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Chapter 1 Overview of Education in Health Care

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Title: Chapter 1 Overview of Education in Health Care


1
Chapter 1Overview of Education in Health Care
2
Historical Foundations of the Nurse Educator
Role
  • Health education has long been considered a
    standard care-giving role of the nurse.
  • Patient teaching is recognized as an independent
    nursing function.
  • Nursing practice has expanded to include
    education in the broad concepts of health and
    illness.

3
Historical Foundations (contd)
  • Organizations and Agencies Promulgating
  • Standards and Mandates
  • 1. NLNE (NLN)
  • first observed health teaching as an important
    function within the scope of nursing practice
  • responsible for identifying course content for
    curriculum on principles of teaching and learning

4
Historical Foundations (contd)
  • 2. ANA
  • - responsible for establishing standards and
    qualifications for practice, including patient
    teaching
  • 3. ICN
  • - endorses health education as an essential
    component of nursing care delivery

5
Historical Foundations (contd)
  • 4. State Nurse Practice Acts
  • - universally includes teaching within the scope
    of nursing practice
  • 5. JCAHO
  • - accreditation mandates require evidence of
    patient education to improve outcomes
  • 6. AHA
  • - Patients Bill of Rights ensures that clients
    receive complete and current information

6
Historical Foundations (contd)
  • 7. Pew Health Professions Commission
  • - puts forth a set of health profession
    competencies for the 21st century
  • - over one-half of recommendations pertain to
    importance of patient and staff education

7
Current Mandates for Nurse as Educator
  • Institute of Medicine 2001
  • CROSSING THE QUALITY CHASM
  • A NEW HEALTH SYSTEM FOR THE
  • 21ST CENTURY
  • focuses more broadly on how the health system can
    be reinvented to foster innovation and improve
    the delivery of care.
  • Six Aims for Improvement
  • Ten Rules for Redesign

8
Institute of Medicine 2001CROSSING THE QUALITY
CHASM A NEW HEALTH SYSTEM FOR The 21ST
CENTURY
  • Faced with such rapid changes, the nations
    health care delivery system has fallen far short
    in its ability to translate knowledge into
    practice and to apply new technology safely and
    appropriately.

9
Institute of Medicine 2001REDESIGN IMPERATIVES
SIX CHALLENGES
  • Reengineered care processes
  • Effective use of information technologies
    Knowledge and skills management
  • Development of effective teams
  • Coordination of care across patient-conditions,
    services, sites of care over time

10
Six Aims for Improvement
  • Safe avoiding injuries to patients
  • Effective providing services based on scientific
    knowledge to all who could benefit
  • Patient-centered providing care that is
    respectful of and responsive to individual
    patient preferences, needs, and values, and
    ensuring that patient values guide all clinical
    decisions.
  • Timely reducing waits and sometimes harmful
    delays for both those who receive and those who
    give care.
  • Efficient avoiding waste, including waste of
    equipment, supplies, ideas, and energy.
  • Equitable care that does not vary in quality
    because of personal characteristics

11
Joint CommissionPatient and Family Education
  • The organization provides education that supports
    patient and family participation in care
    decisions and care processes.
  • Education and training help meet patients
    ongoing health needs.
  • Education methods consider the patients and
    familys values and preferences and allow
    sufficient interaction among the patient, family,
    and staff for learning to occur.

12
Current Mandates for Nurse as Educator
  • Healthy People 2020 (USDHHS)
  • Federal initiatives outlined
  • To increase the quality years of healthy life
  • To eliminate health disparities among different
    segments of the population
  • Requires the nurse as educator to use theory and
    evidenced based strategies to promote desirable
    health behavior.

13
Trends Affecting Health Care
  • Social, economic, and political forces that
    affect a nurses role in teaching
  • growth of managed care
  • increased attention to health and well-being of
    everyone in society
  • cost containment measures to control
  • healthcare expenses
  • concern for continuing education as vehicle to
    prevent malpractice and incompetence

14
Trends (contd)
  • expanding scope and depth of nurses practice
    responsibilities
  • consumers demanding more knowledge and skills for
    self-care
  • demographic trends influencing type and amount of
    health care needed
  • recognition of lifestyle related diseases which
    are largely preventable
  • health literacy increasingly required
  • advocacy for self-help groups

15
Purpose, Benefits, and Goals of Education
  • Benefits of education to patients
  • increases consumer satisfaction
  • improves quality of life
  • ensures continuity of care
  • reduces incidence of illness complication
  • increases compliance with treatment
  • decreases anxiety
  • maximizes independence

16
Purpose, Benefits, and Goals of Education
  • Benefits of education to staff
  • enhances job satisfaction
  • improves therapeutic relationships
  • increases autonomy in practice
  • improves knowledge and skills

17
Purpose, Benefits, and Goals of Education
  • Benefits of preceptor education for nursing
    students
  • prepared clinical preceptors
  • continuity of teaching/learning from classroom
    curriculum
  • evaluation and improvement of student clinical
    skills

