial · Regression · Referent · Feedback · Collaboration · Respect · Assertiveness · Delegation · Message · Suppression · Displacement What is the goal of the nurse patient relationship? Describe nonverbal communication in terms of body language. Describe verbal communication in terms of setting, context, content, written and electronic. Explain the focus of the four basic types of professional communication: · Intrapersonal · Interpersonal · small-group · public communication Identify each phase of the nurse-patient relationship and the focus of each phase. Differentiate between social, therapeutic and nontherapeutic communication What is the focus of therapeutic communication and techniques used to by the nurse to promote open dialogue. What are the special communication considerations for patients who are hearing and visually impaired? Chapter 19 Define the following terms: · Afebrile · apical pulse · apnea · core temperature · fever · hypertension · hyperthermia · hypotension · hypothermia · orthostatic hypotension · pulse deficit What is the purpose of obtaining vital sign? Describe each of the following: · Baseline Vital Signs · Frequency of Vital Signs · Interpretation of Vital Signs What are situations that require vital sign assessment? Normal vital sign parameters for: · Temperature · Pulse · Respirations · Blood Pressure Practice techniques to obtain temperature, pulse, respirations, blood pressure (Yoost – skills 19.1, 19.2, 19.3, 19.4, 19.5 Chapter 26 What is the purpose of hand hygiene? Practice hand hygiene technique (Yoost – skill 26.1) Practice procedure for applying personal protective equipment (Yoost - 26.3) Jarvis Chapter 4 Describe each part of a health history Biographic Data - name, address, and phone number; age and birth date; birthplace; gender; marital partner status; race; ethnic origin; occupation; language Source of History - Record who furnishes the information; Judge how reliable the informant seems and how willing he or she is to communicate; Note if the person appears well or ill Reason for Seeking Care* - brief, spontaneous statement in the person's own words that describes the reason for the visit Present Health or History of Present Illness - For the well person, this is a short statement about the general state of health: “I feel healthy right now.” For the ill person, this section is a chronologic record of the reason for seeking care, from the time the symptom first started until now. -location, character/quality (descriptive terms), timing, setting, aggravating/relieving factors, associated factors, patients perception. Past Health - Past health events are important because they may have residual effects on the current health state. Childhood illnesses, accidents/injuries, serious/chronic illnesses, hospitalizations, operations, obstetric hx, immunizations, last exam date, allergies, current medications. Family Health - accurate family history highlights diseases and conditions for which a particular patient may be at increased risk. Review of Systems - The purposes of this section are (1) to evaluate the past and present health state of each body system, (2) to double-check in case any significant data were omitted in the Present Illness section, and (3) to evaluate health promotion practices. - General overall health state, head to toe assessment. Functional Assessment - Functional assessment measures a person's self-care ability in the areas of general physical health or absence of illness; ADLs such as bathing, dressing, toileting, eating, walking; instrumental ADLs (IADLs) or those needed for independent living such as housekeeping, shopping, cooking, doing laundry, using the telephone, managing finances; nutrition; social relationships and resources; self-concept and coping; and home environment. subjective data—what the person says about himself or herself. objective data—what you observe through measurement, inspection, palpation, percussion, and auscultation. 10- Math 5-7 Pharm 3 packet Majority Urinary system Normal urine Output: 1500mL per day. (I have seen some stuff today that says 1500mL) 1st sign of renal failure: protein in urine (losing muscle) Kidneys and Liver are biggest component in filtration in the body. Should not be in urine: WBC- sign of UTI Protein - is a sign of kidney or liver disease, Blood- hematuria- could be because of trauma or illness Sugar- sign of renal failure or diabetes Sugar must be over 250 in order to show up in urine. Level should be 80-130 two hours after eating with insulin patients. Kidneys produce 30mL per hour. Normal adult Output is 60mL per hour. Labs (normal & lethal levels): BUN- Blood Urea Nitrogen - this is a blood test. It is often used with creatinine to measure kidney function. Normal BUN is 7-20 mg/dl. o Cause of Decrease: Malnutrition, excessive intake of fluids, decreased intake of proteins Creatinine - for women normal is 0.6-1.2 mg/dland for men the normal is 0.8-1.4mg/dl , a high creatinine level is indication of kidney damage or disease.It is a blood test with a timed urine is the waste product cleared through the kidneys. When the kidneys begin to fail