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Delivering Nursing Care

3. Delivering Nursing Care. Learning Outcomes. Describe how the delivery system structures nursing care. Describe what types of nursing care delivery systems exist. Discuss the positive and negative aspects of different systems. Learning Outcomes.

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Delivering Nursing Care

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  1. 3 Delivering Nursing Care

  2. Learning Outcomes • Describe how the delivery system structures nursing care. • Describe what types of nursing care delivery systems exist. • Discuss the positive and negative aspects of different systems.

  3. Learning Outcomes • Describe evolving types of delivery systems that have emerged. • Explain characteristics of effective delivery systems.

  4. Nursing Care Delivery Systems • Provide structure for delivering care • Delivery of care includes: • Assessing care needs • Formulating plan of care • Implementing plan • Evaluating patient's responses

  5. Nursing Care Delivery Systems • Pros and cons debated • Must optimize nurse’s knowledge, skills • Ensure that patients receive appropriate care • Lower mortality rates in hospitals with good environments for nurses

  6. Functional Nursing • RNs, LPNs, and UAPs are assigned different tasks • RNs assess patients • Other staff give baths, make beds, take vital signs, and administer treatments

  7. Figure 3-1 Functional nursing.

  8. Functional Nursing • Advantages • Staff become efficient at performing assigned tasks • Disadvantages • Uneven continuity • Lack of holistic understanding of patient • Problems with follow-up

  9. Team Nursing • Team of nursing personnel provides total care to a group of patients by diagnosis or provider services. • RN leads team • May include other RNs, LPNs, and UAPs • Leaders must be skilled in delegating, communicating, and problem solving • All members of effective teams are good communicators

  10. Team leader time spent in indirect pt care e.g.: • Developing or updating nsg care plan • Resolving problems encountered by team members. • Conducting nsg conferences • Communicating with physicians and other care providers

  11. Figure 3-2 Team/modular nursing.

  12. Team Nursing • Advantages • LPNs and UAPs perform tasks that do not require RN's expertise • Care is more easily coordinated • Saves steps and time

  13. Team Nursing • Disadvantages • Time needed for communicating, supervising, and coordinating team members • Affect of changes in team leaders, members, and assignments on continuity of care • Total patient not considered by any one person

  14. Team Nursing • Disadvantages • Role confusion and resentment • Less control for nurses over assignments • Possibility of unequal assignments

  15. Figure 3-3 Total patient care.

  16. Total Patient Care • RN is responsible for all aspects of care for one or more patients

  17. Total Patient Care • Advantages • Continuous, holistic, expert nursing care • Total accountability • Continuity of communication • Disadvantages • RNs perform tasks that could be done more cost-effectively by less skilled persons

  18. Primary Nursing • RN designs, implements, and is responsible for nursing care for duration of the patient's stay on the unit

  19. Figure 3-4 Primary nursing.

  20. Primary Nursing • Advantages • Knowledge-based practice model • Decentralization of decisions, authority, and responsibility • 24-hour accountability • Improved continuity and coordination of care • Increased nurse, patient, and physician satisfaction

  21. Primary Nursing • Disadvantages • Excellent communication required • Accountability of associate nurses • Patient transfers disrupt continuity of care • Compensation and legal responsibility for staff nurses • Unwillingness of associates to take direction

  22. Practice Partnerships • RN and partner (UAP, LPN, or less experienced RN) work together on same schedule with same group of patients

  23. Figure 3-5 Practice partnerships.

  24. Practice Partnerships • Advantages • Improved continuity of care and accountability for care • Disadvantages • Decreased ratio of RNs to nonprofessional staff • Potential for junior team members to assume too much responsibility

  25. Case Management • Is a model for identifying, coordinating, and monitoring the implementation of services needed to achieve desired patient care outcomes within specific period of time • Case manager supervises the care provided by licensed and unlicensed nursing personnel • Critical pathways provide direction for managing care of specific patients

  26. Nsg case management requires • Collaboration of all members of the health care team • Identification of expected patient outcomes within specific time frame • Use of principles of continuous quality improvement • Promotion of professional practice

  27. Figure 3-6 Case management.

  28. Case Management • Advantages • All professionals equal team members • Members take ownership of patient outcomes • Disadvantages • Requires qualified nurse case manager, team collaboration, and quality management system • Established critical pathways needed

  29. Critical Pathways • Provide care strategies to achieve expected outcomes • Used in case management system • Include ways to identify variances easily and whether outcomes have been met

  30. Critical Pathways • Advantages • Accommodate unique characters, conditions of patients • Reduce costs • Disadvantages • May need revision

  31. Differentiated Practice • Structure of roles and functions differentiated by nurses' education, experience, and competence • Roles, responsibilities, and tasks defined for professional nurses, LPNs, and UAPs

  32. Differentiated Practice • Maximizes nursing resources • Defined scope of practice and level of responsibility

  33. Patient-Centered Care • Nurse coordinates a team of multifunctional, unit-based caregivers • All patient care services are unit-based • Focused on: • Decentralization • Promotion of efficiency and quality • Cost control

  34. Patient-Centered Care • Advantages • Promotes efficiency, quality, and cost control • Disadvantages • Requires considerable time for nurse manager • Demands a strong leader to manage staff

  35. Synergy Model of Care • Patient characteristics and nurse competencies match • Meets standards for Magnet certification

  36. Pt ch:ch include: • Resiliency, vulnerability, stability, complexity, resource availability • participation in care, participation in decision making, predictability

  37. The chch of pt should match with nurse competencies • Clinical judgment • Advocacy and moral agency • Caring practice, collaboration, systems thinking, response to diversity, facilitation of learning, clinical inquiry

  38. Clinical Microsystems • Small unit of care that maintains itself • Dynamic, interactive, self-aware, and interdependent • Proven to improve teamwork, communication, and continuity of care

  39. Evolution of Models for Delivering Care • No system perfect or permanent • Change caused by: • Reimbursement changes • Demands for quality • Technologicial changes

  40. Using the System Effectively • Communication skills • Ability to delegate • Problem-solving skills

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