1 / 86

Define the following terms:

Define the following terms:. Long-term care care for persons who require 24-hour care and assistance. Length of stay the number of days a person stays in a healthcare facility. Terminal illness a disease or condition that will eventually cause death. Chronic

sanjiv
Download Presentation

Define the following terms:

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Define the following terms: • Long-term care • care for persons who require 24-hour care and assistance. • Length of stay • the number of days a person stays in a healthcare facility. • Terminal illness • a disease or condition that will eventually cause death. • Chronic • refers to the fact that a disease or condition is long-term or long-lasting. • Diagnosis • physician’s determination of an illness.

  2. Define the following terms: • Home health care • care provided in a person’s home. • Assisted living • facilities where residents live who need some assistance; they do not usually require skilled care. • Adult daycare • care given at a facility during daytime hours; generally for people who need some help but are not seriously ill or disabled. • Acute care • care performed in hospitals and ambulatory surgical centers. • Skilled care • medically necessary care given by a skilled nurse or therapist.

  3. Define the following terms: • Subacute care • care performed in either a hospital or a traditional nursing home. • Outpatient care • care usually provided for less than 24 hours for persons who have had treatments or surgery requiring short-term skilled care. • Rehabilitation • managed by professionals to restore a person to the highest possible level of functioning after an illness or injury. • Hospice care • care for individuals who have six months or less to live; provides physical and emotional care and comfort.

  4. 1. Compare long-term care to other healthcare settings • Discuss the different healthcare settings. Briefly emphasize aspects of long-term care, including: • Reasons why people live in LTC facilities • Common conditions in LTC • The fact that LTC facilities are residents’ homes

  5. Define the following terms: • activities of daily living (ADLs) • personal dailycare tasks, such as bathing, dressing, caring for teeth and hair, toileting, eating and drinking,walking, and transferring. • culture change • a term given to the process of transforming services for elders so that they are based on the values and practices of the person receiving care; core values include choice, dignity, respect, self-determination, and purposeful living.

  6. 2. Describe a typical long-term care facility • The following services are commonly provided at LTCFs: • Assistance with personal care • Physical, occupational, and speech therapy • Wound care • Care of different types of tubes and catheters (a thin tube inserted into the body that is used to drain fluids or inject fluids) • Nutrition therapy • Management of chronic diseases

  7. 2. Describe a typical long-term care facility • REMEMBER: • There different models of LTC facilities. Some may include dementia or assisted living wings.

  8. 2. Describe a typical long-term care facility • Think about this question: • Why do you think care might be changing to reflect the residents’ individual psychosocial needs?

  9. Define the following terms: • Medicare • a federal health insurance program for people who are 65 or older, are disabled, or are ill and cannot work. • Medicaid • a medical assistance program for low-income people.

  10. 3. Explain Medicare and Medicaid • Define Medicare and Medicaid.

  11. Transparency 1-1: Facts About Medicare • For 65 or older or disabilities and illnesses • Part A pays hospitals, skilled nursing facilities, hospice care, and some home health care. • Part B pays doctors’ services and other medical services and equipment. • Part C allows private health insurance companies to provide Medicare benefits. • Part D helps pay for medications prescribed for treatment.

  12. 3. Explain Medicare and Medicaid • Remember these facts about Medicaid: • Medicaid is funded by the federal government and each state • Eligibility for long-term care coverage under Medicaid is determined by income and special circumstances • People must qualify • Under Medicare and Medicaid • Long-term care facilities are paid a fixed amount for services • Services based on the resident’s needs upon admission

  13. Define the following terms: • Charting • writing down important information and observations about residents.

  14. 4. Describe the role of the nursing assistant • How can NAs provide services for residents? • Performing assigned nursing tasks • Providing personal care or assisting with self-care

  15. 4. Describe the role of the nursing assistant • Think about these questions: • Which tasks do NAs typically perform? • Are there tasks NAs do not perform? What are they?