creatinine levels rise. “Generally 1.0 mg/dl is normal” UA- checks for several things, this is a clean catch and a sterile container needs to be used, refer to yoost for the steps to a “clean catch” “midstream” collection. o Color - should be a amber-yellow o Odor- similar to ammonia o pH- should be slightly acidic with a pH of 6 o Specific gravity- 1.005-1.030 o Glucose - negative (kidney failure or diabetes) o Ketones - negative (formed by improper protein break down) o Protein- negative ( kidney failure, if preg this is used to check for preeclampsia) o Bilirubin- negative (sign of liver issues) o Cast- negative o Bacteria- none (UTI) o Hemoglobin- negative (trauma or illness) o Myoglobin- negative o Culture for organisms- none Culture & Sensitivity - sterile techniques used to collect sample if pt is cathed, the pt should use a clean catch midstream collection, checking for growth of bacteria, if bacteria is found the sensitivity is used to find the best treatment ( If C&S is done on urine it is checking for a UTI) Diagnostics: Know purpose of exam Know if used- dye, anesthesia, NPO/Special Diet Colonoscopy- You are put into kind of a twilight, it make you lose your memory and tell truth w/o being prompted. A camera is passed through the rectum to view the large intestine(colon). Biopsies and polypectomies can be performed with this procedure o Before Cleansing Liquid diet 24 hours before (no red,orange,or purple liquids) Some meds may need to be withheld NPO 4-6 hours before Moderate sedation May get meds to relax smooth muscle After o o o o o Monitor vitals Bed rest till alert Monitor bowel sounds Passing gas, abdominal fullness, and mild cramping are normal Report bleeding Flexible Sigmoidoscopy Occult Blood/Guiac/Hemoccult Endoscopy - sedated- a camera is passed down the esophagus to view the gastric wall, sphincters, and duodenum, tissue samples can be taken. o Before NPO for 8 hours Spray or gargle used to numb the area Meds to reduce secretions and maybe relax smooth muscle Position pt on left side to help with saliva drainage Monitor airway and O2 stats After o o o o o Monitors vitals NPO until gag reflex return Monitor signs of perforation Bed rest till alert Lozenges , saline gargle, oral analgesics for throat pain Bladder Scan - nothing is needed for this. It is a simple scan done an emergent situation just to tell if there is fluid in the bladder. Bladder Ultrasound - non invasive way of measuring how much fluid is in the bladder b/c of frequency, inability to urinate, and amount of residual fluid. Upper GI (check for shellfish allergy)- this is the same reason you check for a CT w/contrast, The contrast is produced with Iodine. Shellfish produces iodine. Same thing as endoscopy Barium Swallow- exam done using a fluoroscopy and the pt drinks barium sulfate.Upper GI tract study o Before- do not eat for 8 hours before the test, o After may need a laxative Increase water to help pass barium Stool may be white as barium passes Colostomy o There are 4 types of colostomies D escending- Left side of the abdomen - poop is starting to firm A scending - right side of the abdomen - watery and foul smelling T ransverse - midline upper quadrants- still lose but firmming S igmoid-left lower quadrant - firm like “normal” stool Ileostomy- this is to bring the small intestine to the surface of the abdomen to divert stool. It is placed in the left lower quadrant at the ileocecal valve. Urinary Diversion Stool for O&P Urine or Stool for C&S MRI CT Scan o Blockage o NPO 12hrs prior o Laxatives, sedatives IVP Cystoscopy- Checks the mucosa in the bladder, it is looking for inflammation, tumors, or calculi, If there is no biopsy planned then there doesn’t need to be any prep, o After May have burning on urination, pink or tea colored urine, frequent urination Increase fluids Deep breathing exercises to relieve bladder spasms PRN analgesics(pain meds) Sitz or tub bath for pain Leg cramps are common b/c of lithotomy position Check for bright red urine or clots, fever, increase WBCs could be infection o NPO 8-12hrs prior o Difficulty urinating after, urine may be red or pink 24- hour urine - does not have to be sterile this test does not check for the presents of bacteria. It can check things like cleared creatinine, levels of hormones, protein, glucose and other chemical compounds. This is a 24 hour collection, it doesn't matter what time it is started, you MUST void the first elimination, then collect for 24 hours, at the 24 hour mark the pt should void one last time and then turn it into the lab, Each test require different storage instructions; such as testing for protein should be kept cold. The stomach produces and secretes Hydrochloric acid - breakdown food & kills harmful bacteria ingested in foods Pepsin - enzyme produced to degrade protein Intrinsic factor - protein produced for the intestines to absorb vitamin B12 Mucus - protects the stomach mucosa Medication Administration: (Rev. ch 34&35) 6 Rights of Medication Types of needles Length of needles in table Volume & Location in table Pinch or Z-track method o Sub Q- is pinch o IM - is Z-track- helps lock