and Answers
Jurisprudence - ✔✔ - the science or philosophy of law
Sources of Law - ✔✔ - -Constitutional Law: Federal, State
-Statutory Law: Federal, State
-Common Law
-Administrative Law
Criminal Law - ✔✔ - Federal or state government attempting to deprive an individual of
life or liberty for something the law considers an offence against society in general
Civil Law - ✔✔ - Seeks to resolve disputes between private parties, which often result in
payment of money
Different Burden of Proof - ✔✔ - Beyond a reasonable doubt; preponderance of the
evidence
Types of Torts - ✔✔ - -Negligence
-Intentional: Assault Battery False Imprisonment
-Quasi-Intentional: Defamation, Liable, Slander
Malpractice - ✔✔ - Negligence committed by a person in his or her professional
capacity is malpractice. Also known as professional negligence.
Medical and nursing malpractice occur when a doctor or nurse fails to do that which a
reasonable, prudent doctor or nurse would do under the same or similar circumstances,
or does that which a reasonable or prudent doctor or nurse would not do under the
same or similar circumstances.
Elements of a Nursing Malpractice Lawsuit - ✔✔ - Duty - the existence of a duty, owed
by the nurse to a patient, to conform to a recognized standard of care
Breach - a failure to conform to the required standard of care
Harm - an actual injury
Cause - there must be proof that the injury was caused by the nurse's act or omission
,Intentional Tort: Assault - ✔✔ - Example of this tort: A nurse threatens to place an NG
tube in a client who is refusing to eat
Intentionally placing another in apprehension or fear that they will suffer harmful or
offensive contact.
Intentional Tort: Battery - ✔✔ - Intentional contact that is harmful or offensive, or
creating the apprehension that such contact is imminent.
-false imprisonment accompanied by forceful restraint or threat of restraint is BATTERY.
IE: Restraining a person to give an injection against their consent or order
Intentional Tort: False Imprisonment - ✔✔ - "unjustifiable detention of a person without
legal warrant to confine the person" (client has the right to leave AMA)
-false imprisonment accompanied by forceful restraint or threat of restraint is BATTERY.
Quasi-Intentional Tort: Defamation - ✔✔ - A communication that tends to hold the
plaintiff up to hatred, contempt or ridicule, or to cause him to be shunned or avoided.
Tarnishing the reputation of someone.
Quasi-Intentional Tort: Defamation Types - ✔✔ - Types:
Libel - printed or broadcast
Slander - spoken
Nurse Practice Act (NPA) - ✔✔ - defines the scope and limitations of professional
nursing practice; vary from state to state.
The practice of nursing is a right granted by a state to protect those who need nursing
care. The guidelines of the NPA and its rules provide safe parameters within which to
work, as well as protect patients from unprofessional and unsafe nursing practice. The
act is a dynamic document that evolves and is updated or amended as changes in
scope of practice occur.All states and territories have enacted a NPAGenerally, NPAs
include:Authority, power and composition of a board of nursingEducation program
standardsStandards and scope of nursing practiceTypes of titles and
licensesRequirements for licensureGrounds for disciplinary action, other violations and
possible remedies
Rules & Regulations - ✔✔ - The NPA itself is insufficient to provide the necessary
guidance for the nursing profession, therefore, each NPA establishes a board of nursing
, (BON) that has the authority to develop administrative rules or regulations to clarify or
make the law more specific. Rules and regulations must be consistent with the NPA and
cannot go beyond it. These rules and regulations undergo a process of public review
before enactment. Once enacted, rules and regulations have the full force and effect of
law.
IT IS A NURSE'S RESPONSIBILITY TO KNOW NPA/RULES AND REGULATIONS -
✔✔ - As a nurse in Texas, you have a responsibility to know and follow the Nursing
Practice Act and all applicable BON Rules and Regulations relating to your nursing
practice. All current BON Rules and Regulations and the Nursing Practice Act can be
downloaded from the BON's web site at www.bon.texas.gov
Standards of Nursing Practice - ✔✔ - Standards Applicable to All Nurses. All vocational
nurses, registered nurses and registered nurses with advanced practice authorization
shall:
(A) Know and conform to the Texas Nursing Practice Act and the board's rules and
regulations as well as all federal, state, or local laws, rules or regulations affecting the
nurse's current area of nursing practice.
The standards of practice establish a minimum acceptable level of nursing practice in
any setting for each level of nursing license or advanced practice authorization. Failure
to meet these standards may result in action against the nurse's license even if no
actual patient injury resulted.
Laws & Regulations Regarding Nursing - ✔✔ - - Texas Nurse Practice Act (NPA)
- Texas Board of Nursing (BON) Rules & Regulations
- BON Position Statements
Don't have the force of law, but the Board strongly encourages nurses to choose those
position statements applicable to their practice setting and incorporate them into their
daily practice to assure patient safety
The Texas Board of Nursing (BON) - ✔✔ - Established by passage of the NPA
BON empowered by NPA with the responsibility and legal authority for ensuring
competent practitioners of nursing.
Grants authority to the BON to make the rules and regulations to carry out the act.
The Board: - ✔✔ - Protects the public from unsafe nursing practice, provides approval
for more than 200 nursing education programs, issues licenses to more than 27,000
nurses per year by examination to new graduates and by endorsement to licensees