Ngoa, Jose Troy - Sas2
Ngoa, Jose Troy - Sas2
Ngoa, Jose Troy - Sas2
LESSON PREVIEW/REVIEW
Answer the following questions in your SAS based on your understanding. You may use the back sheet of this page for
your answers. Here are the questions as follow:
1. What is nursing as a science?
Nursing is science because it needs scientific methods and applications for in any forms of life and practices
information of human beings in mutual process with their environment in order to provide for the well-being
of patients.
Nursing is an art because it is where theoretical frameworks are widely used to convey and to serve people
with proper examination to conclude what is wrong to the patient.
Nursing is a profession where body of knowledge must obtain in order to be expert to that kind of field
where professionalism is a must to be applied.
MAIN LESSON
You will study the contents of this lesson and read your book, if available.
Nursing as a Profession
• Patient-centered care
• Professionalism
□ Administer quality care
□ Be responsible and accountable
• Health care advocacy groups
□ Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) Future of Nursing: Campaign for Action
□ Institute of Medicine (IOM) publication on The Future of Nursing
Standards of Practice
• Six standards of practice:
□ Assessment
□ Diagnosis
□ Outcomes identification
□ Planning
□ Implementation
□ Evaluation
Code of Ethics
• A code of ethics is the philosophical ideals of right and wrong that define principles used to provide care.
• It is important for you to incorporate your own values and ethics into your practice.
• It will be important to incorporate the ANA code of ethics, as well as your personal values and ethics, into your
nursing practice.
• The ANA has a number of publications that address ethics and human rights in nursing. The Code of Ethics for
Nurses with Interpretive Statements is a guide for carrying out nursing responsibilities that provide quality nursing
care; it also outlines the ethical obligations of the profession.
Professional Roles
Autonomy and Accountability Educator
Caregiver Communicator
Advocate Manager
• You are responsible for obtaining and maintaining specific knowledge and skills for a variety of professional roles
and responsibilities.
□ Autonomy is an essential element of professional nursing that involves the initiation of independent
nursing interventions without medical orders. Accountability means that you are responsible
professionally and legally for the type and quality of nursing care provided.
□ As a caregiver, you help patients maintain and regain health and find their maximum level of independent
function through the healing process. A patient’s health care needs include the patient’s emotional,
spiritual, and social well-being.
□ As a patient advocate you protect your patient’s human and legal rights and help patients assert those
rights when needed.
□ As an educator, your teaching can be formal or informal. Always use teaching methods that match your
patient’s capabilities and needs, and incorporate other resources, such as the family, in teaching plans.
□ Your effectiveness as a communicator is central to the nurse—patient relationship. It allows you to know
your patients, including their strengths, weaknesses, and needs. You will routinely communicate with
patients and families, other nurses and health care professionals, resource people, and the community.
□ As a manager, you will establish an environment for collaborative patient-centered care to provide safe,
quality care with positive patient outcomes.
Career Development
Nursing provides an opportunity for you to commit to lifelong learning and career development.
• Provider of care
• Advanced practice registered nurses
□ Clinical nurse specialist
o An APRN who is an expert clinician in a specialized area of practice, such as a population (e.g.,
geriatrics), a setting (e.g., critical care), a disease specialty (e.g., diabetes), a type of care (e.g.,
rehabilitation), or a type of problem (e.g., pain).
□ Certified nurse practitioner
o An APRN who provides health care to a group of patients, usually in an outpatient, ambulatory
care, or community-based setting. NPs provide care for patients with complex problems and a
more holistic approach than physicians.
□ Certified nurse midwife
Historical Influences
• Nurses:
□ Respond to needs of patients
□ Actively participate in determining best practices
• Knowledge of the history of the nursing profession increases your ability to
understand the social and intellectual origins of the discipline.
Florence Nightingale
• First practicing epidemiologist
• Organized first school of nursing
• Improved sanitation in battlefield hospitals
• Practices remain a basic part of nursing today
• Clara Barton - founder of the American Red Cross, tended soldiers on the battlefields.
• Mother Bickerdyke - organized ambulance services and walked abandoned battlefields at night, looking for
wounded soldiers.
• Harriet Tubman - a prominent female in the Underground Railroad movement to free slaves.
• Mary Mahoney - the first professionally trained African-American nurse. She was concerned with the relationship
between cultures and races; and as a noted nursing leader she brought forth an awareness of cultural diversity
and respect for the individual, regardless of background, race, color, or religion.
• Lillian Wald and Mary Brewster - opened the Henry Street Settlement, which focused on the health needs of poor
people who lived in tenements in New York City.
