Chapter 20: Leadership Roles and Management Functions in Nursing

Chapter 20: Leadership Roles and Management Functions in Nursing

Chapter 20: Leadership Roles and Management Functions in Nursing

  1. Fill in the Staffing Table or describe what tasks each person will perform during the day shift.
    • Use a Staffing Model (primary, team, or modular nursing) to help make your decision.
  2. Your paper should be:
    • Typed according to APA style for margins, formatting and spacing standards
    • 1-2 pages, no abstract just one refeance

aChapter 20 – Nursing Management – Staffing

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Staffing Table

Your job is to fill in the following chart or at least describe what assignments each person will have during the day shift today. This is normally Mary’s job, but you are helping her out since she will probably be pretty busy today. The charge nurse usually only takes one or two patients along with the rest of their duties, but since she will be with a new grad and an LPN, you are anticipating that she will be busy. Is her being busy sound like a reasonable projection? It will be your choice what type of staffing model you utilize such as primary, team or modular nursing.

 

  Mary, RN

(Charge Nurse)

 

Mary has been an RN for 7 years and has worked in several different units throughout the hospital.

John, RN

(New grad)

 

John has been a nurse for only one month.

Sarah, LPN

(LPN)

 

Sarah has been an LPN for the past 3 years and has not done her IV certification course.

Amy, CNA

(CNA)

 

Amy has been an assistant for the past 5 years.

Patient #1: A 47-year-old woman admitted from the recovery room at 2:15am after an emergency open cholecystectomy. Vital signs are stable; she is experiencing postoperative nausea and vomiting. She is receiving intravenous morphine on a PCA pump and antibiotics IV every 6 hours. She is also on a maintenance IV drip. The T-tube is draining a moderate amount. Chapter 20: Leadership Roles and Management Functions in Nursing

 

 

 

 

     
 

Patient #2: A 20-year-old woman admitted two days ago with abdominal pain, fever and nausea. She had a endoscopic cholecystectomy last night and is due for her first bandage change this afternoon.

 

 

 

 

     
   

Mary, RN

 

John, RN

 

Sarah, LPN

 

Amy, CNA

Patient #3: A 76-year-old man in respiratory isolation to rule out tuberculosis. Third morning sputum for AFB is needed. Vitals are stable; and he is independent of his iADL’s but has some physical limitations that he is appreciative of help.

 

 

 

 

 

     
 

Patient #4: An 60-year-old man with congestive heart failure (CHF). This patient is a DNR. Family is present with the client. Respirations are shallow; blood pressure is beginning to decline at the end of the last shift.

 

 

 

 

     
 

Patient #5: A 60-year-old woman admitted 3 days ago with left lower lobe pneumonia. She is receiving intravenous antibiotics, oxygen at 3 Liters N/C. She spiked a fever to 39.5 C. overnight; acetaminophen was administered. She receives piggyback antibiotic every 6 hours.

 

 

 

 

     
 

Patient #6: An 82-year-old man admitted 10 days ago with a urinary tract infection. The infection resolved. He is now waiting for long-term care placement. He requires assistance with ADL’s and ambulates with assistance also.

 

 

 

 

     
         
   

Mary, RN

 

John, RN

 

Sarah, LPN

 

Amy, CNA

 

Patient #7: A 36-year-old woman scheduled for a bowel resection at 10:00am She is NPO and has an intravenous maintenance infusion running. Bowel preparation is complete and preoperative teaching is done. The consent needs to be signed and the operating room checklist must be completed. Her pre-medications must also be administered when called by the OR.

 

 

 

     
 

Patient #8: A 55-year-old man in the cardiac interventional lab having an angiography done. He will be prescribed bed rest on return and will have a sandbag on his groin to prevent bleeding while his heparin level is monitored during the day. His vital signs and groin site will be checked frequently when he returns. Chapter 20: Leadership Roles and Management Functions in Nursing