nurse as leader exam 2
capacity staatistic
# of beds or blocks of time available for providing services
percentage of occupancy
# of occupied beds for reporting period
volume statistic
# of units of service reporting period
delegation to LPN
- Auscultate/Listen - Check(s) - Reinforce/remind - Administer (PO,SubQ,IM -- NO high alert meds, plasma, blood products - Observe - Collect (data, specimens) - Monitor - Set up (basic equipment) - Review/Teach-- Usually standard practices (hand washing/hygiene) or med administration (ie. eye drops) -- RN mostly teaches/educated and LPNs Reinforce - Wound care/Suction/Urinary Cath/Blood glucose readings * get CHRONIC, STABLE pts with predictable outcomes (a popular one is COPD!) * pts who are 24hr post-op * NO: d/c planning, admission assessments (including admission VS) and IVs. * YES: can give narcs, have patients 72hr after MI, have patients with CVA, SCI, on vents or with low coma scale AFTER ONE WEEK. * can do sterile procedures * give meds (but nothing IV) * nursing process under the direction of the RN * can work with contagious patients (think of patient assignments! these can all be delegated to the LPN) Avoid These Assignments for New/Float/LPN/Traveling -New onset/sudden/acute -New admission -Transfer -Newly diagnosed -Discharge -Require education/teaching (beyond basic skills -- tend to be complex and specific to patients on that particular unit) - Unstable (ie. High risk of sudden respiratory failure, or requires frequent assessments and changes in therapy(like electrolyte imbalances)
why decisions go wrong
1. No framework used 2. Flawed data 3. Bias - filtering out data you don't want to hear, assumptions 4. Want to avoid conflict or change 5. Ignorance 6. Using what's available ("availability heuristics") "rule of thumb", "good enough" 7. Overconfidence in decision-making, problem-solving powers - jump to conclusions 8. Haste - shut off data collection before you have all the needed information
staffing key points
1. Patient need 2. RN nurse experience 3. Practice environment: ranging from supervisory support to continuing education 4. Staffing guidelines
long term care
>30 days
consolidated systems
A group of healthcare organizations that are united based on common characteristics of ownership, regional location, or mutual performance objectives for the purpose of optimizing utilization of their resources in achieving their missions.
Roles of nurse manager
Accountable for quality/safety indicator performance in responsibility areas Communicates performance priorities and targets to staff Meets regularly with staff to monitor progress/help with improvement work Uses data to measure effectiveness of improvement Works with staff to develop and implement action plans for improvement of measures that do not meet target Provides time for unit staff to participate in quality improvement measures Observes staff directly and coaches as needed Consults quality management team/risk management team as appropriate Writes and submits to senior leaders periodic action plan including performance measures and plans for improvement Shares information and benchmarks with other units and departments to improve organization's performance
accreditation organization
Accreditation: depends on type of organization/services provided a. Acute care: Joint Commission, American Osteopathic Association, DNV GL - have "deeming authority" through CMS
overt behaviors
Aggressive behaviors such as shouting or threatening harm Being accused of making errors made by someone else Nonverbal info Eye rolling Physical harm
at-will employment
An employer's common law right to terminate employment
subtle behaviors
Being excluded from activities Being gossiped about Having opinions ignored Assigned unreasonable unpleasant or impossible tasks, targets, or deadlines Being humiliated at work Having key areas of responsibility removed or replaced with trivial or unpleasant tasks Having all decisions challenged Being manipulated into taking on roles or tasks that were not in the nurse's best interest
covert behaviors
Being sabotaged Having info or resources withheld that affects performance Moving the goal post in a person's work without informing them Giving confusing or inaccurate information Being told tasks were urgent when they were not Not responding when a response is called for
build on the change
Change is ongoing, create a culture where continuous improvement is a norm Kotter's model
create vision for change
Change may involve lots of small alterations, but these must always be connected to a larger, inspiring vision kotter's model
informed decision making
Consumers have access to relevant and accurate information to make rational decisions
form powerful coalition
Develop a core group of change advocates who will help build momentum and support individuals through the change experience Kotter's model
Delegation to UAP
Do Not Delegate: Assessment Teaching Medication Evaluation Unstable Patients
effective staffing
Evaluating what you do - how effective is it? a. NDNQI - nurse quality indicators b. readmissions, never events c. patient satisfaction, staff satisfaction 2. Organizational factors that affect effective staffing
roles of follower/staff (direct care nurse)