the injection into the muscle Slide the tissue to the side, give injection, release tissue o ID- stretch the skin using thumb and forefinger Bevel up or down o Sub Q - up o ID - up IM and SubQ Location of injections in chart Angles of injections o Sub Q Pinch and inch = 90° angle Otherwise it will a 45° angle o ID 5 - 15° angle o IM- 90° Non-parenteral Med Administration: G tube/ Peg tube - liquids and crushed meds J tube - liquids only Know Medication Rounding Rules: Leading by 1, go to tenth only: 1.5 Leading by 0, go to hundredth: 0.55 ALWAYS go to hundredth for weight- kg : 22.55lbs How to calculate I & O: INPUT- convert all liquids and IV into mL Subtract Output from Input. Within 500mL difference is healthy. Over 500mL is not healthy. Catheters: Locations o Indwelling catheters have a high chance of infections Susceptible to infections Know -ostomy Ascending colostomy: fecal output is liquid in consistency, with a pungent odor, and the stoma is located in the upper right quadrant of the abdomen Descending colostomy: produce increasingly formed stool; located on left side of the abdomen Ileostomy: produce liquid stool but with less odor because enzyme activity is not present; located at the end of the Ileum and bypasses the large intestine Colon job: absorb water/ fluid balance Intestines: digestion Basic Urinary Anatomy Vocabulary: Anuria: Output of 50-100mL in 24hrs Nocturia: Excessive urination at night Dysuria: Painful urination Enuresis: The involuntary passing of urine Oliguria: Output of 100-500mL in 24hrs Hematuria: Blood in the urine Polyuria: Excessive production and excretion of urine (2500mL urine per day) Stress Incontinence: Loss of urine control during activities that increase intraabdominal pressure Overflow Incontinence: A constant dribbling of urine or frequency in urination Urge Incontinence: Sudden strong desire to void, followed by rapid bladder contraction Urine Color Changes: Tea-colored or brown: Metronidazole (Flagyl), Liver disease, Hepatitis, Cirrhosis Blue-green: Tagamet, Indocin, Promethazine (Remsed, Phenergan), Asparagus Orange: Rifadin, Warfarin (Coumadin), Phenazopyridine (Pyridate, Pyridium) Red or Pink: diet including beets or blackberries and if blood is present in the urine, which may be secondary to an enlarged prostate or kidney stones Clear: overhydrated UNIT 1 & 2: Development, Inflammation, Immunity, Infection https://quizlet.com/207293410/nurse-360-chapter-18-human-development-young-adult-toolder-adult-flash-cards/ Erikson's Theory (8 Stages): psychosocial development of an individual across the lifespan 1. Trust versus Mistrust: Birth to 18 mo. ---- Caregiver must meet all needs of the child Could develop trust issues later in life if they do not have a consistent caregiver. 2. Autonomy versus shame and doubt: 18 mo to 3 yr---- Child strives to make decisions for himself or herself. Restrictive parents can cause children to develop shame and doubt. Give choices within boundaries. 3. Initiative versus guilt: 3 to 6 yr---- Child explores his or her world and abilities (running, jumping, throwing). Restricting play or imagination can cause development of guilt. 4. Industry versus inferiority: 6 to 12 yr---- Child refines skills acquired previously and develops a peer social network that exerts great influence on him or her. Develop inferiority due to high expectations of self: real or imaginative. 5. Identity versus role confusion: 12 to 18 yr---- Adolescent explores and integrates multiple roles: student, athlete, child, adult. Emotional fluctuation and stress are common as the adolescent struggles to sort out his or her identity. Education, sexual, occupational- result in confusion. 6. Intimacy versus isolation: 18 to 35 yr---- Person searches for a partner who supports and complements him or her. Starting a family is common. Fail to find partner results in isolation. 7. Generativity versus stagnation: 35 to 55 yr---- Person seeks involvement in creative and meaningful work and transmits culture and values to younger generations. To be successful in this stage of life people must reach beyond their families, There community and social become more important to them. Becoming involved with volunteering and outreach programs would be an example of meeting your milestone at this age group. 8. Integrity versus despair: 55 yr and beyond---- Person reviews life events and accepts the finality of death. If feeling of failure, it can affect sense of integrity, regret. Piaget's Theory of Cognitive Development(4 Stages): how children innately organize their world and learn to think. 1. Sensorimotor: (Birth to 2 yr ) The child explores the environment by using the senses. 2. Preoperational: (2 to 7 yr) The child begins to use images and symbols to represent the world; is still unable to repeat mentally what he or she can do physically. 3. Concrete operational: (7 to 11 yr) Logical reasoning gradually replaces intuitive thought. 4. Formal operational: (11 yr & beyond) The person refines his or her ability to think logically; is capable of abstract thought. 