Client Safety
Client Safety
Grief, Loss, and Palliative Care
Grief, loss, palliative care... pain
Pain Management
100

Priority nursing actions to prevent falls:

Assess fall risk, bed in lowest position, nonskid footwear, call light within reach, hourly rounding, assist with ambulation.

100

Fire safety procedures (RACE & PASS):

  • RACE: Rescue, Alarm, Contain, Extinguish/Evacuate

  • PASS: Pull, Aim, Squeeze, Sweep

100

Stages of grief (Kubler-Ross):

Denial → Anger → Bargaining → Depression → Acceptance (not linear).

100

Priority goal of palliative care:

Improve quality of life through symptom management.

100

Nonpharmacologic pain interventions:

Heat/cold, repositioning, relaxation, imagery, massage.

200

Risk factors that increase injury:

Impaired mobility, sensory deficits, cognitive impairment, medications (sedatives, antihypertensives), and unfamiliar environment.

200

Medication safety practices:

Follow 6 rights, check allergies, use two identifiers, double-check high-alert meds, do not leave meds unattended.

200

Difference between grief and mourning:

Grief = internal response; Mourning = outward expression of loss.

200

Signs of complicated grief:

Prolonged depression, inability to function, denial of death long-term.

200

Opioid nursing considerations:

Monitor respiratory rate, sedation, constipation, nausea.

Signs of opioid overdose:
Respiratory depression, decreased LOC, pinpoint pupils.

300

Use of restraints – legal and safety principles:

  • Used only as last resort

  • Requires provider prescription (except emergencies)

  • Time-limited order

  • Least restrictive method

  • Frequent monitoring (skin, circulation, ROM)

300

Injury risks by age:

  • Infants: suffocation

  • Toddlers: poisoning

  • School-age: accidents

  • Adolescents: risk-taking behaviors

  • Older adults: falls

300

What is anticipatory grief?

Grief experienced before an actual loss occurs.

300

Nursing care at end of life:

Pain control, comfort measures, emotional support, respect cultural/spiritual wishes.

300

When should pain medication be given?

Before pain becomes severe; around-the-clock for chronic pain.

400

Nursing responsibilities for restraint use:

Assess need first, obtain order, explain to patient/family, pad bony prominences, remove regularly, document behavior and alternatives tried.

400

Home safety teaching:

Remove throw rugs, install grab bars, adequate lighting, store chemicals safely.

400

Nursing interventions for a grieving client:

Active listening, presence, allow expression of feelings, avoid clichés.

400

Difference between acute and chronic pain:

Acute: sudden, short-term
Chronic: lasts >3–6 months, ongoing.

400

Adjuvant pain medications:

Antidepressants, anticonvulsants (for neuropathic pain).

500

Seizure safety precautions:

Pad side rails, suction and oxygen available, bed in low position, do not restrain or place objects in mouth during seizure.

500

Aspiration prevention:

Elevate HOB, assess swallowing, thickened liquids if ordered, suction PRN.

500

Difference between palliative care and hospice:

  • Palliative: comfort at any stage of illness

  • Hospice: end-of-life care, typically <6 months

500
  • Best way to assess pain:

Patient self-report (pain scale).

500

Patient teaching about pain management:

Pain control improves healing; addiction is rare when opioids are used correctly for pain.

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