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Methods of Organising Care

Methods of Organising Care. Return to Practice Susie Pease. Methods of Organising Care Aims and Objectives. To discuss the methods of care organisation To list the advantages and disadvantages of these methods.

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Methods of Organising Care

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  1. Methods of Organising Care Return to Practice Susie Pease

  2. Methods of Organising Care Aims and Objectives • To discuss the methods of care organisation • To list the advantages and disadvantages of these methods. • To discuss the differences in team nursing, primary nursing and case management.

  3. Effective, Individualised Care! • How can nurses achieve this? • List the methods of care organisation you know. • Choose two of these methods and identify their advantages and disadvantages to patient care.

  4. Organisation or Chaos

  5. Task Allocation • Functional nursing • Patient becomes a passive object • Tasks listed on daily or shift basis • Complex tasks to most senior nurse • Follows medical model

  6. Advantages of Task Allocation • Efficient – tasks can usually be completed during a span of duty • Nurses are responsible for a block of tasks and the completion of these can be easily checked • Day to day work planning is simple due to rigid organisation

  7. Disadvantages of task allocation • Fragmented - patient does not receive holistic care • Tasks may assume priority over patient • Hierarchical • Emotional and psychological needs may remain unmet • Lack of continuity in care delivery

  8. Patient allocation • Nurse allocated the care of a number of patients • Advantage • Emphasis on total client care • Disadvantage • Lack of continuity of care

  9. Team Nursing • Group of Nurses • Nurse patient during hospital stay • Provide continuity • Provide holistic care? • Can be hierarchical

  10. Advantages of team nursing • Promotes patient contact (Chavigny & Lewis 1984) • May increase patient satisfaction • May increase nursing job satisfaction • Should provide continuity of patient care • May provide holistic patient care • Ref: Chavigny K & Lewis A (1984) Team or primary nursing care? Nursing Outlook. 32(6) 322-7

  11. Disadvantages of team nursing • May resemble task allocation • Discontinuity of care or fragmentation as different teams on duty • May become hierarchical

  12. Primary Nursing • Each patient has one nurse responsible for their care • Primary nurse should assess and plan care • Responsibility delegated to associate nurse when off duty

  13. Primary Nursing Advantages • Primary nurses have increased accountability. • Nurses should develop a partnership with patient leading to patient choice. • Consistency of care and development of therapeutic nursing should be increased.

  14. Primary Nursing Disadvantages • Dependence on one nurse • Intense relationship • Lack of continuity when primary nurse not available

  15. Case Management • Linked to critical care pathways. • All professional groups involved. • Arrive at consensus about standards of care and patient outcomes. • One member of MDT is case manager. • Routine care standardised but individual needs must be assessed and met.

  16. Caseload Management • Community settings • Health Visitor or District Nurse acts as caseload manager • Caseloads organised geographically or by GP attachment.

  17. Caseload Management continued • Each caseload manager leads a team of qualified nurses and healthcare support workers • Continuity of care should be maintained as teams organised to ensure a team member is available every day • Each registered nurse accountable for his or her actions • Case manager organises skill mix and resources

  18. Action Plan • Reflect on your past experiences of care organisation • Find out the method of organising care in your placement areas • List the advantages and disadvantages of this method of organisation

  19. Summary • 80% of patient care delivered by nurses • Whether care is organised by • Team nursing • Primary nursing • Case or caseload management • Patients should receive individualised, effective care • Patients are often experts in managing their own care and nurse/patient partnerships should develop

  20. References & Book List • Ersser S. & Tutton E. (1991) Primary Nursing in Perspective. Scutari Press • Hale C. et al (1996) Organisation of Nursing Care. Distance Learning Centre • Hogston R. & Simpson P. M. (2002) Foundations of Nursing Practice (2nd Edition) Palgrave MacMillan • Manthey M. (1992) The Practice of Primary Nursing. Kings fund Centre • NMC (2002) Code of Professional Conduct.

  21. To contact Susie Pease: • Telephone: 0113 343 1304 • Email: s.pease@leeds.ac.uk

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