3 MONTHS 7 MONTHS 12 MONTHS Raises head and chest when prone Rolls from front to back and from back to front Gets to sitting position without assistance Brings hands to mouth Sits with support and then without it Crawls forward on belly, using arms and legs to push Follows a moving object with eyes Transfers object from one hand to another Assumes hands-and-knees position Smiles at the sound of caregiver's voice Responds to own name Uses pincer grasp Smiles socially Uses voice to express pleasure Says “da-da” and “ma-ma” Babbles Finds partially hidden objects Tries to imitate words Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs ABC’s- Airway, Breathing, Circulation - if asked what intervention or assessment to complete first think ABC Health Belief Model 3 primary components 1. Perception of susceptibility 2. Perception of the seriousness of the illness 3. Probability that the individual will act to prevent “ avoidable health risk” main constructs influences. Models suggest that people are more motivated to take action if they have certain beliefs or experiences: 1. They are susceptible to the condition ( Perceived susceptibility) 2. Condition has a serious consequences ( Perceived severity) 3. Taking action would reduce the susceptibility or severity (Perceived benefit) 4. They are exposed to factors that prompt action, such as media campaigns, postcard reminders, and advice from others ( Cues of action) 5. They have confidence in their ability to perform an action ( Perceived self-efficacy) Informatics: EHR: Electronic health record. Life long record that follows patient. EMR: Electronic medical record. Record of specific visit. HIPAA PHARM 1 & 2 PACKET Therapeutic index- The safety margin for a drug. Hepatic first pass - This is the amount of the drug that is absorbed by the stomach and small intestine. Bioavailability- how much of the drug reaches circulation. Only drugs given through IV are 100% bioavailable Half-life - the amount of time it takes for half of the drug to be eliminated by your body Pharmacodynamics- what a drug does to a pt body after the other 2 phases have been completed. o Onset, Peak, Duration, Trough, Loading Dose Rights of drug Administration 1. Patient 2. Drug 3. Dose 4. Route 5. Time Routes of Meds1. Parenteral ( By injection or infusion) a. IV b. IM (intramuscular) c. ID (intradermal) d. Sub-q 2. PO- orally - by mouth 3. Suppository -rectally 4. Buccal- against the cheek 5. Sublingual - under the tongue 6. Topical- on skin or mucous membrane 7. Inhaled - inhalers All medication orders must have 1. Date 2. Time 3. Drug name 4. Dose 5. Route 6. Frequency 7. Duration 8. EVERY order must be signed by the ordering health care provider. Before giving a med you should always ask 5 questions 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Name DOB Allergies? Have you had this med before If it was an injection where? Anti Inflammatories a. Inflammation is cause by tissue damage (injury/pathogen) that release chemical mediators i. Histamine- Arrives first, causes dilation of arterioles and redness ( think allergic reaction) ii. Kinis - causes pain iii. Prostaglandins - vasodilation and fever at site COX-cyclooxygenase- is an enzyme, it converts arachidonic acid into prostaglandins causing pain and inflammation, there are 2 types o Cox-1 - protects the stomach and regulated the platelets. o Cox-2 - promotes inflammation and causes pain All 1st gen NSAIDS are non-selective meaning they are COX-1 and COX-2 Only 2nd gen NSAIDS(Celebrex) are selective to COX-2 (platelets and stomach lining are unaffected) NSAIDs- nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug - will inhibit COX o Elderly are PRIME USERS of NSAIDs Anti Infectives- C&S must be done before first dose is given. o Penicillins (PCN) - derived from fungus/molds, This classification has the most allergic reaction. Bacteria produce an enzyme called beta-lactamase or penicillinase to destroy PCNs, there are 4 types. Natural (penicillin G)- oldest, used more b/c they are better Aminopenicillins- $$$ but more effective, are not penicillinase resistant. Most common is Amoxicillin penicillinase -resistant penicillins - used on staph infections (methicillin) only since they are not killed by the penicillinase enzyme. Become resistant to it with MRSA, given IV or IM Extended spectrum penicillins- works on hard to treat G- bacteria. Mainly pseudomonas, not penicillinase resistant Ex:piperacillin and ticarcillin. Cephalosporin ( Keflex, Rocephin,Mefoxin)- similar molecular structure as PCNs. Watch for nephrotoxicity, pseudomembranous colitis and seizures Macrolides ( Zithromax, Erythromycin)- go to drug for pt w/PCN allergies. Erythromycin is destroyed by stomach acid, salt is added to aid in absorption, they are harsh on the GI system. Both can cause problem with Kidney and auditory sense, Monitor BUN& Creatinine and whisper test. Chronic Infections HIV: mutation that occurs during cell replication. It is the CD-4 cells. Symptoms- tired, malasis, flu like symptoms, they are very non descriptive could be taken as symptoms for just about anything else. HAART meds 3 modes of transmission Know Isolation types Contact: Dropet: Airborne: