Mark Klimek Audio Lectures-Lectures 12 Prioritization, Delegation, and Staff Management
- It takes 3 things to pass the NCLEX exam - Knowledge - Confidence - Exam Proficiency - You can’t apply what you don't know, but you have to be able to apply what you do know. - Go with majority: if something is 75% fatal, consider it fatal. - If you try to learn everything you will master nothing. Lecture 12 Prioritization, Delegation, and Staff Management Prioritizing patients - With these questions you are trying to identify either: - The highest priority clients - The lowest priority clients - The answers to prioritization questions always have four parts 1. An Age 2. A Gender 3. A Diagnosis 4. A Modifying Phrase - Example: A 10-year-old male with hypospadias vomiting bile-stained emesis. 1. 10 year old 2. Male 3. Hypospadias 4. Vomiting bile-stained emesis - The age of the client and their gender are irrelevant information. - The diagnosis and the modifying phrase is important information. - The modifying phrase is more important than the diagnosis. - Example: - A client with angina pectoris - A patient with a myocardial infarction (MI) - With just the diagnosis the MI patient is a higher priority. - A client with angina pectoris with unstable blood pressure - A patient with a MI having stable vitals - With the modifying phrase the angina patient is a higher priority - 4 Rules for prioritizing patients 1. Acute is a higher priority than a chronic - COPD - CHF - Appendicitis (highest priority, acute) 2. Fresh post-op (within first 12 hours) is a higher priority than medical or other surgical. - COPD - CHF - Appendicitis - 2 hours post op colectomy (Highest priority, 2-hours post-op) - 2-day post op coronary bypass patient 3. Unstable patients are a higher priority than stable patients. - Words in an answer that makes a patient unstable or stable Stable Unstable - Use of the word stable - Use of the word unstable - Chronic illness - Acute illness - Post-op grater than 12 hours - Post-op less than 12 hours - Local or regional anesthesia - Lab abnormalities of an A or B level - The phrase: “ready for discharge” or “admitted 24 hours ago” - Unchanged Assessments - Experiencing the typical, expected signs and symptoms of their illness with which they were diagnosed - Applying
Written for
- Institution
- Advance nursing
- Course
- Advance nursing
Document information
- Uploaded on
- November 1, 2021
- Number of pages
- 6
- Written in
- 2021/2022
- Type
- Exam (elaborations)
- Contains
- Questions & answers
Subjects
- delegation
- and staff management
-
lectures 12 prioritization
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