Twenty-First Century
• Changes in curriculum
• Advances in technology and informatics
• New programs address current health concerns
• Leadership role in developing standards and policies
Contemporary Influences
• Importance of nurses’ self-care
Trends in Nursing
• Evidence-based practice
□ Your practice needs to be based on current evidence, not just according to your education and
experiences and the policies and procedures of health care facilities.
• Quality and Safety Education for Nurses (QSEN)
□ QSEN addresses the challenge to prepare nurses with the competencies needed to continuously improve
the quality of care in their work environments.
• Impact of emerging technologies
□ Many emerging technologies have the potential to rapidly change nursing practice. Some of these help
nurses use noninvasive, more accurate assessment tools; implement evidence-based practices; collect
and trend patient outcome data; and use clinical decision support systems.
• Genomics
□ A newer term that describes the study of all the genes in a person and interactions of these genes with
one another and with that person’s environment.
• Public perception of nursing
□ As frontline health care providers, nurses practice in all health care settings and constitute the largest
number of healthcare professionals. When you care for patients, recognize how your approach to care
influences public opinion. Always act in a competent professional manner.
• Impact of nursing on politics and health policy
□ Nurses are becoming more politically sophisticated and, as a result, are able to increase the influence
nursing has on health care policy and practice.
1. A nurse is caring for a patient with end-stage lung disease. The patient wants to go home on oxygen and be
comfortable. The family wants the patient to have a new surgical procedure. The nurse explains the risk and benefits
of the surgery to the family and discusses the patient's wishes with them. The nurse is acting as the patient's:
a. Educator.
b. Advocate.
c. Caregiver.
d. Case manager.
ANSWER: B
RATIO: Protect the patient’s human and legal rights and help patients assert those rights when needed.
3. Contemporary nursing requires that the nurse has knowledge and skills for a variety of professional roles and
responsibilities. Which of the following are examples? (Select all that apply.)
a. Caregiver
b. Autonomy
c. Patient advocate
d. Manager
ANSWER: A B C D
RATIO: All of the answers are must require to have knowledge and skills for a variety of professional roles and responsibilities.
4. You are preparing a presentation for your classmates regarding the clinical care coordination conference for a patient
with terminal cancer. As part of the preparation you have your classmates read the Nursing Code of Ethics for
Professional Registered Nurses. Your instructor asks the class why this document is important. Which of the following
statements best describes this code?
a. Improves self–health care
b. Protects the patient's confidentiality
c. Ensures identical care to all patients
d. Defines the principles of right and wrong to provide patient care
ANSWER: D
RATIO: Nursing Code of Ethics for Professional Registered Nurses defines the principles of right and wrong to provide patient care.
5. The nurses on an acute care medical floor notice an increase in pressure ulcer formation in their patients. A nurse
consultant decides to compare two types of treatment. The first is the procedure currently used to assess for pressure
ulcer risk. The second uses a new assessment instrument to identify at-risk patients. Given this information, the nurse
consultant exemplifies which career?
a. Clinical nurse specialist c. Nurse educator
b. Nurse administrator d. Nurse researcher
ANSWER: D
RATIO: Nurse researcher where comparing the two treatment for the patient.
6. Nurses in an acute care hospital are attending a unit-based education program to learn how to use a new pressure-
relieving device for patients at risk for pressure ulcers. This is which type of education?
a. Continuing education
b. Graduate education
c. Professional Registered Nurse Education
d. All of the above
ANSWER: A
RATIO: •Continuing and in-service education
□Involves formal, organized educational programs offered by universities, hospitals, state nurses’ associations, professional
nursing organizations, and educational and health care institutions.
8. A patient in the emergency department has developed wheezing and shortness of breath. The nurse gives the
ordered medicated nebulizer treatment now and in 4 hours. Which standard of practice is performed?
a. Planning
b. Evaluation
c. Assessment
d. Implementation
ANSWER: D
RATIO: Implementation is performed by the nurse where she/he implement the interventions in the plan of care.
10. Which of the following is used by the nurse to identify the patient’s healthcare needs and strengths and to establish
and carry out a plan of care to meet those needs?
a. Nursing standards c. Nurse practice acts
b. Nursing orders d. Nursing process
ANSWER: D
RATIO: The nursing process is the foundation of clinical decision making and includes all significant actions taken by nurses in providing
care to patients.
RATIONALIZATION ACTIVITY
The instructor will now provide you the rationalization to these questions. You can now ask questions and debate among
yourselves. Write the correct answer and correct/additional ratio in the space provided.
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LESSON WRAP-UP
You will now mark (encircle) the session you have finished today in the tracker below. This is simply a visual to help you
track how much work you have accomplished and how much work there is left to do.
You are done with the session! Let’s track your progress.
This strategy provides a structure for you to record your own comprehension and summarize your learning.