front 1 Documentation | back 1 be clear, accurate, concise, and accessible, should provide a clear understanding of the client |
front 2 What is PIE? | back 2 Problem, Intervention, Evaluation |
front 3 What is SOAP? | back 3 Subjective Objective Assessment Plan |
front 4 What is subjective? | back 4 symptoms the client is describing / telling you |
front 5 What is Objective? | back 5 what the provider observes -smells, hears, sees, measures, touches |
front 6 What is Assessment? | back 6 combines subjective and objective information to arrive at a nursing diagnosis |
front 7 What is Plan? | back 7 Steps to treat clients and suggests need for consultation or additional testing to address client needs |
front 8 Source Oriented? | back 8 the traditional format for documenting. divided into history and physical, progress notes, nurse notes lab reports, and diagnostic testing |
front 9 Focus Charting | back 9 Focus charting centers on specific health care problems, changes in condition, client events, and concerns. |
front 10 three components that must be documented in focus charting | back 10 Data - information related to a patient's condition or situation Action - interventions by healthcare providers in response to data Response - patients' response to intervention or treatment provided |
front 11 What does FACT stand for in documentation? | back 11 Factual Accurate Complete Timely |
front 12 What is the correct way to correct documentation errors? | back 12 Keep the original document.
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front 13 What guidelines should be followed when making a late entry in charting? | back 13
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front 14 What is the purpose of Electronic Health Records (EHRs) | back 14 provide a systemic, digitized documentation system that improves client care. They provide comprehensive records of a person’s health history and serve as a communication tool for all healthcare providers involved in the client’s care. They are also used for billing and can be used in court. |
front 15 What is the role of the Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP)? | back 15 The ISMP is devoted to preventing errors that occur within health care facilities and compiles a list of abbreviations appropriate for documentation. |
front 16 What is priority setting in nursing? | back 16 Priority setting is the delivery of nursing care based on the urgency or importance of client needs. It involves organizing client care so that the most critical intervention or action is completed first. |
front 17 What are the five levels of Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs, and which level must typically be met first? | back 17 The five levels are:
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front 18 What does the ABCDE method in priority setting stand for? | back 18 <ul> <li>A: Airway</li> <li>B: Breathing</li> <li>C: Circulation</li> <li>D: Disability</li> <li>E: Exposure</li> </ul> <br> |
front 19 What does the CURE acronym stand for in nursing priority setting? | back 19
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front 20 What is the difference between prioritization and triage in nursing? | back 20 - Prioritization involves ranking potential nursing actions in order of importance. Triage, on the other hand, assigns priority based on a quick initial assessment followed by assigning an acuity level, indicating how long a client can safely wait for screening and treatment. |
front 21 What is the 5-level triage system, and what does it indicate? | back 21
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front 22 What is resource allocation in the context of nursing care? | back 22 Resource allocation is the process of assigning portions of services or resources in caring for clients. Priority setting often involves deciding how to distribute these resources effectively based on client needs. |
front 23 What are the steps of the Nursing Process for a Registered Nurse | back 23
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| back 25 Critical thinking is the skill of analyzing and interpreting data to solve a problem and achieve a desired outcome. It includes questioning, analysis, synthesis, interpretation, inference, inductive and deductive reasoning, intuition, application, and creativity. |
front 26 What is clinical reasoning in nursing? | back 26 Clinical reasoning is the mental process of analyzing all data in a clinical situation to make informed decisions. It involves assessing data, selecting relevant information, and making decisions based on nursing knowledge while applying critical thinking in the practice setting. |
front 27 What is clinical judgment in nursing? | back 27 Clinical judgment is the outcome of critical thinking and decision-making that considers nursing knowledge, client situations, prioritization of problems, and evidence-based practice. It develops over time and improves with practice. |