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CONTEMPORARY IMAGE OF PROFESSIONAL NURSING

CONTEMPORARY IMAGE OF PROFESSIONAL NURSING. Core statement according to Royal College of Nursing 2003.

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CONTEMPORARY IMAGE OF PROFESSIONAL NURSING

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  1. CONTEMPORARY IMAGE OF PROFESSIONAL NURSING

  2. Core statement according toRoyal College of Nursing 2003 “Nursing is the use of clinical judgment in the provision of care to enable people to improve, maintain, or recover health, to cope with health problems, and to achieve the best possible quality of life, whatever their disease or disability, until death.”

  3. CollegialityStandard of ANA – Scope and Standards of Practice, 2004 • Be civil • Be ethical • Be honest • Be the best • Be consistent • Be a communicator • Be accountable • Be collaborative • Be forgiving • Be current • Be involved • Be a model

  4. Nursing Shortage – Current Scenario • Average age of nursing graduate is 33 • Average age of RN is 44 • Average age of faculty is 50 • By 2015, 50% of RNs expected to retire • From 2006, job opportunities increased by 21%

  5. TRENDS IN NURSING • The Grim Reality • Trend#1: Nursing Shortage • Trend #2: Disparities in Healthcare • Trend #3:Skyrocketing Healthcare Cost • Trend#4: Nursing Values Challenged by Managed Care • The Brighter Side • Trend#5: Expansion of employment opportunities for Nurses • Trend #6: Nurses’ role have evolved • Trend#7: Nursing and Biomedical Research

  6. Cont… • Trend #8: Use of atomic energy for medical diagnosis and treatment • Trend#9: Use of more sophisticated equipment for diagnosis and therapy • Trend #10: Technology Made Nurses’ Life Easier • Trend#11: Advent of Space Medicine • Trend#12: Nurses involvement/ impact on politics and health policy • Trend #13: Consumerism in Healthcare • Trend#14: Emergence of Complimentary and Alternative Medicine • Trend#15: Web-based Nursing Degrees

  7. Four document nurses should possess and READ • State Nurse Practice Act • Nursing’s Social Policy Statement (ANA) • The Code of Ethics for Nurses (ANA) • Scope and Standards of Clinical Practice (area specific or ANA)

  8. Quality of Nursing Leadership • Leaders are perceived as knowledgeable, strong, risk-takers who follow a meaningful philosophy that is made explicit in the day-to-day operations of the department & convey a strong sense of advocacy providing staff with an overall positive sense of support • The nursing director and managers are pivotal to the success of the organization • The nursing director is critical to the development of a positive nursing situation

  9. Organizational Structure • The director of nursing is at the executive level of the organization, reporting directly to the chief executive officer • Decentralized departmental structures allow for a sense of control over the immediate work environment and strong nursing involvement in the committee structure across departments • With regard to staffing, quality of the staff is as important as the quantity

  10. Management Style • Participative management style characterized by involvement of staff at all levels • Participation is sought, encouraged and valued; nursing administration is both visible and accessible • Communication is a two way process with active listening, direct staff input and ongoing information about what is happening within nursing and the broader organization

  11. Professional Models of CareQuality of Care • The model of care gives the nurse the responsibility and related authority for patient care • Nurses are accountable for their own practice and are coordinators of care • The nurses believe themselves to be providing high quality of nursing care to their patients • Directors of nursing and nursing management are viewed as responsible for developing the environment where such care can flourish

  12. Nurses as Teachers • Nurses place a high value on education and teaching by nurses, not only their own personal and professional growth, but they value their roles as teachers • Nurses derive much satisfaction from teaching and it is viewed as an energizing activity • Teaching is seen as both an expectation in the profession and as an opportunity to practice as a professional

  13. Orientation, inservice, continuing education, formal education and career development • Magnet facilities have a high emphasis on personnel growth and development; staff development starts w/orientation & is a strong influence on retention, w/ the gradual introduction of work viewed as important • Access to inservice & continuing education related to the area of practice involved is essential; multiple opportunities exist for clinical advancement that is advancement that is competency based w/specific requirements

  14. Believe in Nursing • Valuing Nursing • Only RNs should attend nursing staff meetings • Identify yourself • Protect the name of “Nurse” • Insist on being addressed as a professional

  15. Creating a New Image • Nurses value nursing and image it daily • Nurses take themselves seriously and dress the part • Nurses recognize the value of caring, health promotion, health teaching, and illness care • Nurses believe in themselves and their colleagues

  16. THANK YOU

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