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King Saud University College of Nursing Adult Nursing (NUR 316)

King Saud University College of Nursing Adult Nursing (NUR 316). Caring for Patients Having Surgery. Learning Outcomes. Describe how surgical procedures are classified.

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King Saud University College of Nursing Adult Nursing (NUR 316)

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  1. King Saud UniversityCollege of NursingAdult Nursing (NUR 316) Caring for Patients Having Surgery

  2. Learning Outcomes • Describe how surgical procedures are classified. • Discuss roles and responsibilities of nurses and interdisciplinary team members in ensuring patient safety during the perioperative experience.

  3. Learning Outcomes • Identify and use specific communication techniques and protocols to promote safety in the perioperative setting. • Assess stated needs, values, and expectations of the preoperative patient; planning and implementing patient-centered care; and teaching in collaboration with the interdisciplinary team.

  4. Learning Outcomes • Plan for and provide appropriate evidence-based nursing care for the patient in the preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative phases of surgery. • Adapt perioperative care for the older adult as appropriate.

  5. Learning Outcomes • Apply principles of pain management for postoperative pain control. • Compare and contrast patient needs and nursing responsibilities related to outpatient and inpatient surgery.

  6. Introduction • Perioperative nursing care • Provided immediately before, during, and after surgery • Types of surgeries • Inpatient surgery • Admitted to hospital before and after surgery

  7. Introduction • Types of surgeries • Ambulatory (outpatient) surgery • Performed outside of the hospital • Under local or general anesthesia • Limited time for opportunity for assessment of patient needs, teaching for home care

  8. Introduction • Types of surgeries • Similarities • Preoperative, intraoperative phase, and postoperative phase • Focus of collaborative and nursing care • Differences • Time for patient teaching • Emotional support

  9. TABLE 10-1 Classification of Surgical Procedures

  10. Informed Consent • Legal document required for procedures or therapeutic measures • Protects the patient, nurse, physician, health care facility • Most states require patient to be 18 years of age or older to sign.

  11. Informed Consent • Married minors and emancipated minors may sign consent. • Spouses, children, significant other cannot sign instead of a capable adult

  12. Safety in Perioperative Care • Guidelines • TJC, WHO, and AORN publish guidelines on preventing errors and unintentional injury. • Effective communication • With patient and all members of team • Handoff • Essential, up-to-date, specific information • Opportunity to ask, respond to questions

  13. Phases of the Surgical Experience

  14. Preoperative Phase • Obtain informed consent. • Identify patient risk factors, needs before and during surgery. • Physical and psychologic preparation of the patient • Educate the patient and family. • Teach postoperative measures to promote recovery, prevent complications.

  15. Preoperative Phase • Three major organ systems involved in stress response • Nervous system • Endocrine system • Immune system • Level of anxiety of patient and family is unique and dependent upon significance of underlying diagnosis.

  16. Surgical Risk Assessment • Patient's overall health status • Specific factors • Used in planning nursing care during all phases

  17. TABLE 10-2 Nursing Implications for Surgical Risk Factors continued on next slide

  18. TABLE 10-2 (continued) Nursing Implications for Surgical Risk Factors continued on next slide

  19. TABLE 10-2 (continued) Nursing Implications for Surgical Risk Factors continued on next slide

  20. TABLE 10-2 (continued) Nursing Implications for Surgical Risk Factors

  21. Collaborative Care • Universal Protocol established by TJC • Diagnostic tests • Complete blood count (CBC) • Serum electrolytes • Coagulation studies • Urinalysis • Chest x-ray • Electrocardiogram (ECG)

  22. TABLE 10-3 Laboratory Tests for Perioperative Assessment continued on next slide

  23. TABLE 10-3 (continued) Laboratory Tests for Perioperative Assessment continued on next slide

  24. Collaborative Care • Medications • Used for: • Sedation • Reducing anxiety • Enhancing anesthesia • Reducing the risk of complications • Address any final patient questions prior to administering

