Safety Measures
Clinical Judgement
Professional Identity
Communication
Ethics
100

This is the single most important practice to prevent the spread of Infection.

What is hand hygiene?

100

This first step involves identifying relevant information from the patient's chart, labs, or physical assessment.

What is Recognizing Cues?

100

This foundational document, published by the ANA, outlines the non-negotiable ethical obligations of every nurse.

What is the Code of Ethics for Nurses?

100

This technique involves repeating the patient's main idea back to them to let them know you’re listening.

What is Restating (or Paraphrasing)?

100

This is the obligation to "do no harm," whether intentional or unintentional.

What is Non-maleficence?

200

PPE should be removed in this specific order to prevent self-contamination.

What is gloves, gown, goggles, mask?

200

This is the first action a nurse should take when they walk into a room and find a patient in distress.

What is Assess? (Always assess before you act!)

200

This professional attribute involves taking ownership of one’s own actions and the outcomes of patient care.

What is Accountability?

200

This four-letter acronym is the gold standard for standardized reporting between healthcare providers.

What is SBAR?

200

This is the legal and ethical requirement to keep a patient's health information private.

What is Confidentiality (or HIPAA compliance)?

300

This structured communication tool is used to standardize communication between healthcare team members.

What is SBAR (Situation-Background-Assessment-Recommendation)?

300

This cognitive bias occurs when a nurse fixates on the first piece of information found and fails to update their plan as new cues emerge.

What is Anchoring?

300

This term means "do no harm" and is a core requirement of professional nursing practice.

What is Non-maleficence?

300

A nurse uses this technique when they point out a discrepancy between what a patient says and how they are acting.

What is Confrontation?

300

This is the process of providing a patient with all necessary information so they can make a reasoned decision about a procedure.

What is Informed Consent?

400

These are the essential, standard items (e.g., patient, medication, dose, route, time) that must be checked before administration.

What are the Rights of Medication Administration?

400

This term refers to "doing good" or acting in the best interest of the patient during the intervention phase.

What is Beneficence?

400

This core value involves treating all patients with fairness and providing equal access to care.

What is Justice?

400

This non-therapeutic technique involves telling a patient "everything will be fine" when it might not be.

What is False Reassurance?

400

These are the state-level laws that define the "Scope of Practice" for nurses to ensure public safety.

What are Nurse Practice Acts?

500

This concept promotes a non-punitive environment for reporting errors to foster learning.

What is a "Just Culture"?

500

This is the "Right" of delegation that asks if the staff member has the proper training to perform the task safely.

What is the Right Person?

500

This practice involves looking back on clinical experiences to identify what went well and what could be improved.

What is Reflective Practice?

500

This is the term for a patient's inability to understand or act on health information, often due to a communication gap.

What is Low Health Literacy?

500

This "standard" is used in court to determine if a nurse acted as any other prudent nurse would in the same situation.

What is the Standard of Care? [1]