CDiff: HIV: Aseptic: clean Sterile: surgical MRSA flu TB wash hands with soap and water only passed through saliva, blood, breast milk, vaginal/genital secretions Chain of Infection -broken by washing hands 1. Infectious agent ( pathogen) 2. Susceptible host 3. Reservoir 4. Portal of exit- feces, saliva, blood 5. Mode of transmission 6. Portal of entry- broken skin, sex https://quizlet.com/212565487/isolation-flash-cards/ https://quizlet.com/167924282/the-chain-of-infection-flash-cards/ PPE ON: 1. Wash hands 2. Gown 3. Mask 4. Goggles 5. Gloves PPE Removal: 1. Gloves 2. Goggles 3. Gown 4. Mask R.I.C.E for inflammation (Rest, Ice, Compress, Elevate) Most effective within 24-48hr period after injury No more than 20 mins at a time Diagnostic Testing CBC (Complete Blood Count)- Infection. include the RBC count, hemoglobin level, hematocrit, RBC indices, WBC count, and differential WBC count. normal range is 4,500 to 10,000 cells per microliter (cells/mcL). WBC(white blood count): infection Normal is less than 4500 cells per microliter Culture & Sensitivity: identifies invading pathogen and how to treat it C-reactive protein (CRP): detects elevated C-reactive protein (a substance produced by the liver in the presence of inflammation in the body) Normal is less than 1.0 mg/L, Anything over that increases risk of heart disease. MRI: can give a better visualization of blood vessels and joints without radiation exposure. Can detect inflammation in soft tissues, such as inflammation of pancreas. Nothing metal can go inside room/machine CT Scan: provides cross sectional images of organs. Can detect appendicitis and inflammation in colon. Inflammation- not all inflammation has infection but all infection has inflammation. o 5 cardinal signs of inflammation 1. Redness (histamine) 2. Heat (prostaglandins) 3. Swelling (histamines)(prostaglandins) 4. Loss of movement/function (kinins) (prostaglandins) 5. Pain (kinins) A temp for infection will not show up for 36 - 48 hours after surgery/ invasion. Inflammation is secondary response to infection UNIT 3: Elimination https://quizlet.com/209855953/chapter-40-bowel-elimination-flash-cards/ https://quizlet.com/209975024/chapter-41-urinary-elimination-flash-cards/ Labs BUN- often used with creatinine to measure kidney function. Normal BUN is 7-20 mg/dl. Creatinine - women: 0.6-1.2 mg/dl; men:0.8-1.4mg/dl. high creatinine level is indication of kidney damage or disease. UA- clean catch and a sterile container needs to be used o Color - amber-yellow o Odor- similar to ammonia o pH- 6 o Specific gravity- 1.005-1.030 o Glucose - negative (kidney failure or diabetes) o Ketones - negative (formed by improper protein break down) o Protein- negative ( kidney failure, if preg this is used to check for preeclampsia) o Bilirubin- negative (sign of liver issues) o Cast- negative o Bacteria- none (UTI) o Hemoglobin- negative (trauma or illness) o Myoglobin- negative o Culture for organisms- none Culture & Sensitivity - sterile technique. use a clean catch midstream collection, checking for growth of bacteria, if bacteria is found the sensitivity is used to find the best treatment ( If C&S is done on urine it is checking for a UTI) 24 hour urine - checking input and output. 1st urine in toilet; time starts at 1st urine. 2nd urine 24 hour period is collected. Anyone can take to lab. Ensure no paper in container. Remember to discard first void when starting the time. Failure to collect one sample result in restarting the test. STOOL IS NOT STERILE- does not need to be in sterile container Colon job: absorb water/ fluid balance Small Intestines: digestion/ absorption of nutrients Stomach: breaks down the food to allow the small intestine to digest it. Vocabulary: Anuria: Output of 50-100mL in 24hrs Nocturia: Excessive urination at night Dysuria: Painful urination Enuresis: The involuntary passing of urine Oliguria: Output of 100-500mL in 24hrs Hematuria: Blood in the urine Polyuria: Excessive production and excretion of urine (2500mL urine per day) Stress Incontinence: Loss of urine control during activities that increase intraabdominal pressure Overflow Incontinence: A constant dribbling of urine or frequency in urination Urge Incontinence: Sudden strong desire to void, followed by rapid bladder contraction Normal output: 1500mL Nonsensical fluid loss Fluid lost through feces: 200mL Fluid loss from respiration/sweating: 500mL Diagnostics Catheters: Locations o Indwelling catheters have a high chance of infections Susceptible to infections Condom catheter is not sterile- do not need sterile gloves IVP - Intravenous pyelogram ( can also be called Intravenous Urography) A radiological procedure use to look for abnormalities in the urinary system ..