  25. TABLE 10-4 Giving Medications Safely: Preoperative Medications continued on next slide

  26. TABLE 10-4 (continued) Giving Medications Safely: Preoperative Medications

  27. Collaborative Care • Physical preparation • Marking the operative site • Skin preparation • Insertion of indwelling urinary catheter • Bowel preparation • Withholding of food and fluids

  28. BOX 10-3 Nursing Care Checklist: Day of Surgery continued on next slide

  29. BOX 10-3 (continued) Nursing Care Checklist: Day of Surgery

  30. Nursing Care • Prioritizing nursing care • Accurately identify patient, procedure • Prepare patient before surgery • Health promotion • Preoperative teaching • What to expect before, during, after procedure • Anticipated sensations • Expected timetable for surgery, recovery

  31. Nursing Care • Health promotion • Preoperative teaching • Preparations for day of surgery • Instructions for medications • Time to arrive at the hospital • Location of waiting area • Anticipated postoperative routine and devices or equipment • Timetable for surgery and recovery room

  32. Nursing Care • Assessing • Subjective and objective data • Identifying potential complications • Presence of risk factors • Malignant hyperthermia • Note medications

  33. Nursing Care • Diagnosing, planning, and implementing • Readiness for enhanced knowledge • Anxiety • Disturbed sleep pattern • Evaluating • Patient's success in meeting expected outcomes

  34. Nursing Care • Managing nursing care • May assign hygiene measures, ADLs to assistive personnel • Documenting • Understanding of, response to planned procedure • Continuity of care • Systemized communication format SBAR

  35. Intraoperative Phase • Begins when patient admitted to operating room and ends when patient admitted to PACU • Universal Protocol on entry to surgical suite while patient still awake • "Time out" to verify correct patient, procedure, and site

  36. Collaborative Care • The surgical team • Surgeon • Surgical assistant • Anesthesiologist or certified registered nurse anesthetist • Circulating nurse • Scrub nurse • All are responsible for managing noise and other distractions.

  37. Collaborative Care • Medications • General anesthesia • Depresses central nervous system • Loss of consciousness, amnesia • Phases • Induction • Maintenance • Emergence

  38. Collaborative Care • Medications • Moderate sedation/analgesia • Patient independently maintains airway, respirations and responds to verbal commands • Regional anesthesia • Medication blocks transmission of nerve impulses in particular area. • Peripheral nerve blocks

  39. Collaborative Care • Medications • Regional anesthesia • Epidural and caudal anesthesia • Spinal anesthesia • Local anesthesia • Specific area of the body • Topical or injected

  40. Collaborative Care • Infection control • Surgical asepsis • Surgical attire • Strict dress codes • Unrestricted, semirestricted, and restricted zones

  41. Collaborative Care • Infection control • Surgical hand hygiene • Required for all personnel • Site preparation • Preparation of patient's skin • Clippers preferred for hair removal • Positioning • Crucial to prevent patient injury • Patient cannot respond to discomfort.

  42. TABLE 10-5 Common Surgical Positions continued on next slide

  43. TABLE 10-5 (continued) Common Surgical Positions continued on next slide

  44. TABLE 10-5 (continued) Common Surgical Positions

  45. Nursing Care • Prioritizing nursing care • Maintain patient's physiologic, psychologic safety • Health promotion • Protect patient's rights, safety • Verify identity, procedure, site, documents, allergies, preferences • Assessing • Collaborate with anesthesiologist

  46. Nursing Care • Diagnosing, planning, and implementing • Risk for perioperative-positioning injury • Risk for infection • Risk for imbalanced body temperature • Risk for aspiration • Evaluating • Patient free from intraoperative injury

  47. Nursing Care • Evaluating • Patient's body temperature remains within normal limits • No evidence of breaks in aseptic technique observed • Document • Assessment data, care provided, sponge and instrument counts • Adverse events, unexpected incidents

  48. Nursing Care • Continuity of care • SBAR system to report pertinent information to nursing staff in recovery or postoperative unit

  49. BOX 10-5 Focus on Older Adults: The Older Adult Undergoing Surgery

  50. Postoperative Phase • Begins in PACU • Ends when wound healing and functional recovery are complete

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