  16. 4. Describe the role of the nursing assistant • What are some typical NA duties? • Feeding residents • Helping with toileting and elimination • Assisting with mobility • Keeping living areas neat and clean • Encouraging residents to eat and drink • Caring for supplies and equipment • Helping residents dress • Making beds • Giving back rubs • Helping with mouth care

  17. 4. Describe the role of the nursing assistant • There are some tasks that NAs are generally not allowed to do: • Giving medications • Inserting or removing tubes • Changing sterile dressings • Giving tube feedings • REMEMBER: • NAs are the “eyes and ears” of the healthcare team.

  18. Define the following terms: • Care plan • a plan developed for each resident to achieve certain goals; it outlines the steps and tasks that the care team must perform.

  19. 5. Describe the care team and the chain of command • Think about these questions: • What is the purpose of the care plan? • How and why is each care plan different?

  20. 5. Describe the care team and the chain of command • REMEMBER: • Activities not listed on the care plan must not be performed.

  21. 5. Describe the care team and the chain of command • What are the roles of each of the following team members? • Nursing Assistant • Registered Nurse • Licensed Practical Nurse/Licensed Vocational Nurse • Physician or Doctor • Physical Therapist • Occupational Therapist • Speech Language Pathologist • Registered Dietitian • Medical Social Worker • Activities Director • Resident and Resident’s Family

  22. Define the following terms: • Chain of command • the line of authority in a facility that helps make sure that residents get proper health care. • Liability • a legal term that means someone can be held responsible for harming someone else. • Scope of practice • defines the things that healthcare providers are legally allowed to do and how to do them correctly.

  23. Transparency 1-2: Chain of Command

  24. 5. Describe the care team and the chain of command • REMEMBER: • Some tasks are never performed by NAs. • NAs must never honor a request to do something outside their scope of practice; such requests must be reported to the nurse.

  25. Define the following terms: • Policy • a course of action that should be taken every time a certain situation occurs. • Procedure • a method, or way, of doing something.

  26. 6. Define policies, procedures, and professionalism • These are common policies and procedures in facilities: • All resident information is confidential. • Resident’s care plan must be followed. • NAs only perform tasks in job descriptions. • NAs report changes/observations to nurse. • Personal problems must not be discussed with residents or families. • Gifts and money cannot be accepted from residents or families. • NAs must be dependable.

  27. 6. Define policies, procedures, and professionalism • REMEMBER: • Ask questions or review your facility’s procedure manual when you are unsure about care. • If you do not understand a policy at your facility, ask questions until you do understand.

  28. 6. Define policies, procedures, and professionalism • NAs can maintain professional relationships with residents by • Being positive • Doing only assigned tasks • Keeping resident information confidential • Being polite and cheerful • Never discussing personal problems • Not using profanity • Listening • Calling resident by proper name • Explaining care • Following care practices

  29. 6. Define policies, procedures, and professionalism • NAs can maintain professional relationships with employers by • Completing duties • Following policies/procedures • Documenting and reporting care • Communicating problems • Asking questions • Taking directions and criticism • Being clean and neatly dressed and groomed • Being on time • Notifying if absent • Following chain of command • Participating in education programs • Being a role model for the facility

  30. Transparency 1-3: Qualities of Great Nursing Assistants Nursing assistants must be • Compassionate • Honest • Tactful • Conscientious • Dependable • Respectful • Unprejudiced • Tolerant

  31. 6. Define policies, procedures, and professionalism • Think about this question: • Can you think of examples of how each quality of a great nursing assistant pertains to care of residents?

  32. Define the following terms: • Ethics • the knowledge of right and wrong. • Laws • rules set by the government to help people live peacefully together and to ensure order and safety.

  33. 7. List examples of legal and ethical behavior and explain Residents’ Rights • Remember these guidelines for legal and ethical behavior: • Be honest at all times. • Protect residents’ privacy. • Keep staff information confidential. • Report abuse or suspected abuse of residents, and assist residents in reporting abuse if they wish to do so. • Follow the care plan and your assignments.

  34. 7. List examples of legal and ethical behavior and explain Residents’ Rights • Remember these guidelines for legal and ethical behavior (cont’d.): • Do not perform any task outside your scope of practice. • Report all resident observations and incidents to the nurse. • Document accurately and promptly. • Follow rules on safety and infection control (outlined in Chapter 2). • Do not accept gifts or tips. • Do not get personally or sexually involved with residents or their family members or friends.