( X-rays) There is contrast so you will want to ask for allergies before the test. May need to use an emema or laxative before. May be food or fluid restrains (when I had one I did not ) There is information on page in Saunders it is called a Intravenous Urography Know -ostomy Ascending colostomy: fecal output is liquid in consistency, with a pungent odor, and the stoma is located in the upper right quadrant of the abdomen Descending colostomy: produce increasingly formed stool; located on left side of the abdomen Ileostomy: produce liquid stool but with less odor because enzyme activity is not present; located at the end of the Ileum and bypasses the large intestine D descending A ascending T transverse S sigmoid Ememas: 1. Cleansing- empty bowel, remove feces through fluid; peristalsis stimulation 2. Hypertonic: osmotic pressure draws out fluid in interstitial spaces 3. Isotonic: expands colon and promotes peristalsis 4. Oil retention: oil/lubricate the rectum and colon 5. Medication: used to treat infections 6. Carminative: provide relief from gastric distension 7. Return-flow: provide relief from gastric distension Nursing Diagnoses • Impaired Urinary Elimination related to microorganisms in the urinary tract as evidenced by urgency, frequency, and reports of burning with urination (Although not directly related to urinary elimination, associated nursing diagnoses such as Risk for Impaired Skin Integrity, Risk for Infection, Disturbed Body Image, Ineffective Coping, and Pain may be appropriately assigned to patients experiencing urinary elimination concerns.) • Urinary Retention related to post anesthetic state as evidenced by absent urinary output, lower abdominal distension, and residual urine evident on bladder scan • Toileting Self-Care Deficit related to neuromuscular impairment as evidenced by right-sided paralysis, inability to perform proper toileting hygiene, and inability to manipulate clothing during toileting Overflow urinary incontinence -characterized by the involuntary release of urine from an overfull urinary bladder, often in the absence of any urge to urinate. Reflex urinary incontinence-occurs when the bladder muscle contracts and urine leaks (often in large amounts) without any warning or urge. This can happen as a result of damage to the nerves that normally warn the brain that the bladder is filling. Stress urinary incontinence -happens when physical movement or activity — such as coughing, sneezing, running or heavy lifting — puts pressure (stress) on your bladder. Urge urinary incontinence -is a sudden and strong need to urinate. You may also hear it referred to as an unstable or overactive bladder, or detrusor instability, nocturia is often seen with this, Bowel elimination Nursing Diagnosis Risk for constipation Risk for Diarrhea Risk for bowel incontinence Goals for the resolution of elimination problems are structured around maintaining normal elimination patterns, returning to previous levels of function, preventing associated risks, or coping with an altered pattern. The nurse and the patient should work collaboratively to create individualized goals specific for the diagnosis and prioritized according to the patient's need, which may initially have a psychosocial focus. Expected outcomes are related to satisfactory management of incontinence, complete emptying of the bladder, and independent management of toileting tasks. Short-term goals may include: • Patient will report resolution of UTI symptoms within 5 days of taking prescribed antibiotic treatment. • Patient will spontaneously empty bladder completely without assistance within 12 hours after surgery. • Patient will effectively wipe self with left hand after urination within 5 days. Long-term goals associated with urinary elimination concerns may include: • Patient will perform self-catheterization without developing a UTI for 6 months after urinary diversion surgery. • Patient will demonstrate care of urinary diversion before discharge from the hospital. • Patient will demonstrate ability to safely perform toileting tasks without assistance within 9 months of developing left-sided weakness secondary to a severe cerebrovascular accident. Interventions that assist the patient in achieving the goals, including, but not limited to, continence, complete emptying of the bladder, and self-care in toileting. The focus of each goal is directly related to the identified nursing diagnosis, which in turn determines what interventions are most appropriate for each patient. The nurse must focus on activities that will help the patient with compromised urinary elimination return to the normal state of function or adapt to changes in the state of function. Nursing interventions to help patients achieve urinary continence and complete emptying of the bladder and independent toileting include promoting adequate fluid intake, teaching self-care activities, and assisting with voiding. Collaborative interventions require the assistance of the PCP or other professionals, such as a physical therapist or nutritionist. Ongoing assessment and follow-up are needed to ensure quality in the care provided and to determine need for further nursing interventions. Patient education is crucial for maintaining urinary tract health. Before leaving the acute care facility, the patient needs to demonstrate understanding and competency in assessment of the qualities and characteristics of urine, home catheterization, toileting, fluid intake, and preventing UTIs. MOD 3 PHARM Diarrhea BRAT