Ethics
Collaboration and Delegation
Communication and Documentation
Safety
Healthcare Law
100

Duty to tell the truth

Veracity

100

Rounding on patients by the entire healthcare team is an example of this type of collaboration

Interprofessional Collaboration

100

Introducing yourself to the client is an example of this phase of the nursing-client relationship

Orientation

100

This idea seeks to find a balance between the need to learn from mistakes and the need for disciplinary action

Just Culture

100

Role of the nurse with respect to the signing of informed consent paperwork

Nurses can only WITNESS signatures. The provider must "get" the informed consent (ask for it, educate on risks/benefits/alternatives/consequences of refusal)

200

Theory thats aims to do the greatest good for the greatest number

Utilitarianism

200

Member of the healthcare team who is ultimately responsible for patient care

Registered Nurse

200

These individuals are NOT allowed to read patient records

Anyone who is not directly involved in the care of the patient

200

The pharmacy technician places Oxycodone-Acetaminophen (Percocet) in the Acetaminophen (Tylenol) slot in the Pyxis. 

What type of error is this?

Latent or Blunt

200

This defines the authority of the state board of nursing, its composition, and powers

Nurse Practice Act

300

Placing an IV is an example of this type of ethical issue

Ethical Dilemma

300

Refers to the process in which responsibility and authority are transferred to another individual

Delegation

300

Patient: "Abortions are sinful."

Nurse: "I agree."

This is an example of what non-therapeutic communication technique?

Agreement

300

The nurse plans to administer a PO medication on a client that they do not know is at risk for choking. 

This type of error would occur if this medication was administered. 

Error of Commission

300

A Nurse Practice Act is an example of this type of law

Statutory Law

400

Difference between personal and professional ethics

Personal ethics refers to ethics a person identifies with respect to people and situations that they deal with in everyday life. 

Professional ethics refers to ethics that have been put in place by an organization that a person must adhere to in order to adequately participate justly within that organization. 

400

4 things that the RN CANNOT delegate

Assessments

Planning and evaluation of nursing care

Development of a plan of care

Health Teaching/Counseling (unless reinforcement or previously-taught material)

400

Method of charting that focuses on documenting abnormal findings

Charting by exception

400

This model shows how errors can occur when situational factors align, despite multiple layers of safeguards for the prevention of errors

Reason's Swiss Cheese Model of Accident Causation

400

4 elements that must be satisfied to meet criteria for an unintentional tort (negligence or malpractice)

Duty

Breach of Duty

Causation

Harm

500

5 Ethical Issues in Nursing

Protecting Clients' Rights and Dignity

Not respecting informed consent treatment

Providing care with risk to the nurse

Using or not using restraints

Understaffing

Prolonging living and dying process

Policies that threaten quality of life

Working with unethical or impaired colleagues

500
5 Rights of Delegation

Right task

Right circumstance

Right person

Right direction

Right supervision

500

5 Nonverbal Skills to Facilitate Active Listening (Hint: SOLER)

Sit facing client

Open position

Lean toward the client

Eye contact

Relax

500
6 QSEN Competencies

Quality Improvement

Safety

Evidence-Based Practice

Informatics

Patient-centered Care

Teamwork and Collaboration

500

3 Responsibilities of a state board of nursing

Establishing requirements for obtaining a nursing license

Issuing nursing licenses

Determining scope of practice

Setting minimum education requirements

Managing disciplinary procedures

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