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Prioritization and Delegation

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Both papers presented the same message. Delegation is an essential nursing skill. The NCLEX-RN Exam includes competencies related to delegation. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Prioritization and Delegation


1
Prioritization and Delegation
SOAR-RN
  • Margaux Johnson RN
  • Surgical Unit Team Leader

2
What do you want to know
Discussion Objectives
  • Verbalizes appropriate delegation
  • Verbalize CURE method utilized in prioritization
    and managing multiple tasks

3
Prioritization
  • What words or phrases come to mind when we hear
    the word prioritization?

4
How the experts define prioritization
  • Clinical Definition
  • Deciding which needs or problems require
    immediate action and which ones could be delayed
    until a later time because they are not urgent.

5
Who do you see first?
  • Mr. C., 68-year-old with unstable angina who
    needs teaching for CCL, scheduled this morning.
  • Ms. J., a 45-year-old woman experiencing chest
    pain scheduled for a graded exercise test later
    today.
  • Mr. R., a 75-year-old with a 2-day-old
    left-sided stroke.
  • Mr. L., a 59-year-old man with mild shortness of
    breath and chronic emphysema.

6
What factors influence prioritization for you!

7
Factors that influence prioritization
  • Experience expertise of individual nurse
  • Patient acuity
  • Nurse-patient relationship
  • Unit organization
  • Models of care
  • Individual priority-setting strategies

8
Barriers
  • What are some possible barriers to accurate
    prioritization?

9
Pitfalls in Priority Setting
  • Inadequate assessment and evaluation
  • Failure to differentiate between priority and
    non-priority problems
  • Acceptance of others priorities without
    assessing the possibilities
  • Performance of tasks
  • First identifiedfirst completed approach
  • Completion of the easiest task first

10
Strategy for Prioritizing
  • CURE
  • Critical needs
  • Urgent needs
  • Routine Responsibilities
  • Extras

11
Refocusing--Outcomes vs. Tasks
  • What is my goal (outcome)?
  • What tasks will lead to fulfillment of the goal?
  • What problems do I anticipate if I wait to do the
    tasks?
  • What happens if the outcome is not reached?
  • What should I do what could I delegate?

12
After hearing shift report which patient will
you see first?
  • 1. A 20 year old with possible acute myelogenous
    leukemia who has just arrived on the medical
    unit.
  • 2. A 38 year old with aplastic anemia who needs
    teaching about decreasing infection prior to
    discharge.
  • 3. A 40 year old with lymphedema who requests
    help to put on compression stockings before
    getting out of bed.
  • 4. A 60 year old with non-Hodgkins lymphoma who
    is refusing the ordered chemotherapy regimen.

13
Who will you see first after report?
  • 1. A patient who developed tumor lysis
  • syndrome around 500 am.
  • 2. A patient with frequent reports of
  • break-through pain over the past 24
  • hours.
  • 3. A patient scheduled for exploratory
  • laparotomy this morning.
  • 4. A patient with anticipatory nausea and
  • vomiting for the past 24 hours.

14
Who, What, When..
  • Who can help me?
  • What do I need to do first?
  • When does it need to be done?
  • What will be the outcome if I do
  • one activity before another one?

15
(No Transcript)
16
What is Delegation?
  • ANA defines delegation as
  • the transfer of responsibility for the
    performance of an activity from one individual to
    another while retaining accountability for the
    outcome
  • Key Concept transfer while retaining
    accountability

17
What is Delegation?
  • NCSBN defines delegation
  • transferring to a competent individual the
    authority to perform a selected nursing task in a
    selected situation
  • Key Terms competent, selected
  • task, selected situations

18
Safeguarding the Public Safety
  • State Boards of Nursing are responsible for Nurse
    Practice Acts, Scopes of Practice, and clear
    regulations for delegation.
  • A licensed nurse has ultimate responsibility
    accountability for management and provision of
    patient care.
  • http//adm.idaho.gov/adminrules/rules/idapa23/0101
    .pdf

19
Delegation is an essential nursing skill
20
  • Who do you delegate to at
  • St. Lukes?

21
What Cannot Be Delegated
  • Activities within the scope of nursing practice
  • Unstable patients
  • Activities requiring assessment, problem-
    solving, judgment, evaluation
  • Where outcome is unpredictable
  • Sterile technique, med administration,
  • IV therapy, invasive procedures.

22
Shift your focus!
  • Identify outcomes for your patients at the
    beginning of your shift.

23
Barriers to Delegation
  • Concern regarding patient safety
  • Unsure of the persons competency to
    whom you are delegating?
  • Super nurse mentality
  • Unsure about rules and regulations
  • What else?

24
Delegation Process
  • Knowledge of job descriptions, policies,
    regulations, State Practice Act
  • Identify the purpose of delegation
  • Ensure the 5 rights of delegation
  • Communicate effectively
  • Offer and receive feedback
  • Retain accountability for outcome

25
Five rights of Delegation
  • Right task
  • Right person
  • Right circumstance
  • Right communication
  • Right supervision, feedback

26
Right Task
  • What can be delegated?
  • Tasks that fall within the facility procedures
    and protocols
  • Tasks performed on patients who are stable and
    whose outcomes are predictable
  • Tasks that require minimal supervision

27
Right Person
  • Matching a task to a person
  • Select the right task
  • Person must be competent
  • Right situation
  • Focuses on outcomes
  • Determine strengths and weaknesses of team members

28
The Right Circumstances
  • Appropriate
  • Patient
  • Setting
  • Available resources

29
Right communication
  • Initial direction is most important
  • Use the Cs of initial direction

30
The Cs of initial direction
  • CLEAR
  • CONCISE
  • CORRECT
  • COMPLETE

31
Stop and Reflect
  • The nurse asks a CAP who didnt hear shift
  • change report to take a patients B/P.
  • The CAP measures the BP in the left arm
  • which has a arteriovenous shunt. Which
    right of delegation did the nurse violate?
  • Right time, right person, right information,
    right task.

32
Red Flags of Delegation
  • Refusal to accept delegation
  • Incomplete directions
  • Failure to confirm expectations
  • Failure to communicate

33
Supervision - Defined
  • Provision of guidance or direction to perform and
    accomplish a task

34
Right Supervision
  • Ask for the other individuals feedback
  • first.
  • Give credit for effort.
  • Share your perceptions with each
  • other.
  • Explore different points of view.
  • Agree on a plan for the future, include
  • timeline for follow-up.
  • Revisit the plan and results achieved.

35
Reflection
  • How do you give feedback?

36
Trade roles and walk in their shoes!
  • Trust one another- confidently expect
    fulfillment of patients and each others needs
  • Respect for all roles/tasks and their importance
  • Admiration- express approval/pride verbally and
    nonverbally
  • Define/describe roles clearly (job descriptions).
  • Expectations must be upheld for all roles.
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