Diet- Bananas, Rice, Applesauce, Tea/Toast Constipation Increase fluid intake Increase fiber in diet Increase activity Give laxatives as last resort o Osmotic: pulls water into colon. Used for bowel prep (Milk of Mag) o Stimulant: irritates intestinal wall (ExLax) o Bulk-forming: absorbs water in intestine & increases peristalsis. Mix with full glass of water, drink an additional glass- can cause intestinal obstruction. (Metamucil) o Emollient: soften stools and lubricates for easier elimination (good for pts with Hx of heart attack) Contraindications for laxatives: 1. Inflammatory disorders of GI tract 2. Appendicitis 3. Diverticulitis 4. Ulcerative colitis 5. Spastic colon 6. Bowel obstruction 7. Can induce labor UNIT 4 & 5: Fluid and Electrolyte Imbalance, Perfusion, Pain Sodium (Na+): 135-145 Potassium (K+): 3.5-5.5 (cardiac) Calcium (Ca+): 8.5-10.5 (cardiac) Magnesium (Mg+): 1.3-2.1 Chloride (Cl-): 95-105 Paired Electrolytes Sodium likes Chloride Magnesium is antagonist to Calcium Potassium follow Magnesium Phosphorus and calcium are always opposite Sodium like potassium Chloride and Calcium Chloride and potassium https://quizlet.com/42013572/electrolytes-flash-cards/ https://quizlet.com/209715829/chapter-39-fluid-electrolytes-and-acid-base-balance-flash-cards/ Indication of imbalance: unexplained vomiting, diarrhea Nursing Diagnosis for electrolyte/fluid imbalance Risk for electrolyte imbalance ( as related to diarrhea or vomiting) Readiness for enhanced fluid balance Deficient fluid volume (Dehydrated not drinking enough) Risk for deficient fluid volume Excess fluid volume (Fluid overloaded, pul edema, edema,overhydration ) Risk for imbalanced fluid volume Pain Referred: pain felt in another part of the body other than actual source Psychogenic: pain that is perceived but has no physical cause Radiating: pain that travels the length of the nerve Somatic: injury to skin, bone, joints Visceral: pain coming from an organ Phantom: pain that occurs when the brain receives messages from an area of amputation • Medication administration may not be delegated. • Unlicensed assistive personnel (UAP) should report the following to the nurse: • Changes in vital signs or any patient complaints or discomforts • Medications found in the patient's room • Patient questions regarding medications • Collaborate with the pharmacist about medication questions before administration. CAM Alternative - Alternative therapies take the place of pharmacologic interventions, and complementary therapies are implemented to enhance the effect of pharmacologic treatment. During the assessment process, nurses should inquire about the patient's use of herbal remedies to avoid potential medication interactions if analgesics are included in the plan of care. Complementary- Music therapy, massage therapy, physical therapy, and the services of health care providers specializing in pain management provide exercise, muscle manipulation, and other complementary therapies to manage pain in addition to medication. Modalities a. Physical based modalities- any therapeutic medium that uses the transmission of energy to or through the pt, physical force such as heat, cold, pressure, water, light, sound, or electricity to help control pain, not supposed to replace medical or other interventions, help the overall outcome b. Biologically based modalities- substance found in nature herbs, food, and vitamins. c. Mind-body based modalities -Acupuncture, massage,therapy, meditation, relaxation techniques, spinal manipulation, and yoga, tia chi d. Multimodalities - therapies combined to treat pt. UAP Delegation: The nurse can delegate unlicensed assistive personnel to perform nonpharmacologic pain management techniques, such as administering back rubs, repositioning the patient, performing oral hygiene, changing the linens, talking to the patient, and darkening the room, to help make the patient more comfortable and assist in decreasing pain. https://quizlet.com/237018966/cam-flash-cards/ https://quizlet.com/133569577/pain-and-communication-quiz-flash-cards/ Sleep Dyssomnia: o Insomnia( Trouble getting to sleep), jet lag, obstructive sleep apnea, narcolepsy, restless leg syndrome Parasomnia: nocturnal enuresis (bed wetting), sleep terrors (do not wake up), bruxism (teeth clenching at night) Nursing Diagnosis Related to Sleep Risk for insomnia Risk for sleep deprivation Risk for disturbed sleep pattern https://quizlet.com/203624366/chapter-33-sleep-questions-flash-cards/ UNIT 6: Culture, Healthcare Quality, Communication, Informatics I am not really sure what they are going to be asking on the test but I thought these links may be a good place to start. https://quizlet.com/195555830/fundamentals-of-nursing-yoost-chapter-21-ethnicity-and-culturalassessment-flash-cards/ https://quizlet.com/209561700/nurse-360-chapter-3-communication-flash-cards/ Race -is a socially constructed concept that tends to group people by common descent, heredity, or physical characteristics. Ethnicity - is the person's identification with or membership in a particular racial, national, or cultural group and observation of the group's customs, beliefs, and