Follows policies, procedures, protocols to ensure quality, safe patient care Remains current in the literature on quality and safety specific to nursing Promotes evidence-based practice standards Communicates with and educates peers immediately if they are observed not following quality and safety standards Reports quality and safety issues to supervisor/manager Invests in the process by continually asking self "What makes this indicator important to measure?" "What has been done to improve it?" "What can I do to improve it?" Participates actively in the quality improvement activities Provides insight as a direct care provider Generates ideas for unit quality improvement efforts Serves as a role model for other direct care providers
Bureaucracy characteristics
Formality Low autonomy Hierarchy of authority Rule dominated environment Division of labor Specialization Centralized decision making High control
create urgency
Generate open dialogue about external and internal realities affecting the need to change kotter's model
anticipated scheduling variables
Hours of operation Shift rotations Weekend rotations Approved benefit time (vacations and holidays) Approved leaves of absence/short-term disability Approved seminar, orientation, and continuing education time Scheduled meetings for the schedule period Current filled positions and current staffing vacancies Number of part-time employments
collective action
How groups form and organize to pursue their goals or objectives, including how to get individuals and groups to participate and to cooperate. The term has many applications in the various social sciences such as political science, sociology, and economics.
QI steps
Identify needs most important to the consumer of healthcare services Assemble team to review consumer needs and services Collect data to measure status of these services Establish measurable outcomes and quality indicators Select and implement a plan to meet the outcomes Collect data to evaluate the implementation of the plan and the achievement of outcome
negative impacts of workplace violence on workplace
Immediate and often long term disruption to interpersonal relationships, the organization of work and the overall working environment Deterioration in quality of service provided Direct costs of legal liabilities Indirect cost of reduced efficiency and productivity Difficulty in recruiting or retaining qualified personnel Loss in company image and reduction in number of clients Unemployment and retraining costs for victims who lose or leave jobs because of violence Disability costs if the working capacities of the victims are impaired by psychological or physical violence at work The need for expensive and security measures
remove obstacles
Keep alert for barriers in structure and processes that limit the ability to change; remove them when you find them Kotter's model
roles of senior leader
Leads culture transformation Sets priorities for house-wide activities, staffing effectiveness, and patient health outcomes Builds infrastructure, provides resources, removes barriers to improve Defines procedures for immediate response to errors involving care, treatment, or services and contains risk Assesses management and staff knowledge of quality management process regularly, and provides education as needed Implements/monitors systems for internal/external reporting of information Defines and provides support system for staff who have been involved in a sentinel event Empowers nursing leaders and direct care providers to implement and evaluate improvement efforts Removes barriers and ensures resources are adequate Rewards high-performing teams
communicate the change vision
People tend to pay attention to what is reinforced, so communicating regularly and consistently is paramount to sustaining the effort. kotter's model
QA vs QI
QA: discovery and correction of errors QI: prevention of errors
Anchor the changes in culture
Recognize when the change is working, report on the difference it is making, and honor the people who helped make it happen Kotter's model
create short-term wins
Success motivates future successes, so create short-term targets and celebrate accomplishing them Kotter's model
5 rights of delegation
Task: is it appropriate? Circumstance: are the environment and equipment available? Person: is person able and willing to? direction/communication: is the task clear and does delegatee understand? Supervision: will delegatee provide feedback r/t task and will delegator monitor appropriately
organizational theory
The study of how organizations function and how they affect and are affected by the environment in which they operate
negative impacts of workplace violence on individual
The suffering and humiliation resulting from violence, which usually lead to lack of motivation, loss of confidence, and reduced self-esteems If situation persists, consequences such as physical illness, psychological disorders, or tobacco, alcohol and drug abuse often observed Potential of workplace violence leading to nurses leaving the workforce
unions in nursing
a form of a trade or labor union which is an organization that advocates for the interest of the nurses that comprise the group. advocates for nurses
shared governance
a method that aims to distribute decision making among a group of people no leader
systems theory
