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Nurses' Legal Responsibilities II01:23

Nurses' Legal Responsibilities II

Establishing a secure, collaborative nurse-patient relationship is crucial for delivering high-quality care. This relationship, founded on trust, respect, and honesty, enhances the patient's comfort and willingness to share vital health information. For example, a nurse who listens actively and without judgment provides clear information about health conditions and treatment options and respects patient decisions, which builds a trusting relationship.
Communication between nurses and patients...
Nursing Interventions I: Taxonomy of Nursing Interventions01:03

Nursing Interventions I: Taxonomy of Nursing Interventions

Nursing interventions are chosen as part of the planning process to achieve patient outcomes. Once nursing diagnoses are determined, the goals and outcomes are specified, then the nursing interventions are selected and individualized according to the patient's situation.
A nursing intervention is a treatment or action based on scientific concepts and knowledge from the nursing, behavioral, and physical sciences. Identifying and prioritizing nursing interventions based on the desired outcome is...
Nurses' Legal Responsibilities III01:16

Nurses' Legal Responsibilities III

Nurse-to-nurse relationships are legally required to adhere to professional standards, ensuring a respectful and positive working environment. Professional conduct demands that nurses treat all colleagues respectfully and courteously, fostering a productive, supportive workplace. Nurses must actively eliminate bullying, discrimination, and harassment to maintain a safe and inclusive environment.
Cultivating a culture of collaboration and mutual respect among nurses transcends mere enhancement...
Ethical Standards II01:23

Ethical Standards II

Ethical standards are the backbone of nursing practice, guiding nurses as they interact with patients, families, and colleagues. These standards are crucial for providing safe, empathetic care centered on the patient's needs.
Nurses are entrusted with upholding various ethical principles and standards. Nurses forge solid therapeutic relationships using trust, empathy, autonomy, confidentiality, and professional competence.
Confidentiality is crucial, embodying respect for individual privacy and...
Interdisciplinary Care: The Health Care Team-I01:21

Interdisciplinary Care: The Health Care Team-I

An interdisciplinary team includes many healthcare professionals working together and utilizing their skills, knowledge, and expertise to provide holistic and quality patient care.
Physicians
The physician's primary responsibility is to diagnose illness and direct the medical or surgical treatment of the condition. The authority to admit patients to a healthcare agency or institution and practice care within that setting is granted to physicians by the healthcare agency or institution itself.
Ethical Standards I01:25

Ethical Standards I

The American Nurses Association (ANA) created and implemented the first nationally accepted Code of Ethics for Nurses with Interpretive Statements. The Code of Ethics is a living document regularly updated by the ANA and establishes an ethical standard that is non-negotiable for nurses in all roles and settings.
The Code of Ethics provisions outline the nurse's duty to the patient, the healthcare team, the profession, and society. The Code's fundamental principles include advocacy,...

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Persistent isolationist or collaborator? The nurse's role in interprofessional collaborative practice.

Carole A Orchard1

  • 1The University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario N6A 5C1, Canada. corchard@uwo.ca

Journal of Nursing Management
|June 16, 2010
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Nurses must shift from service-focused care to patient-centred collaborative practice. This requires addressing barriers and fostering trust, power sharing, and shared decision-making within healthcare teams.

Related Experiment Videos

Area of Science:

  • Healthcare delivery models
  • Nursing practice
  • Interprofessional collaboration

Background:

  • The traditional profession-specific focus in nursing is increasingly challenged by calls for interprofessional, patient-centred teamwork from various health organizations.
  • Global health bodies advocate for collaborative approaches to enhance patient care outcomes.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To explore the current understanding of interprofessional collaborative client-centred practice.
  • To define the role of nursing within this evolving care delivery model.

Main Methods:

  • Literature review and synthesis of existing research on interprofessional collaborative client-centred practice.
  • Analysis of nursing's role and contributions within collaborative healthcare settings.

Main Results:

  • Transitioning to patient-centred collaborative practice faces significant barriers, but enablers like trust-building, power sharing, and shared decision-making are crucial.
  • Institutional commitment is essential for supporting collaborative team development and transforming workplace environments.
  • Nurses can integrate into collaborative teams by understanding and articulating their roles, fostering mutual role understanding with other professionals, identifying shared responsibilities, and developing teamwork skills.

Conclusions:

  • A fundamental shift from service-oriented delivery to a patient-centred collaborative approach is necessary for all healthcare professionals, including nurses.
  • Healthcare organizations must embed the values of collaborative interprofessional patient-centred practice.
  • Leadership support is vital for assessing and ensuring adherence to collaborative practice expectations among staff and physicians.