language. Culture - a pattern of shared attitudes, beliefs, self-definitions, norms, roles, and values that can occur among those who speak a particular language or live in a defined geographical region. Enculturation - the process by which a person learns the norms, values, and behaviors of a culture, similar to socialization. Culture is passed from generation to generation. Acculturation - the process of acquiring new attitudes, roles, customs, or behaviors as a result of contact with another culture. Both the host culture and the culture of origin are changed as a result of reciprocal influences. Assimilation is the process by which individuals from one cultural group merge with, or blend into, a second group. Group merges with another culture. Socialization is the process of being reared and nurtured within a culture and acquiring its characteristics. Community- A group of people that have a common interest or identity Generalization-is a statement, idea, or principle that has a broad application. Stereotypes-a set of fixed ideas, often unfavorable, about members of a group. Prejudice-is the process of devaluing an entire group because of assumed behavior, values, or attributes. Discrimination -refers to policies and practices that harm a group and its members,discrimination may be de facto (practiced, but not legally sanctioned) or de jure (legally sanctioned). Racism- is an unfounded belief that race determines a person's character or ability and that one race is superior or inferior to another. Ethnocentrism is the belief that one's own culture is superior to that of another while using one's own cultural values as the criteria by which to judge other cultures Rule of descent- Arbitrarily assigning a race to a person on the basis of a societal dictate that associates society identity with ancestry Transcultural nursing focuses on human caring–associated differences and similarities among the beliefs, values, and patterned life ways of cultures to provide culturally congruent, meaningful, and beneficial health care Emic perspective focuses on the local, indigenous, and insider's culture; Etic perspective focuses on the outsider's world, and especially on professional views Culturally congruent care uses culturally based knowledge in sensitive, creative, safe, and meaningful ways to promote the health and well-being of individual people or groups and improve their ability to face death, disability, or difficult human life conditions Cultural competence refers to the complex integration of a person's knowledge, attitudes, beliefs, skills, and encounters with those of people from different cultures Time Orientation: Past, Present, Future Australian, British, and Chinese/Asian cultures tend to be time-oriented in the past People of these cultures tend to believe that if certain solutions worked for their ancestors, such solutions will work for them. African American and Hispanic cultures orient to the present are less likely to embrace preventive health care Focused on the “here and now” Think of time in a linear fashion Run on “island time” Middle-class Americans, regardless of ethnic or cultural origin, tend to be future-oriented Spirituality- Expression of meaning and purpose in life (with-in you, purpose) Religion- Provides a structure for understanding spirituality and involves rites and rituals within a faith community. Nursing Dx • Spiritual Distress related to chronic illness as evidenced by expressions of hopelessness and statements indicating concern over the recent inability to pray • Impaired Religiosity related to illness as evidenced by difficulty adhering to religious dietary customs and expressions of emotional distress over special diet restrictions • Readiness for Enhanced Religiosity as evidenced by rejecting harmful customs and seeking reconciliation with previously estranged family members • Moral Distress related to cultural conflict between medical treatment and religious beliefs as evidenced by expressions of concern about rejection by religious community and hesitation in accepting blood transfusion • Decisional Conflict related to unclear personal beliefs as evidenced by questioning of personal beliefs while making decisions and delayed decision making Readiness for enhanced spiritual well-being Nurses Roles: Teacher, Leader, Advocate, Caregiver Sentinel Events: 1. Falls are #1 2. Error by personnel 3. Equipment malfunction 4. Self-harm Write an incident report. ONLY facts go in the chart- do not record that an incident report was done. Culture/Spirituality: 1. Know dietary and medication restrictions 2. Review reading guide for cultures: Asian, Muslim, Hindu, African American, Latino, Jewish Hindu (vegetarian): monitor iron levels after surgery Muslim: may refuse Elixir (do not consume pork or alcohol); fast during Ramadan Orthodox Jewish: Sabbath (won’t use call button because religion forbids use of technology); do not eat meat and dairy together; only eat vegetarian animals, cloven hoof, or ritually slaughtered, fish with scales or fins Vietnamese: family may bring food from home (allowed but make sure it follows diet)