Critical Care Nursing : NursingCrib.com Updates | ![]() |
Posted: 20 Oct 2009 10:05 PM PDT 1. Critical care nursing deals with human responses to life-threatening problems and includes the critically ill patient, the critical care nurse, and the critical care environment. 3. Care is provided to patients of all ages with alterations in physical or emotional health. 5. Critical care nurses can be found working in a wide variety of environments and specialties, such as emergency departments and the intensive care units. B. Critically Ill Patient 1. Critically ill patients are defined as those patients who are at high risk for actual or potential life-threatening health problems. 2. The critically ill patient is at high risk for developing life-threatening problems and requires constant, intensive, multidisciplinary assessment and intervention to restore stability, prevent complications, and achieve and maintain optimal responses 3. The more critically ill the patient is, the more likely he or she is to be highly vulnerable, unstable and complex, thereby requiring intense and vigilant nursing care. C. History of Critical Care Nursing 1. Critical care began as a component of recovery rooms before expanding into coronary care units in the 1960s C. Critical care environment 1. Units may be specially designated as medical, surgical, coronary, pediatric, neonatal, recovery, or postanesthesia or may encompass other areas in some institutions D. Roles of the critical care nurse 1. Care provider: provides comprehensive—and at times highly technical—direct care to the patient and family in response to life-threatening health problems E. Functions of the critical care nurse 1. Assesses and implements treatment for patient responses to life-threatening health problems F. Legal issues affecting the provision of critical care nursing 1. Negligence G. Qualifications of a Critical Care Nurse 1. To become a registered nurse (RN), an individual must earn a diploma in nursing, an associate's degree in nursing (ADN) or a bachelor's degree in nursing (BSN) and pass a national licensing exam. 2. Requirements vary and are dictated by each state's Board of Nursing. Many nursing schools offer students exposure to critical care, but most of a critical care nurse's specialty education and orientation is provided by the employer. Advanced practice nurses must earn a degree at the master's or doctoral level. 3. Although certification is not mandatory for practice in a specialty like critical care, many nurses choose to become certified. Some employers prefer to hire certified nurses because they have demonstrated acquisition of a specific high level of knowledge in their specialty through successful completion of a rigorous, psychometrically valid, job-related examination. 4. Certification examinations test critical care knowledge primarily at the application/analysis level, which indicates strong critical thinking abilities. 5. A required number of clinical hours in the specialty are also an examination prerequisite. Certified nurses validate their continuing knowledge of current practices in critical care nursing through a renewal process every three years, which includes meeting extensive continuing education and clinical experience requirements. 6. Certified critical care nurses (CCRN) must have been in critical care practice for a minimum of two years to be eligible for the examination. Recommended Books:
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