Fundamentals of Nursing and Midwifery 2e
Unit III Thoughtful practice and the process of care
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this phase of the process, you will continue to collect data and to modify the plan of care as needed (Figure 18-1). All activities are documented in the format used by the healthcare facility. IMPLEMENTING PERSON-CENTRED CARE When applying a person-centred approach to implementing planned healthcare you must include the person and family
in all aspects of the process. Feedback from the person is essential to ensure that the identified health problems are being addressed through the delivery of the planned care. The person should be encouraged to be part of the decision- making process relating to their care. You cannot reliably identify a person’s health problems and plan and implement care without their input. In all interactions with the person, the nurse or midwife is concerned with the person’s response to health and illness and their ability to meet basic human needs. Whereas other health- care professionals focus on selected aspects of the person’s
TABLE 18-1 Relationships, role responsibilities and related competencies
Relationship
Role responsibilities
Related competencies
Repertoire of therapeutic interpersonal behaviours— attending, listening, interview- ing, non-verbal communication, touching, facilitating, coaching Ability to establish trusting relationships Demonstrated competence in the roles of carer, teacher, counsellor, advocate
Nurse/midwife– person
Communicate your concern for the person (as well as the disease) and your interest in how this change in health state will affect the person’s overall well-being. Create an environment in which the person can commit their energies to health promotion or restoration or peaceful dying, confident that basic human needs are being addressed. Encourage the person to develop self-care abilities that promote holistic health. Develop in the person and family, the knowledge, attitude and skills that will enable them to respond to the self-care challenge of the health or illness state. Intervene as appropriate to promote healthy functioning. Educate the family or others to be wise and assertive healthcare consumers. Support one another’s efforts to deliver quality care; work collaboratively with administration to improve quality care. Provide creative leadership—formally or informally—to make the unit a satisfying and challenging place to work. Supervise the care given by other personnel; affirm the strengths of others, and constructively address the deficiencies encountered. Enhance the professional development of self and others through active participation in professional organisations.
Nurse/midwife– person–family or significant others
Communication Teaching/counselling/advocacy
Nurse/midwife– nurse/midwife
Assertiveness Collaboration Coordination Group process Organisation
Leadership Delegation Change strategies Problem solving Decision making Conflict resolution
Nurse/midwife– healthcare team
Communicate clearly nursing/midwifery’s perspective regarding the person and family with the healthcare team. Coordinate the inputs of the interdisciplinary team into a comprehensive plan of care. Serve as a liaison between the person and family and the healthcare team, as necessary.
Nurse/midwife– community agencies
Communicate with community agencies as required.
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