1 / 39

Important to consider:

Non-therapeutic techniques. Barriers to effective communication. Communicating with the angry, demanding or manipulative patient. Important to consider:. psychological and emotional state of the patient spiritual elements financial state educational background mental state

dinges
Download Presentation

Important to consider:

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. Non-therapeutic techniques.Barriers to effective communication.Communicating with the angry, demanding or manipulative patient.

  2. Important to consider: • psychological and emotional state of the patient • spiritual elements • financial state • educational background • mental state • social well being • familial aspects • physical state

  3. It is important working with patient to think differently of:  • partnership • consumer rights • consultation • not forcing my views upon others • checking out with people what they want • giving people options.

  4. Subjective data • Client—'I feel really awful, hot and dizzy all the time.' • Client—'They told me it was really bad, much worse than they thought.' • Husband—'She went through a really bad patch after her dad died.' • Nurse—'He looks depressed to me.' • Client—'Fit as a fiddle all my life nurse, can't understand what all the fuss  is about.'

  5. Objective data • measurements (like a client's temperature) • examination (like listening to the client's chest sounds with a stetho-scope) • laboratory tests (like blood or urine) • past records (previous admission notes etc).

  6. Loss, bereavement and grief • abbreviated grief • actual loss • anticipatory loss • bereavement • death • dysfunctional grief • grief • inhibited grief • loss • mourning • pathologic grief • perceived loss • physical loss • psychological loss • terminal illness • unresolved grief.

  7. Care of the dying • construct a list of common psychological and physical problems associated with dying • Suggest how these problems could be rephrased into a possible nursing diagnosis •  What would the nursing goal be for each of these problems? • Outline nursing interventions for each of these problems •  What would the desired outcome-criteria be for clients with grief and loss and the physical symptoms related to dying?

  8. assist the family in dealing with the impending death of a loved one • facilitate their - -  coping response, -  readjustment -  bereavement and -  participation in care.

  9. Modes of communication • Verbal communication - spoken or written word • Be aware of: • vocabulary - various subcultures • clarity and brevity • use layman’s terms – denotative and connotative meaning • pacing when speaking • Intonation

  10. Verbal communication • Timing and Relevance • Humor

  11. Nonverbal Communication • Transmission of messages without the use of words • Factors • Personal appearance • Facial expression • Posture / Gait • Eye Contact

  12. Nonverbal communication factors • Gestures • Touch • Territoriality and Space

  13. Factors to influence communication • Perceptions - personal view of events • Values • Emotions • Gender • Knowledge • Roles and relationships

  14. Factors to influence communication • Sociocultural background • European Americans more open • Native Americans comfortable with silence

  15. Zones of Personal Space • Intimate (0-18 in) • Personal (18-4ft) • Social (4- 12 ft) • Public (12 ft or greater)

  16. Forms of Communication • Therapeutic- Communication that is beneficial in developing a nurse-client helping relationship • Non-Therapeutic- Communication that is not beneficial or helpful to people involved

  17. Therapeutic Communication • Listening - nonverbal; conveys interest in the client; active listening • Listening vs. Hearing • Nod as client speaks • Appear attentive • Conveying Acceptance - listen without judging

  18. Therapeutic Communication • Paraphrasing • Focusing - centering information on the key elements of the message • Stating observations • Clarifying • Focus • Assertiveness • standing up for one’s rights without violating those of others • Summarizing - concise review of main ideas • Appropriate self-disclosure

  19. Barriers to Effective Communication • Inattentive listening • Medical vocabulary • Giving personal opinions • Being defensiveness • Showing disapproval • Cultural differences • Prying • Offering false reassurance • Being defensive • Asking why • Stereotyping - generalized beliefs held about people • Changing the subject inappropriately • Showing approval or disapproval

  20. Components of helping relationships • Trust - Belief that other people will provide help in times of need and distress • Empathy - Ability to try to understand and enter the patient’s frame of reference • Sympathy - expression of one’s own feelings about another’s predicament

  21. Components of caring relationships • Caring - positive regard for another person • Availability • Courtesy/Confidentiality • “ A Professional”

  22. Communication with special populations • Children • Nonverbal messages - avoid sudden movements or gestures • Calm and gentle • Be honest • Short simple concrete sentences and explanations

  23. Communication with the older adult • Changes in hearing • Tinnitus • Decrease in visual acuity

  24. The Nurse-Client Helping Relationship Helping relationships are created through the nurse’s: • Application of scientific knowledge • Understanding of human behavior and communication • Commitment to caring • *Therapeutic communication doesn’t happen. You have to work at it.

  25. Phases of Nurse/ Client Relationships • Pre-interaction Phase • Orientation Phase • Working Phase • Termination Phase

  26. Pre-interaction Phase • Before meeting client • Review data available ( diagnosis, medical history) • Assign appropriate room • Anticipate concerns or needs

  27. Orientation Phase • Introduce yourself • Set a positive tone with a warm empathetic manner • Assess client health status • Prioritize needs and goals of your client • Clarify client’s and your roles • Let the client know when to expect the relationship to end

  28. Working Phase • Encourage and help the client express feelings • Encourage and help client set goals • Take action to meet the goals set the client

  29. Termination Phase • Remind client that termination is near • Evaluate goal achievement • Help to achieve a smooth transition to other caregivers

  30. Techniques for improved therapeutic communication • Professionalism • Courtesy • Confidentiality • Availability • Trust • Empathy • Sympathy • Acceptance • Respect • Silence • Hope • Encouragement • Socializing • Gender/Cultural sensitivity

  31. Communication-Nursing Process • Assessment • Physical and Emotional Factors • Developmental Factors • Sociocultural Factors • Gender

  32. Communication-Nursing Process • Nursing Diagnosis • Impaired verbal communication • Anxiety • Social isolation • Ineffective coping • Impaired social interaction • Powerlessness • Planning • Goals and outcomes; priorities; continuity of care.

  33. Therapeutic Communications Implementation • Attentive Listening • Sharing observations • Sharing empathy • Sharing hope • Sharing humor • Sharing feelings • Using touch • Using silence • Providing information • Clarifying

  34. Therapeutic Communication -2 • Focusing • Paraphrasing • Asking relevant questions • Summarizing • Self-disclosure • Confrontation

  35. Barriers to Effective Communication-2 • Arguing • Passive or Aggressive Responses • Defensive Responses • Asking personal questions • Sympathy and not empathy

  36. Communication-Nursing Process - Evaluation • Analysis of communication patterns • Process recordings • Evaluate goal of improving communication. • If goal unmet, utilize new and different nursing interventions.

  37. CommunicationSummary • Communication is important. • Collect data and establish trusting relationship. • Share information with other team members. • Implement care and evaluate goals .

  38. Critical Thinking Exercise • Mr. Phillips is a 70 year old resident of the long term facility, who has begun making inappropriate sexual comments to the staff. He asks staff members for a “little hug” ( and worse ) and tries to pull young female members of the staff into empty rooms. The Nursing Assistant have asked you to help them create a plan to “deal with this”. What will you do then?”

  39. Thank you for your attention!

More Related