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Related Concept Videos

National Nursing Organizations II01:30

National Nursing Organizations II

Nursing organizations play a vital role in representing nurses working in specialized clinical settings, such as the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses (AACN).
The AACN emphasizes a healthy work environment through six standards to achieve an optimal patient outcome. The standards are appropriate staffing, meaningful recognition, collaboration, authentic leadership, effective communication, and decision-making. In addition, AACN provides certification programs, webinars, journals, 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.
The Professional Nurse01:22

The Professional Nurse

Professional nurses are not limited to bedside care and are taking roles of greater responsibility. A nurse should have a knowledge-based practice, including personal, theoretical, procedural, cultural, and reflexive knowledge. Additionally, nurses must be competent in cognitive, technical, interpersonal, and ethical/legal skills. Some of the best attributes of successful nurses include the following:
Communication skills: These are critical characteristics, especially speaking and listening.
Nursing Implementation01:15

Nursing Implementation

Implementation is the execution of the nursing care plan developed during the planning phase.
The five steps to implementing effective nursing care include reassessing the patient, reviewing and revising the existing nursing care plan, organizing the resources and care delivery, anticipating and preventing complications, and implementing nursing interventions.
Pharmacokinetics in Pediatric Patients: Drug Excretion01:26

Pharmacokinetics in Pediatric Patients: Drug Excretion

In pediatric medicine, understanding the renal function and drug elimination nuances is crucial for administering safe and effective treatments. Newborns, in particular, display markedly slower renal functions than adults, profoundly affecting how drugs are cleared from their bodies. This slower drug clearance requires clinicians to extend the dosing intervals for many medications to prevent drug accumulation and toxicity while ensuring therapeutic efficacy.One key area where these adjustments...
Nursing Assessment01:29

Nursing Assessment

The two sources for collecting information are primary and secondary. After gathering information, interpretation and validation help to complete the data. The purpose of assessment is to establish data with the initial information, to interpret data about the patient's perceived needs and health problems, and to respond to these problems identified.
The nurse collects all aspects of the patient's health in the initial assessment, establishing priorities for ongoing focused assessments and...

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Related Experiment Videos

Acute care pediatric nurse practitioner: a practice analysis study.

Karin Reuter-Rice

    Journal of Pediatric Health Care : Official Publication of National Association of Pediatric Nurse Associates & Practitioners
    |May 12, 2012
    PubMed
    Summary
    This summary is machine-generated.

    This study examined the practice of acute care pediatric nurse practitioners (ACPNPs) in 2009. Findings reveal shifts in clinical practice and educational preparation since the CPNP-AC certification exam began.

    Keywords:
    Acute carecertificationpediatric nurse practitionerpopulation focus

    Related Experiment Videos

    Area of Science:

    • Nursing
    • Advanced Practice Nursing
    • Pediatric Nursing

    Background:

    • Certification organizations must provide sound and defensible examinations.
    • Practice research validates advanced practice roles and updates national examinations.
    • This study describes the practice of acute care pediatric nurse practitioners (ACPNPs) post-CPNP-AC certification inception in 2005.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To describe the practice of U.S. ACPNPs in 2009.
    • To identify changes in clinical practice and educational preparation 5 years after the CPNP-AC certification examination.

    Main Methods:

    • A descriptive analysis of a 2009 national practice survey.
    • Survey included 291 U.S. ACPNP respondents.

    Main Results:

    • Most respondents were White women, mean age 40; 47.9% had formal ACPNP education.
    • Over 40% practiced in the Midwest, 86.2% in urban areas.
    • 71% of practice time was in inpatient settings, primarily critical care (27.5%), emergency departments (10.7%), and specialty practices.

    Conclusions:

    • Re-examination of ACPNP practice shows changes in clinical practice and educational requirements.
    • These changes align with recent advanced practice regulatory role distinctions.