CH. 4 Professional Nursing Practice by Mary Koloroutis - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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CH. 4 Professional Nursing Practice by Mary Koloroutis

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Title: CH. 4 Professional Nursing Practice by Mary Koloroutis


1
CH. 4 Professional Nursing Practiceby Mary
Koloroutis
  • Key Constructs to Professional Nursing
  • The nurse-patient is the cornerstone
  • The two major H.C. drivers can negatively impact
    Professional Nursing
  • Financial decisions
  • Technology issues
  • Magnet Status is positively related to
    Professional Nursing

2
Key Constructs to Professional Nursing continued
  • Aiken Study (1994) gt P. N.
  • Facilitate professional autonomy
  • Nursing control over their practice
  • Positive nurse-physician relations
  • P.N. numbers/mix impact patient outcomes by
    3-12 (Needleman, 2001)
  • Provides compassionate care to clients
  • OJT does not normally meet the requirements of a
    professional occupation.

3
What is a Profession?
  • Abraham Flexner (1910)
  • Intellectual vs physical (care plan vs IV)
  • Based on an assessable body of knowledge
  • Is practical rather than theoretical
  • Can be taught through professional Ed
  • Has a strong internal organization of members
  • Has practitioners motivated by altruism

4
Explore the Meaning of a Professional vs.
Technical Practice
  • Describe the similarities or differences between
    the chef at the Brown Palace the cook at the
    Village Inn?

Cook
Chef
5
Professional vs. Technicalfor all practice areas
  • Professional Practices
  • Have a culture that supports professional
    activities frameworks, CE, research
  • Has a defined body of knowledge gained by formal
    education
  • Is a discipline with peer review and a code of
    ethics
  • Autonomy in practice with legislative and legal
    sanctions
  • Is an organized system of practice-society
    recognized
  • Technical Practices
  • Are more likely to have more OJT than formal
    education.
  • Are skill focused
  • Have trade journals or technique trainings
  • Do not focus on what advances the practice
  • Develop through certifications
  • Want less accountability

6
Professional vs. TechnicalThinking and Valuing
  • Professional thinking
  • More is best
  • Specialization in depth and breadth
  • Evidence-based education
  • Invests energy beyond the work-associations,
    research, reading
  • Expects self accountability
  • Resilient with change and believes change is
    valuable
  • Technical Thinking
  • Least is best
  • Specialization in depth
  • Experience is the primary educator
  • Conserves energy beyond the workday
  • Prefers others be accountable
  • Enjoys consistency and believes change is
    disruptive

7
Professional vs. TechnicalNursing Competencies
  • Professional
  • Technical

8
Imagine Nursing as Never Changing-Flat Line
  • Completely controlled
  • Impact on patient outcomes
  • Impact on new nurses
  • Impact on physicians
  • Impact on quality
  • Impact on staff

9
What Would it Look Like with Fluctuation and
Change?
  • How is Fluctuation Change different from Random
    Chaos?
  • What are the Benefits of Fluctuation and Change?
  • Called Cybernetics II
  • (as system in constant changeshaping toward
    improvements)

10
Imagine Minimal Change
11
Professionals believe there are Mind and Body
Failures
  • Limited knowledge
  • Information processing barriers
  • Environmental barriers
  • Motivational (internal) barriers
  • Emotional barriers
  • Perceptual barriers
  • Intellectual barriers
  • Cultural barriers (bias)
  • KEY RESPONSES ARE
  • More people need to be stepping up to critical
    decisions with
  • Shared Governance
  • We need practice theories to keep us on track and
    tell us when we are lost
  • We need to practice in an evidence-based care
    environment

12
Conceptual Frameworks-Theory Allow You To
Organize Your Thinking and Connect it to
Principles
  • It helps to know what we believe and why
  • These are the the building blocks of our
    knowledge and beliefs
  • This allows us to move into new territory as if
    we have a map for the unknown
  • We have less surprises, and then react less
    stressed
  • It is an external support for our faulty thinking

13
Imagine Nursing as Random PracticeNot a
Discipline
  • Inconsistent care
  • Patient confusion
  • Evidence based practices are not encouraged
  • There is confusion and constant conflict
  • No accountability

14
Metaparadigms
  • Broadest consensus of a discipline
  • Have general parameters creates boundaries
  • Have a distinctive domain and cover all of it
  • Most theories include these components
  • Person (humans)
  • Environment (context)
  • Health (ideas of health)
  • Nursing (nursing as a discipline)
  • Caring
  • Quality

15
Propositions Linkages Relationships
  • Belief regarding person to their own health
  • Belief regarding person to environment
  • Belief regarding health to nursing practice
  • Belief regarding the connection of person,
    environment, health , and the practice of nursing
  • Beliefs about caring, quality and practice