a system comprises 4 elements: structure, technology, people, and environment Viewed as inputs, throughputs, and outputs Closed system: self-contained Open system: interacting with internal and external forces
regulatory organizations
a. Federal: CMS, Dept Health & Human Services b. State: licensing, regulation, safety c. Local: specific business licenses, safety regulations d. Voluntary/Industry: American Hospital Association
internal factors affecting decision making
a. Internal: things personal to the decision maker such as emotions, values, biases, experience, knowledge, attitudes towards risk (taking/avoiding) b. external: things outside the individual - the circumstances, environment, time available, resources -effective nurse leaders "create a work environment that welcomes considered risk taking and encourages employees to share and discuss new and innovative ideas -risk taking affected by self-esteem, self-confidence, peers, confidence in making decisions c. Research Perspective, p. 261: 5 principle factors that influence decision making
clinical judgement model
a. noticing: picking up on patterns in patient behavior, outcomes, etc. b. interpreting: recognizing from the "noticing" that you need to make a decision/respond c. responding: deciding the best option d. reflecting: evaluating what happens
negative impacts of workplace violence on community
access to quality health services are threatened
leaders in change
acknowledge thoughts and feelings align with purpose and values create agency with genuine choices adjust your attitude
critical thinking
active skillful process, uses concepts, higher thought process, not regurgitating facts, used in decision making and problem solving
shared (governance) decision making
all working together to make a decision
bureaucracy
an administrative concept imbedded in how organizations are structured
assignment vs delegation
assignment: accepting the care within the scope of practice of the nurse delegation: a specific task is requested and to be completed and overseen by the licensed person
example of typical unit activity productivity report
assume that a 20-bed med-surg unit (capacity statistic) accrued 566 patient days in June (volume statistic). 98 of these patients were discharged during the month. Average Daily Census on this Unit: 18.9 (566 patient days / 30 days) Percentage of Occupancy for June: 95% (19 patients / 20 beds) Average Length of Stay for June: 5.8 (566 patient days / 98 patient discharges)
average length of stay
average # of days that a patient remained in an occupied bed
average daily census
average # of patients cared for per day for the reporting period
Bureaucracy drawbacks
can lead to frustration and delays due to low autonomy on the front line
power coercive
change agent strategies include application of power/authority to effect change, resistance is handled by authority measures
rational-empirical
change agent that assumes resistance to change is from lack of knowledge and resistance will lessen with factual information ex: evidenced based
normative re-educative
change agents used social expertise to influence others, peer pressure and attitudes
good change agent attributes
commitment to a better way (excited about designing a better future) courage to challenge power bases and norms (closest to the work) Go beyond role, take initiative, think outside the box (assurance of change happening) Persona (self-motivated, generate enthusiasm) Caring (commitment to patients about their welfare) Humility (about the change, not about "me") Sense of Humor (self-support through challenges)
change agent characteristics
committed to best way of doing things courageous take initiative and think out the box motivated caring humble sense of humor
Accountable Care (ACO)
coordinates care among different types of facilities and providers, focus is usually Medicare pts but not always -teaching status: academic teaching facilities - part of a university or affiliated w/ a university - ex.: University of TN Medical Center; St. Thomas -accreditation status
Kotter's 8 step model (change agent)
create urgency form powerful coalition create a vision for change communicate the change vision remove obstacles create short-term wins build on the change anchor changes in culture
quality control process
criterion or standard is determined info is collected to determine whether standards have been met educational or corrective action taken to meet criteria benchmarking is process of measuring products, practices, and services against best performing organizations
quality management
customer satisfaction, innovation, employee involvement most effective in a flat, democratic organization improves systems and processes, does not place blame
DECIDE (for problem solving)
define establish consider identify develop evaluate
indirect intervention
delegate influence
total quality management
edwards deming all staff committed to customer satisfaction
planned change
first order change type change that results from a well thought out and deliberate effort to make something happen
quality improvement
focuses on outcomes leaders, managers, and followers must be committed
Fishbone diagram
gather data; objective & subjective analyze the data develop solutions: be open-minded, pull out and examine your assumptions select a solution implement the solution evaluate the result
decision making
