when providing care. Because cultures and customs that are followed vary so much from patient to patient‚ the nurse should be educated on how to provide culturally competent care. Being culturally competent means showing respect for‚ and knowledge of‚ the patient and their culture‚ and will help the nurse build rapport and a trusting‚ therapeutic relationship. By building this trusting relationship‚ the patient is more likely to be compliant with the health care regimen and therefore‚ will be more
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In the article‚ Patient Safety and Patient Safety Culture: Foundations of Excellent Health Care Delivery‚ by Ulrich and Kear (2014)‚ patient safety issues are identified and ways to improve these safety issues are also discussed. “Patient safety forms the foundation of healthcare delivery […] ensuring patient safety requires the ongoing‚ focused efforts of every member of the healthcare team” (Ulrich & Kear‚ 2014). In 1999‚ a report was released regarding the number of medical errors and injures/deaths
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compassionate is to understand what our patients are going through and then provide the best care that we can to benefit them. I really liked how Steven put in it that “it allows for medical care that isn’t superficial‚ but rather focuses on care for the patient that goes beyond the medical care.” Any health care provider can just focus on the signs and symptoms of a patient and treat them more as number than as an individual. This could lead to the patient having resentment towards the healthcare
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Noncompliance of Patients Sequential compression devices are non-invasive‚ and are usually the first choice for venous thromboembolism prophylaxis (Moore et al.‚ 2013). Patients’ outcomes are poor despite medical orders for SCDs. Patient noncompliance is one of the top causes for venous thromboembolism development. Noncompliance is usually due to discomfort sensations such as itching‚ sweating‚ tightness‚ and just disliking the feeling of sleeves on the legs. Furthermore‚ patients often remove these
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Seisay I completely agree with you that nurses play a vital role in ensuring patient safety‚ since we all know that patient safety can improve patient outcome and subsequently reduce the cost of healthcare. The culture of safety is a continuously changing concept and focus on preventing medical errors and maintaining patient safety and that when those errors happen‚ they lead to bad consequences including‚ increase in length of hospital stay‚ litigation costs‚ healthcare-associated infections‚ lack
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3/16/2005. Patient is a 55-year-old female flight attendant who strained her back and left leg during a recurrent training. Per OMNI‚ she was initially diagnose d with lumbar sprain‚ lumbago and low back pain. Treatment includes electrical stimulation unit and PT. Per the PT note dated 10/11/16‚ the patient reported continued symptoms‚ but she is working on managing her pain. She was assessed to have improved core stability. Based on the progress report dated 10/27/16 by Dr. Waldman‚ the patient presents
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foresee a happy patient coming out of this procedure. From the beginning‚ the MA should have educated the patient on the purpose or procedure of the laboratory order. When she should have been educating the client she could have been putting her gloves on as well‚ but instead she was looking for the proper vein and cleaning it without gloves. Whether the MA washed her hands or not‚ she is still spreading germs. The gloves should have been put on prior to her ever touching the patient‚ not after she
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Evidence Based Practice: Patient-centered Care 1 Evidence Based Practice: Patient-centered Care Evidence Based Practice: Patient-centered Care 2 Patient-centered Care In the definition of patient-centered care it states that we should recognize the patient as the source of control in providing compassionate and coordinated care based on respect for patient’s preferences‚ values‚ and needs(NAP‚ 2003). In this quantitative teaching strategy by Pamela Ironside‚ PhD‚ RN‚ FAAN
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nurse‚ a nurse practitioner‚ and a unit secretary. A staff nurse is in outpatient is responsible of admitting patients‚ making preparations which includes both patients and the equipments that are necessary‚ they assist physicians with many bedside procedures‚ and are responsible of recovering patients. A nurse staff is also responsible of checking charts and orders‚ monitoring patients and troubleshooting to make sure that there’s no errors. A charge nurse is registered nursed who is responsible
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“Providing Culture-Sensitive Healthcare to Hispanic/Latino Patients” A Hispanic patient with a high fever may resist cold compress because their theory of “hot” and “cold” imbalance. They use hot things to cure cold and cold thing to cure the body being “hot”. For instance within the American medical field we use heat foe hot. If you’re running a fever things that makes you sweat it out are better. So the difficulties that the Hispanic patient will bring is simply not following the physician’s orders
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