16
The Focus of Ones PracticeImpacts the practice
and workplace
  • Client focused
  • Family focused
  • Person-environment focused
  • Nursing therapeutic focused
  • Humanistic focused
  • Spiritually focused
  • Process focused

17
Models Give you a Picture of How the Parts are
Related
18
A Philosophy Has Your Key Values Presented for
Others
Advocacy through Caring About Quality Nursing Practice
Patients are the reason we exist and our caring shows that we advocate for them Quality is the combination of clinical competency and the art of caring Nursing is at the forefront of our excellence
19
Other TheoriesImpact the practice and the
workplace
  • Growth and development (Erikson, Piaget)
  • Adult development (Kohlberg, Gilligan, Rest)
  • Aging and death (Kubler-Ross)
  • Chronic Disease (Geriatric Theories)
  • Human Intelligence (Gardner)
  • Psychological development (Psych. Theories)
  • Cause and Effect Multifactorial (Medicine)
  • Potentiality, Consciousness Reality (Q.M.)

20
Definitions of Nursing (ANA)
  • Provision of a caring relationship that
    facilitates health and healing
  • Attention to the range of human responses to
    health and illness, the physical and social
    environments
  • Integrates objective data and subjective
    experience.
  • Apply scientific knowledge
  • Advance knowledge through scholarly inquiry
  • Influence social and public policy for social
    justice

21
Definition of Nursing (ANA)
  • Nursing is the protection, promotion, and
    optimization of health and abilities, prevention
    of illness and injury, alleviation of suffering
    through the diagnosis and treatment of human
    response, and advocacy in the care of
    individuals, families, communities, and
    populations.

22
The Scope of Nursing Practice
  • Dependent on their educational preparation
  • Their experience
  • Their role
  • And the nature of the patient population
  • Practice within recognized standards of
    professional nursing practice (varies with
    education, experience

23
Three Realms of Practice
  • Delegated
  • RNs carry out medical plans of action
  • RN is responsible to confirm safety, and
    appropriateness of the order
  • Independent
  • Focus is on the patients response to actual or
    potential health problems
  • Interdependent
  • Interdisciplinary care, planning, and services

24
Entry Levels of Nursing Today
  • Certified Nursing Assist.
  • Licensed Practical Nurse
  • PN, LPN, LVN
  • Professional Entry
  • AD, BSN, (Dip), ND
  • Advanced Practice Nurses
  • NP, CNS, ND
  • Terminal Degrees
  • Ed.D., Ph.D., DNSc, DNP, DScN,

25
Creating Boundaries for Practical Nursing
What is in the Domain of
NOT Practical Nursing
Practical Nursing
26
Quiz 1 Name Date
List four things that are in the domain of
practical nursing four things that are beyond
the scope of practical nursing

Beyond LPN
Within LPN
27
Creating Boundaries for NursingWhat is the
Discipline?
What is in the domain And what is not
NOT NURSING
NURSING
28
Evaluating the boundaries of Nursing
  • 1.    Distinctions between human and non-human
    (not nursing),
  • 2.    Distinctions between living and nonliving
    (not nursing),
  • 3.    Nature of environments and
    human-environmental interactions from cellular to
    societal levels,
  • 4.    Illness versus health and well-being
  • 5. What you do to or for your clients

29
Academic Training for RNs
  • All Nursing
  • Assessment
  • Diagnosis
  • Outcomes Identified
  • Planning
  • Implementation
  • Coordination of Care
  • Health teaching, Promotion
  • Consultation
  • Prescriptive Authority
  • Evaluation
  • Professional Nursing
  • Quality of Practice
  • Education
  • Professional Prac. Eval.
  • Collegiality /Collaboration
  • Ethics
  • Research
  • Resource Utilization
  • Leadership

30
Roles of Professional Nursing
  • Have a Voice of Agency
  • 1. Sentry (Watch over, protect others)
  • 2. Healer (Care for anothers body, mind, spirit)
  • 3. Guide (Leads another through unfamiliar
    territory)
  • 4. Teacher (Imparts knowledge)
  • 5. Collaborator (Works with others)
  • 6. Leader (Has authority to act on behalf of
    others)

31
Essential Functions of Nursing Practice
  • Assessment of needs through data collection,
    clinical assessment, plan, implement, evaluate
  • Manage and deliver the care required for the
    patients condition and individual human response
  • Communication and coordinate care with others who
    are interacting with the patient
  • Coordinate the patient transfer or discharge

32
Benners Novice to Expert (1984)
  • Novice
  • Advanced Beginner
  • Competent
  • Proficient
  • Expert

33
Quotes form Ch. 4
  • There must be a relationship with the patient to
    know their strengths, weaknesses, hopes and
    fears our challenge is to balance tasks with
    relationship. (Manthey)
  • Within the dominant, modern, Western mindset, the
    caring-healing practices of nursing have been on
    the marginshave been repressed and silenced.
    (Watson)
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