goal directed process uses systematic process choosing among options not always a problem ex: buying a new appliance or vehicle
root cause analysis
goal: learn from mistakes and to minimize blame •Most fundamental reason for failure or inefficiency of a process, in any work setting, is referred to as a "root cause" action: the product of a a root cause analysis joint commission plays a role
Bureaucracy assertions
high control and clear labor division promote efficiency and productivity
participatory management
implies that others are allowed to participate in decision making over which someone has control
performance improvement
individual, process, or system improvement
autocratic decision making
leaders make the decision alone without necessarily involving employees in the decision-making process
restraining forces of change
low energy level limited financial resources unreliable transportation time with family already limited reaching the goal
4 M's
manpower methods machines materials
nurse sensitive indicators
measurements of client care that are impacted by nursing interventions Nursing hours per patient day Patient falls with and without injury Injury level Pediatric pain assessment, intervention, reassessment (AIR) cycle Pediatric PIV infusion rates Pressure ulcers prevalence Hospital acquired Unit acquired Community acquired Psych physical/sexual assault rate Restraint prevalence RN education RN satisfaction surveys Job satisfaction scales or short form Practice environment scale (PES) Skill mix: percent of total nursing hours supplied to agency stagg Voluntary nurse turnover Healthcare associated infection UTI, CLABSI, VAP
collective bargaining
negotiation of wages and other conditions of employment by an organized body of employees.
continuous quality improvement
ongoing process of improvement in all aspects
driving forces of change
opportunity for advancement status, social gratification enhanced self esteem family supportive of efforts pay increase
change agents
person skilled in theory and implementation of planned change individual named as change agent and is responsible for communicating with stakeholders from beginning to end of change movement must be clear who the individual person named as change agent is; naming a group of individuals as change agent leads to role confusion typically change agent is a key stakeholder
quality assurance
programs to monitor used to ensure standard of care focuses on clinical aspects of care
change
regardless of type, it brings feelings of achievement, pride, loss, and stress
unplanned change
second order change type accidental change, change by drift, sudden change, forced change planned change theories don't work well but can provide useful tidbits -looks chaotic, but organizing below surface -change is constant -complexity theory: change is emergent, influenced by all individuals and subsystems
managers in change
single most important factor for how people accept the change it is critical that they do not view change as a threat without change, the organization may stagnate and die
purposeful inaction
stand back, watch, evaluate; use influence appropriately not the same as "laissez faire" (where you should act but choose not to)
acute care
stay <30 days
SWOT (decision making)
strengths weaknesses opportunities threats
complexity theory
the study of how order and pattern arise from very complicated, apparently chaotic systems how things connect and affect each other
choas theory
the universe is chaotic and requires organization to be self-organizing and adaptive to survive Viewed as unpredictable and random events Constant change resulting in little long-term stability
risk management
using strategies to reduce the amount of risk (the degree of likelihood that a person will become ill upon exposure to a toxin or pathogen). patients, staff, finances, managerial, facility safety and management
VUCA environment
volatile uncertain complex ambiguous
unfreezing
•Announce proposed change/include as many stakeholders as possible. Use EBP and encourage exchange of ideas. Encourage stakeholders to volunteer/participate lewin first phase of change
structure audit
•Assumes relationship exists between quality of care and structure or organization. Structural standards, often set by licensing/accrediting bodies, ensure a safe environment. •Example: Call lights in place, or if patients can reach their water pitchers, staffing patterns changing with patient census
process audit
•How nursing care is provided/Critical pathways & standardized clinical guidelines •Process audit task oriented and focused on whether practice standards are fulfilled. •Assumes relationship exists between process used by nurse and quality of care provided
Begin
•Movement: Begin implementation activities, cmte formation, address driving/restraining forces, evaluate process ongoing, prepare budget for resources needed to implement, plan ongoing methods for continual improvement lewin second phase of change
refreezing
•New process is implemented, evaluated multiple times, the new norm. Continue to address problems/process changes lewin 3rd phase of change
outcome audit
•Reflect end result of care/how patients status changes as result of intervention •Nursing Sensitive Indicators-Fall rates, nosocomial infection, pressure sores, physical restraint, and patient satisfaction scores