  35. 7. List examples of legal and ethical behavior and explain Residents’ Rights • Think about this question: • What each of these guidelines mean for your behavior on the job?

  36. Define the following terms: • Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (OBRA) • law passed by the federal government that includes minimum standards for nursing assistant training, staffing requirements, resident assessment instructions, and information on rights for residents. • Cite • in a long-term care facility, to find a problem through a survey.

  37. Define the following terms: • Residents’ Rights • numerous rights identified in OBRA that relate to how residents must be treated while living in a facility; they provide an ethical code of conduct for healthcare workers. • Informed consent • the process in which a person, with the help of his doctor, makes informed decisions about health care.

  38. 7. List examples of legal and ethical behavior and explain Residents’ Rights • Remember these important points about OBRA: • Sets minimum standards for NA training • Requires regular in-services for NAs • Establishes state registry of NAs • Includes increased minimum staff requirements • Sets resident assessment requirements (MDS) • Includes changes in survey process • Establishes Residents’ Rights

  39. Transparency 1-4: Residents’ Rights Residents have a right to • Quality of life • Services and activities to maintain a high level of wellness • Be fully informed regarding rights and services • Participate in their own care • Make independent choices • Privacy and confidentiality • Dignity, respect, and freedom • Security of possessions • Be informed of and consent to transfers and discharges • Voice complaints • Have visits

  40. 7. List examples of legal and ethical behavior and explain Residents’ Rights • Think about this question: • Look at the bulleted list on page 11 of your textbook. Can you think of other ways NAs can protect residents’ rights?

  41. Handout 1-1: Decision Quiz Choices I have made today include 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

  42. 7. List examples of legal and ethical behavior and explain Residents’ Rights • REMEMBER: • Everyday decisions may not seem that important because you are able to make them.

  43. 7. List examples of legal and ethical behavior and explain Residents’ Rights • Think about these questions: • What if you were not able to make all of your own choices? • Why do you want to make your own decisions?

  44. 7. List examples of legal and ethical behavior and explain Residents’ Rights • REMEMBER: • Making decisions about our own lives is a very important part of being an adult. Residents’ Rights guarantee that residents can continue to make many decisions about their own lives.

  45. Define the following terms: • Neglect • harming a person physically, mentally, or emotionally by failing to provide needed care. • Active neglect • purposely harming a person by failing to provide needed care. • Passive neglect • unintentionally harming a person physically, mentally, or emotionally by failing to provide needed care. • Negligence • actions, or the failure to act or provide the proper care, that result in unintended injury to a person.

  46. Define the following terms: • Malpractice • injury to a person due to professional misconduct through negligence, carelessness, or lack of skill. • Abuse • purposely causing physical, mental, or emotional pain or injury to someone. • Physical abuse • any treatment, intentional or not, that causes harm to a person’s body; includes slapping, bruising, cutting, burning,physically restraining, pushing, shoving, or rough handling.

  47. Define the following terms: • Psychological abuse • any behavior that causes a person to feel threatened, fearful, intimidated, or humiliated in any way. • Verbal abuse • the use of language—spoken or written—that threatens, embarrasses, or insults a person. • Assault • the act of threatening to touch a person without his or her permission. • Battery • touching a person without his or her permission.

  48. Define the following terms: • Sexual abuse • forcing a person to perform or participate in sexual acts against his or her will; includes unwanted touching, exposing oneself, and sharing pornographic material. • Financial abuse • the act of stealing, taking advantage of, or improperly using the money, property, or other assets of another person. • Domestic violence • physical, sexual, or emotional abuse by spouses, intimate partners, or family members. • Workplace violence • verbal, physical, or sexual abuse of staff by residents or other staff members.

  49. Define the following terms: • Involuntary seclusion • separating a person from others against the person’s will. • Sexual harrassment • any unwelcome sexual advance or behavior that creates an intimidating, hostile, or offensive working environment; includes requests for sexual favors, unwanted touching, and other acts of a sexual nature. • Substance abuse • the use of legal or illegal drugs, cigarettes, or alcohol in a way that is harmful to the abuser or to others.

  50. Transparency 1-5: Suspicious Injuries

More Related