18
Purpose, Benefits, and Goals (contd)
  • Goal to increase self-care responsibility of
    clients and to improve the quality of care
    delivered by nurses

19
The Education Process
  • Definition of Terms
  • Education Process a systematic, sequential,
    planned course of action on the part of both the
    teacher and learner to achieve the outcomes of
    teaching and learning
  • Teaching/Instruction a deliberate intervention
    that involves sharing information and experiences
    to meet the intended learner outcomes

20
The Education Process (contd)
  • Learning a change in behavior (knowledge,
    skills, and attitudes) that can be observed and
    measured, and can occur at any time or in any
    place as a result of exposure to environmental
    stimuli

21
The Education Process (contd)
  • Patient Education the process of helping clients
    learn health-related behaviors to achieve the
    goal of optimal health and independence in
    self-care
  • Staff Education the process of helping nurses
    acquire knowledge, attitudes, and skills to
    improve the delivery of quality care to the
    consumer

22
ASSURE Model
  • A useful paradigm to assist nurses to organize
    and carry out the education process.
  • Analyze the learner
  • State objectives
  • Select instructional methods and materials
  • Use teaching materials
  • Require learner performance
  • Evaluate/revise the teaching/learning process

23
Role of the Nurse As Educator
  • Nurses act in the role of educator for a diverse
    audience of learnerspatients and their family
    members, nursing students, nursing staff, and
    other agency personnel.
  • Despite the varied levels of basic nursing school
    preparation, legal and accreditation mandates
    have made the educator role integral to all
    nurses.

24
Role of Nurse As Educator (contd)
  • Nurses function in the role of educator as
  • - the giver of information
  • - the assessor of needs
  • - the evaluator of learning
  • - the reviser of appropriate methodology
  • The partnership philosophy stresses the
    participatory nature of the teaching and learning
    process.

25
Barriers to Teaching
  • Barriers to teaching are those factors impeding
    the nurses ability to optimally deliver
    educational services.
  • Major barriers include
  • lack of time to teach
  • inadequate preparation of nurses to assume the
    role of educator with confidence and competence
  • personal characteristics
  • low-priority status given to teaching

26
Barriers to Education (contd)
  • environments not conducive to the
    reaching-learning process
  • absence of 3rd party reimbursement
  • doubt that patient education effectively changes
    outcomes
  • inadequate documentation system to allow for
    efficiency and ease of recording the quality and
    quantity of teaching efforts

27
Obstacles to Learning
  • Obstacles to learning are those factors that
    negatively impact on the learners ability to
    attend to and process information.
  • Major obstacles include
  • limited time due to rapid discharge from care
  • stress of acute and chronic illness, anxiety,
    sensory deficits, and low literacy
  • functional health illiteracy

28
Obstacles (contd)
  • lack of privacy or social isolation of
    health-care environment
  • situational and personal variations in readiness
    to learn, motivation and compliance, and learning
    styles
  • extent of behavioral changes (in number and
    complexity) required

29
Obstacles (contd)
  • lack of support and positive reinforcement from
    providers and/or significant others
  • denial of learning needs, resentment of authority
    and locus of control issues
  • complexity, inaccessibility, and fragmentation,
    of the healthcare system

30
Questions To Be Asked
  • The following questions can be posed about the
    elements of the education process, the role of
    the nurse as educator, and the principles of
    teaching and learning
  • How can the healthcare teams work together more
    effectively to coordinate educational efforts?
  • What are the ethical, legal, and economic issues
    involved?

31
Questions (contd)
  • What assessment methods and tools can be used to
    determine learning needs, readiness and styles?
  • Which learner attributes positively and
    negatively influence education efforts?
  • What can be done about the inequities in the
    delivery of education services ?

32
Questions (contd)
  • Which elements need to be taken into account when
    developing and implementing teaching plans?
  • Which instructional methods and materials are
    available to support teaching efforts?
  • Under which conditions should certain teaching
    methods and tools be used?
  • How can teaching be tailored to meet the needs of
    specific clientele?

33
Questions (contd)
  • What are the common mistakes made in the teaching
    of others?
  • How can teaching and learning best be evaluated?
  • What other questions might you ask?

34
Perspectives on Research in Patient and Staff
Education
  • most nonresearch-based literature focuses on
    how to do patient teaching
  • more attention is given to the needs of learners
    who have acute, short-term problems than to those
    who have chronic, long-term conditions
  • more research is needed on new teaching
    technologies, especially computer-assisted
    modalities, distance education, and
    Internet-based health information sites

35
Perspectives on Research (contd)
  • further investigation is needed on the
    cost-effectiveness of education efforts
  • future research must address
  • gender issues
  • measurement of behavioral outcomes
  • effects of educational interventions
  • theoretical basis for education in practice
  • cost-effectiveness of educational efforts

36
The Education Process Parallels the Nursing
Process
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