Tag Archives: Hospitals

The Future of Nursing Your Workplace

I was recently speaking to a nurse about her current work place and some of the changes that she sees coming.  She was concerned for the safety of her patients with many changes that will take place putting more work on the nurses and not for any greater pay or benefit.  I explained to this nurse about a previous place that I was employed at and how I had to break away  because I was not using my full potential as a nurse.

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In my previous work environment, my position was a manager of long-term care case managers. The Institute of Medicine(IOM) report was not shaping our scope of practice at my previous location. The organization was very top-heavy and there did not seem to be enough people to do the jobs that directly affects the population that we serviced, which was the Medicaid and Medicare population.  The training that was provided to the staff was more on how to complete reports and paperwork that was required by the state of Florida in order to be in compliance with AHCA.

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The issue with this was that the members were not being followed up with properly.  Nurses and social workers were going through the motions of case managing their files, with basic monthly telephonic questions asking a member living in the home how things were going, have they received their supplies was there anything new that they should be aware of.  A monthly contact should involve so much more, but yet it didn’t because the case managers did not have enough time to fulfill the job in eight hours and they would work for 12-15 hours daily some of them, to get documentation done in order to avoid a reprimand by upper management.

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In the IOM report there are six aims that healthcare providers should follow and one of them is patient centered healthcare (Rubenfeld & Schaeffer, 2014, p. 82). The goal of the health plan was to have patient centered care and have policies in place for it.  The case managers did everything in their power to obtain services for the members and get them started as soon as possible and formulate a care plan with goals.  The challenge that they were running in to was that the case managers were out in the field 4-5 days per week, they didn’t have time to complete the documentation of their assessments while they were in the member’s home, therefore creating more after hours documentation for the case managers, dissatisfaction with the job and more report concerns rather than focusing the time speaking with the member to really understand what the member’s needs are.

The nurses and social workers were not able to apply quality improvement plans because there was little collaboration as an interdisciplinary team. Nurses and social workers both did the same assessments and did not have the ability to collaborate on a case as if they were both co-managing the case.

The nurse I was speaking to was amazed that this happened in the work place that I used to work in. I explained to this nurse that the IOM report would not shape my career as a doctorate of nurse practice (DNP)  at my former job because the region that I was in did not support critical thinking or any type of evidenced based nursing.  The rigid structure would remain and no changes unless implemented or suggested by upper management would be considered in our department.

Now as a DNP on the outside of this organization, the ultimate goal is to consult with nurses, doctors. therapists, nutritionists  and specialist to get the right  people involved in carin for a patient whether at home or in a facility.  It is good to have a future goal with a plan in place to reach that goal.

Two Businesswomen Meeting Around Table In Modern Office
References

Rubenfeld, M. G., & Schaeffer, B. (2014). Critical Thinking Tactics for Nursing Achieving the IOM Competencies (3rd ed.). [P2BS-11]. http://dx.doi.org/

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The Ever Changing Role of Healthcare

In the ever changing world of healthcare,  as new illnesses come along and as managed care gets more involved, nurses and doctors alike will be required to be on top of different ways that they can provide care to patients, DNP’s ( Doctorate of Nurse Practice)  will have to step in and provide expert clinical advice.  With health care costs on the rise, there are new and improved ways to provide care to patients both in and out of the hospitals.  Much of it involves empowering patients and their families to learn more about healthcare.  This will put more responsibility on the nurse to manage the care.  Many people use the emergency room as their primary care doctor.  This is the information that nurses can take to empower patients to have a primary care doctor or go to a less urgent facility like a walk in clinic if it is after hours to allow them to determine severity of their condition.

With the Affordable Care Act, it would be helpful for the DNP to be in an interdisciplinary team, because the nurse cannot possibly function in all the capacities and take care of multiple patients.  Nurses these days coordinate care for patients at home and even in the hospital, so that the different disciplines that need to see the patient, can help them recuperate from their illness or adjust to a new way of life due to a life changing illness.  The eight essential roles for the DNP may be interwoven, however each is a specialty in of itself and that is where the interdisciplinary team can come in to play (Fain, Asselin, & McCurry, 2008).

 

References

Fain, J., Asselin, M., & McCurry, M. (2008, July). The DNP why now. Nursing Management Springhouse, 39(7), 34-37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.NUMA.0000326565.46790.c0

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The Affordable Care Act and Nursing

Provisions that Will Afford Immediate Improvement for Health Care

The American Nurses Association for many years has been trying to get congress to pass a law affording health insurance for their nurses and everyone else.  When Congress passed the Affordable Care Act, more commonly known as Obamacare, they felt they had won the battle.  People in all walks of life were able to maintain health insurance based on what they could afford to pay and there was no longer the stigma of preexisting medical conditions denying coverage for anyone (American Nurses Association, n.d.).

Provisions that Will Fail to Address Deficiencies and Access

On the surface it appears that Obamacare would be a great service for premature babies that will require preventative treatment for a condition known as RSV (Respiratory Syncytial Virus).  The problem is that most recently the American Academy of Pediatrics lowered the amount of time that a premature baby can receive treatment for prevention of RSV.  Initially it was given to the babies under 2 yrs of age every month for a total of 5 months to get them through the season.  Due to the recommendations that the Obamacare made, this was drastically reduced to one every month for 3 months and some babies will only receive 1 dose.  This was due to the cost of this preventative treatment (Ertelt, 2013).

Challenges that affect Implementation of the Affordable Care Act

The most challenging aspect of implementing the Affordable Care Act in the United States is cost.  The insurance is based on a sliding scale and some folks may pay something and others do no pay anything.  The problem with this is the type of service that the patient receives.  If the patient does not have good insurance, they will be discharged sooner than later from the hospital.

Ethical Issues that Arise as a Result of Affordable Care Act

The ethical issues that will come up are always the issues of saving a life.  When the Affordable Care Act was signed in to law, it was noted that Americans would not be paying for plans that paid for abortions.  Yet it was discovered that it was documented in the plan that this would be covered.  Through lobbyists this was changed and if a person would like that part added to their policy, the client will pay 1.00 or so more per month to have that coverage added.

In the state of Florida people can have late term abortions up through 24 weeks.  Institutions or private physicians can refuse to do these abortions without any penalty.  According to statistics, Planned Parenthood received $528 million dollars in federal funding in 2013 (Ertlet, 2014).   It is unclear as to how much is being donated to preterm births.  In conclusion, maintaining a baby in the NICU is far more costly than providing what society calls today a simple abortion.  The costs of a NICU stay can be anywhere in the $2 million dollar range alone in the hospital, this does not include the cost after the infant is home for medications, homecare, therapy, doctor’s appointments with specialists and any other needs for equipment that the baby may have.  The cost of an abortion depending on the stage that the pregnancy is at can range from $300 to obtain the abortion pill, which also in some locations is administered free early on to an estimated cost of $2050 for later term abortions (All Women’s Clinic, n.d.).

 

References

All Women’s Clinic. (n.d.). http://allwomensclinic.com/fees.html

American Nurses Association. (n.d.). http://www.nursingworld.org/healthcarereform

Ertelt, S. (2013). Death panels for babies in Obamacare: Kids with RSV should beware. Retrieved from http://www.lifenews.com/2013/04/11/death-panels-for-babies-in-obamacare-kids-with-rsv-should-beware/

Ertlet, S. (2014). GAO report confirms Obama lied: 1,036 Obama care plans pay for abortions. Retrieved from http://www.lifenews.com/2014/09/16/gao-report-confirms-obama-lied-1036-obamacare-plans-pay-for-abortions/

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